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March 10, 2010

Emerson College rescue bid amid controversy over earlier funding plan

FOREST ROW (NNA) – Emerson College, the international centre for adult education based on the work of Rudolf Steiner, is set to close in the summer unless a bid to turn...


March 02, 2010

Associative Economics Café

By Daniel Osmer, February 22, 2010

Sebastopol, CA, USA

The first Associative Economics Café Sebastopol took place a few weeks ago at the Youth Annex.


March 02, 2010

Higher Notions of Economics, Accounting and Equity

Associative Economics Intensive Course - February 5-14, 2010, England

with Christopher Houghton Budd, Stephen Torr, Frances Zammit

Report by Kim Chotzen

Waldorf Education

Waldorf education places the child at the centre of all educative efforts. It enquires into the gifts and potential available in each child, and tries to nurture and develop these. It tries to help the child unfold his or her full potential, to care for children in the community context in which they grow up, and to prepare them for the tasks facing them in the modern age.

Waldorf education nurtures the whole human being by accentuating scientific, artistic and social aspects in a balanced way. In doing so it takes account of the child’s age and his or her varying needs. Its schools are co-educational, do not propound an overarching view or doctrine and ensure the best developmental opportunities for all children, irrespective of class and background.

In Waldorf schools, foreign languages are taught from the first year of schooling. The basic subjects are augmented by a series of artistic and practical subjects such as handicrafts, eurythmy, painting, modelling, music and drama. Class groups form socially intact learning and development communities since children are never “kept down” and made to repeat a year.

The contact between pupils, teachers and parents is intense. Teachers usually accompany their classes over many years in order to ensure that a positive educational environment develops in the long-term. Waldorf Schools are independent schools in which parents and teachers share legal and financial responsibility.


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