Waldorf
Waldorf Homeschooling:
Waldorf Education, the Montessori Method, and Enki
similarities and
differences
Our
approach starts with the belief that there both is wisdom and genuine care
in all approaches to teaching. As a result, we are informed by and have
threads of many approaches as each applied to both homeschoooling and
classroom learning. Waldorf Homeschooling and education and
Montessori as applied to both homeschool and classroom are certainly
among those at the top of the list. Why? Because although on a practical
level in many ways they are polar opposite approaches, both are focused on
the education as a way to nourish the whole child. Both seek to bring him
to become all he can be, including body, heart, mind, and spirit. We share
that goal.
But we
are also very different.
One key way we are unique grows out
of our belief that all aspects of education need to work with the
breathing rhythms of learning - including the rhythm of learning formats.
Simply put, just as our physical breathing requires an in-out-rest cycle,
so too the children need to feel this in their learning. Waldorf education
works nearly exclusively with the large group/teacher directed learning.
Waldorf homeschooling has more flexibility, but adult directed learning is
still the core. Montessori works almost exclusively with individually
driven and independent learning – whether at home or in the classroom. In
both classroom and
homeschool programs,
we work with both of these and more.
We have
found that a breathing rhythm in learning requires there be times for:
-
adult
led learning as is done in
Waldorf homeschooling
programs such as
Live Education
and
Oak Meadow and
in Waldorf classrooms, is the beginning and ground of each day in an
Enki program;
-
time for individual pursuits which is the center
of Montessori programs, is included in short stretches daily and for
longer periods several times a week in the Enki classroom
homeschool curriculum;
-
cooperative project learning – peer or
family directed - which is the center of theme studies programs, is part
of each week in an Enki program.
These
three different types of learning are woven together differently at
different ages, always with healthy rhythm and the integration of body,
heart and mind as our central goal.
In the
Junior High School, peer group decision making and work are the heart of
the program because we feel the central developmental task for this age is
the forming of healthy peer community. We can all see that preadolescents
desperately seek to do this. In the Enki approach we empower them to do
this in a healthy way. This need for peer work does pose special
challenges for the Homeschool, but attention to this need also gives rise
to creative and wonderful solutions.
In our
High school plan this rhythm expands, as do the children, to include
apprenticeships in the larger community - again developmentally we feel
this is the natural rhythmic step. In the Homeschool this is quite
readily accomplished – more easily than it Is in the classroom setting.
Another
significant difference between the methods (though this does not apply to
either Enki or Waldorf homeschooling), is that in the school setting we
work with partner teaching. On a blueprint level (adapted to financial
constraints) two teachers carry a class for the first five years, with a
new team coming in for the junior high years. Sometimes they work alone,
sometimes together - but both teachers carry the class.
This is
VERY different from having special subject teachers and does not happen in
Waldorf education for complex reasons having to do with Steiner's
insights regarding the development of the ego body. We feel that these
reasons may have been compelling in Europe of 1920, but the world has
changed a lot. First of all, today children rarely get to see adults
working together, so they have no models for doing this. For the most part,
the lucky ones experience tag-team parenting. Very few actually live in a
team situation with real and respectful working together as a model. We
feel this leaves a critical hole in their experience. Second, children
need more from teachers now as the family and community disintegrate at an
alarming rate. It is unrealistic to ask one person to carry this, for both
the teachers' own health and for the children, who today bond at a deeper
level because of unmet needs. We also feel that a fresher perspective is
arrived at by two adults.
In
the
Homeschool curriculum
the children have the experience of a stable home, but still the need to
see adults working together constructively remains an important one. In
the Enki approach to homeschooling we work with the rhythms of the day to
include family chores done all together, and family times which include
sharing a taste of the days work. Together, these support the sense of
working together as a family and offer the child a chance to learn about
relating to adults through the modeling provided by the parents - is no
greater teacher. While are varying views on this in Waldorf circles, it is
also a focus for several of the Waldorf homeschooling programs on the
market – Christopherus being one.
Enki
also views the role of the adult differently from Montessori. In
Montessori the adult is viewed as a facilitator who sets up a learning
environment and then stays out of the way so the children’s owning
impulse to learn is supported. In Enki we also see this as a very
important aspect of learning and growing and great attention is given to
the environment and to opportunities for self-directed learning. But from
the Enki perspective, we also feel the adult must sit as a respected elder,
opening the doors to a vast and rich world the child could not know
without her. This is not just a world of facts and figures, but a world of
imagination and creativity that can take us beyond the confines of the
material world and factual understanding.
And,
most importantly, as adults we stand as models of the child’s potential,
and as inspiration for what lies ahead. If we do not offer the children a
proud and rich example of what lies ahead, what have we told them about
the value of growing and learning?
This
view of the adult’s role also leads to a difference in both the content
and the role of story in the curriculum. This is a place where Enki and
both Waldorf homeschooling and classroom teaching are in agreement. We see
story as a way that the adult can bring the children an experience not
only of worlds beyond their reach, but also worlds that are well within
their experience but are less tangible (emotions, energies, dreams, etc.)
For both Enki and Waldorf, this makes story central to the curriculum and
includes not only history and biography (which are also part of Montessori)
but also myth, fantasy, and the like).
There are many other aspects unique
to our approach, many of which center around our nonhierarchical
multiculturalism. The role of the adult is an area of real difference
between Waldorf, Montessori, and Enki, and is discussed in the article "The
Soup of Wellbeing" on this site, and in
the files section of
our parent discussion site – the Enki
Experience.
All told,
Enki is inspired and informed by the Montessori Method, Waldorf
Homeschooling and classroom education, and many others, but Enki is Enki.
We hope that through this site, the Enki Experience site, our books and
videos, and attendance at our programs, you will have a chance to get to
know this unique and innovative approach.
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