Understanding Waldorf Education
 

Understanding Waldorf Education

by Jack Petrash


Written by a teacher with more than 25 years of experience, this book offers a jargon-free view of Waldorf schools with their philosophy of the importance of a three-dimensional education. Through learning experiences that involve all of the senses, children use a variety of intelligences to develop thought, feeling, and intentional, purposeful activity. Whether you're a Waldorf parent or... (read more)

Top tags: educationmultiple intelligences. great program!parentingraising kidswaldorf (all tags)

Overview: Amazon Reviews

Great book about the waldorf educational system
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, October 23, 2005
This is a great overview of the Waldorf education. It takes you thru the guiding philosophies, traditions and what the children do throughout the years of school. You will fall in love with the Waldorf approach to educating children.
I read it while researching various educational systems for my child and set up a schhol visit as soon as I was finished with the book.
Serves as a warning!
  • Rated 3 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, January 30, 2004
This book does a fair job of conveying the Waldorf philosophy. It provided a useful forearming prior to the Waldorf School indoctrination pitch that I endured when seriously (a brief moment of insanity) considering Waldorf for our daughter. Having read the book, I was far better prepared to challenge the director's delusional utopian drivel on numerous levels. I think anyone who is considering Waldorf as an "education" option for their children SHOULD read this and read it carefully, but consider all the while how unequipped for the REALITY of life this approach will leave them. Read and be warned.
At last! An accessible description.
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, February 27, 2003
I've been a Waldorf parent for 4 years and have been pleased with the education and life experience my kids are getting at school. But I haven't been able to describe to people who ask about the Waldorf school what makes it so different, so special. I've found most of Rudolf Steiner's (Waldorf education's original mastermind) work to be impenetrable; probably due to weak translations, but still. I've read a lot of dense stuff in my day, but Steiner's is unsloggable. This book by Jack Petrash, however, I loved. It's written so 21st century mortals can understand it and relate to it. Right from the first chapter, I understood it and felt it understood me. In the second chapter I thought, "Oh, now he's really captured it. He should have put this chapter first." I thought that again about the third, fourth, and fifth chapters and then decided he probably had the order okay in the first place.
Excellent Overview of Waldorf Education
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, August 23, 2002
I've never read a book that explains the Waldorf Education philosophy in such a captivating way as this book! It is so enjoyable to read. The author uses interesting anecdotes from real-life situations to explain his ideas. The entire book is excellent, but the chapters on the three stages of childhood (preschool, grade school and high school) are so well suited to all parents that I wouldn't limit this book to only those that adhere to Waldorf principles. The author has been a teacher for over 30 years, much of that time at the Washington Waldorf School where he has taken three classes of children from grade one to grade eight. And if this book is any indication, he knows his stuff!
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