Waldorf Teaching

The Best Thing You Can Do for Your Middle School Child During Times of Uncertainty

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by Kristen Henley-Hills, Movement Teacher

This strange, utterly singular experience of closed schools, social distancing, and consequent family togetherness for all things is presenting unique opportunities.  While we can all probably bring to the front anxieties about what this means for the future both for the macro and our individual families, let’s practice a form of emotional distancing from these worries in front of our children!

By this I mean that we need to strive to leave our fears and adult worries at the door when we greet our young people and work with them.  What they need most right now is a sense of security and an assurance that the adults in their lives are hopeful and taking care of things.  Am I suggesting that you fake it in front of them? In a sense, yes.  

Even before this crisis, children born after 9/11 have experienced unprecedented anxiety.  It seems to be in the air. Our world is changeable and fast-paced. But, the hope here is that these wonderful children are born into this time ready to take on the challenges of the world.  While they are developing, we need to protect and guard them while they get their “feet under them.” It’s not a very popular idea not to tell your children everything that is going on and what you are feeling, but I would argue that this is exactly what they need.

As an example, I have a niece who was informed of every aspect of this virus while still in school.  Consequently, she came home hysterical, sure that her grandmother was going to die because she is over 70.  This illustrates how a very “smart” child -- and she is! -- processes adult information emotionally.

Children between 7 and 14 are experiencing life largely through their emotional lives, not their intellectual ones.  So, while they are highly intelligent and can hear and repeat vast quantities of detailed material, they experience this information through their hearts.  And their human experience. A child, even one approaching middle school age, does not have the life experience to extrapolate scary information and absorb it in a healthy way.

In fact, the children in our class 4,5,6 are especially prone to anxiety as they are maturing towards their teen years.  It is particularly important to assuage worries that can settle in as anxiety and depression later. As parents and teachers, we can fortify their emotional strength by providing a model of calm and assurance.

Consider practicing modified answers to their questions ahead of time so that you don’t find yourself in the moment telling them more than is healthy for them to hear.  One can be honest without overloading. Assuring statements such as “The government and communities are taking this seriously and moving quickly to keep everyone safe and take care of this,”  are better than statistical information about how the virus spreads and where it is. You will, of course, find your own words and balance point on this, but be intentional.

At first, you may find your bright little lawyers insisting on more detail, but do try to observe the distance between their quick minds and their emotional maturity.  If you are prepared with only what you are going to say and stick to it with confidence and optimism, you will be pleasantly surprised by how this will bring calm to your children.

Avoid exposing them to the news, either digital, print, or audio, and stick to a rhythm to give form to their days -- and to yours.  These times afford a unique opportunity to be leaders in our families in a way that most of us haven’t been before. This can be a powerful time for good!

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A Waldorf Teacher's Way to Joy in Times of Chaos

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by Louisa Hopewell, Handwork Teacher

Now is a better time than any to pick up knitting. 

Amidst the chaos and confusion, knitting can bring relief. 

That feeling that we have no control can be eased with the meditative rhythm of needles and the comforting feel of yarn in your hands. I see this magic firsthand when my students gather for handwork class.

There is a lot to learn from knitting besides basic skills like knit and purl.  Students at the Waldorf school could tell you that there will almost always be moments of frustration brought on by their handwork classes. Feeling helpless and confused with a new challenging stitch; or bored when knitting the cuff of a sock, before the excitement of starting the heel; or the lack of motivation in the middle of a scarf when it hasn’t seemed to get any longer for quite some time; or impatience when there are too many  students waiting in line ahead of you for help with a dropped stitch. I can’t help but relate these feelings to what we adults are feeling right now. 

It can become too much to bear for many of us. 

But through these feelings of despair can come great joy. 

As the handwork teacher, I see this transformation almost every day as students work through their struggles.  I see them find a rhythm and get into a groove with their work. Eventually, their project doesn’t feel so hard any more. And then eventually, there is satisfaction when the project is complete.

We all feel a great deal of pride when a student realizes that the hat they have been working on actually fits their head!  Our class cheers when each student has finished their first-grade scarf. 

If being a handwork teacher has taught me anything it’s that hard work and community and kindness can carry us through adversity.  I feel so grateful to be part of this community as we move into this difficult time. 

Students’ current handwork projects are being put on hold as we move into this phase of home work.  However, the knitting continues! I have cast on and handed out a new simpler project, knitting a Roll Poly, for each student. If you have needles and yarn at home I encourage parents to do the same. I have used size 4-6 needles for my older students and size 8-10 for the younger ones. Most yarns will work for this project. Many of you will recognize these knitted creations from our EC classrooms. Children can use them to make many things including scarves, makeshift building rope, leashes for pets, imaginary snakes, rivers, roads, and many more. Cast on 8-10 stitches and you are ready to go with a simple knit stitch. And if you need any help at all, please don’t hesitate to reach out! 

If you would like detailed instructions on how to knit a roly poly, visit our tutorial here.

Interested in learning more about our school and Waldorf Education? Click here to reach out to us via email.

How a Waldorf Teacher Inspires Mindfulness

by Ted Curtin, Class 8 Teacher

Class 8 begins each morning by taking a walk around the recess field. It gives us a chance to wake up and stretch our legs after the ride to school, and it gives the students some time to check in with each other and socialize a bit before beginning the day's work.  Before we head back in, we always take a moment to be in the moment, to take in the quality of each particular - and unique - morning. 

At this point in the 8th grade year, we are becoming more cognizant of the fact that we are looking at our last days together at the school. We look at the work that remains to be done - the final blocks, the class play, the last assemblies, the class trip in May - and we find moments that cause us to reminisce about the years that we have spent together. It has been fun to hear the random memories that bubble to the surface and that are retold with humor from that particular perspective of classmates who have spent many years together. Looking back, these 8 years seem to have passed by so quickly!

When we return to the classroom from our morning walk, we sometimes take a few minutes to write something about some aspect of the morning that has touched our thoughts or feelings, or that we have purposefully focused our attention on.

Last week, on a morning misted with a light rain, we stopped in at the Sunhouse. We sat quietly and took in the experience of the place and the moment and then went in to write some impressions. As usual, there were many examples from the students of perceptive observation and beautiful description, in poetry and prose. As the students wrote, I decided to join them, to see what the muses would bring me. I was a bit surprised by what came from my pencil, and share it here not for its literary value, but as an indication of the mood of 8th grade from the teacher's perspective at this point in our story.

In the Sunhouse a drizzly March morning
Incipient Spring gets an early start,
A new season of growth and becoming.
The students in my garden
Are getting ready to unfurl new capacities
Toward their individual futures;
The raindrops on the roof
Tip-tap the passing moments,
Counting out the time left to us.