YOU
will not only have to be teachers and educators at the Waldorf
School, but if things go well you will also have to be protagonists
of the whole Waldorf School system. For, of course, you will know
far more exactly what the Waldorf School really means than can be
conveyed to the neighbouring or more distant outside
world. But to be the true protagonists of the aims of the
Waldorf School and of its aims for civilization in general you
will have to be in a position to conduct your defence against
prevailing opinion wherever this shows itself antagonistic or
even merely demurring. Consequently, I must introduce into
these pedagogical-didactic reflections a chapter which will
quite naturally connect with what we have already so far
analysed in our discussions on method.
You
know that in the sphere of educational theory, as well as other
spheres, much is expected at the present time from the
so-called experimental psychology. Experiments are carried out
on people to determine an individual's gift for forming ideas,
for memorizing, even for willing, although this can naturally
only be ascertained by a detour. The will fulfils itself in
sleep, and the electrical apparatus in the psychological
laboratory can only indirectly discover an individual's
experiences during sleep, just as these cannot be observed
directly by way of experiment. Such experiments, indeed,
are carried out. Do not imagine that I object to such
experiments as a whole. They can be valuable as tendrils of
science, as offshoots of science. All kinds of interesting
things can be learnt from such experiments and I have decidedly
no desire to condemn them, lock, stock, and barrel. I should
like everyone who is attracted to work of this kind to have the
means of acquiring such psychological laboratories and of
carrying out their experiments there. But we must consider for
a moment the rise of this experimental psychology in the form
in which it is especially recommended by the educationist,
Meumann,
[See Dr. C. v. Heydebrand,
Gegen Experimentalpsychologie und Pädagogik.]
who is really one of the Herbartian school.
Why
is experimental psychology practised to-day? Because people
have lost the gift of studying man directly. They can no longer
rely on the forces which inwardly bind one man to another
— or, to the child. So they try to discover by external
devices, by external experiments, what should be done with the
growing child. Clearly our principles and methods of teaching
take a much more inward course. This is, moreover, urgent and
vital for the present day and the immediate future of mankind.
Granted, then, on the one hand, the urge to experimental
psychology, on the other hand, as a result of this experimental
psychology, we get the misconstruction of certain simple facts
of life. Let me illustrate this by an example.
These experimental psychologists and educationists have lately
been particularly interested in what they call the process of
comprehension; for instance, the process of comprehension
in reading, in the reading of a given passage. In order to
ascertain this process of comprehension they have tried to work
with “subjects,” as they are called. If we
summarize the steps taken in great detail, this is the
procedure. A “subject,” a child or an adult,
is given a reading passage, and the investigation is now
directed as to which is the most effective method for the
child, for instance, to adopt, in order to arrive at the most
rapid comprehension. It is discovered that the most effective
method is first to “dispose” the reader to the
reading passage, that is, first to introduce the person
concerned to the meaning of such a reading passage. Then, after
numerous tests, the “subject” carries out what is
called “passive comprehension.” After having dealt
with the meaning, by making “scheme” or plan, it is
supposed to be passively comprehended. For through this passive
assimilation of a reading passage there should occur what is
called “learning to anticipate”: repeating once
more in free spiritual activity what has just been worked out
in scheme or plan and then passively assimilated. And then
follows, as fourth act to this drama, the filling in of all
that until now has remained uncertain, that is, of all that has
not penetrated completely into the life of the human spirit and
soul. If you let the subject carry out, in correct succession,
first the process of familiarizing himself with the meaning of
a reading passage, then of passive assimilation, then of
learning to anticipate, then of returning to the as yet
incompletely assimilated parts, you then see that a given
reading passage is most effectively grasped, read, and
remembered. Do not misunderstand me: I mention this
procedure because it must be mentioned in view of the
fact that people talk to-day so much at cross-purposes, for
they may want to imply the same thing with diametrically
opposed words. Accordingly, the experimental psychologists will
say: “A scrupulously faithful method like this reveals
exactly what should be done in education.” But those who
have a profounder understanding of the life of the whole being
know that this is not the way to true education — any
more than you can put together again a living beetle from its
separate parts after it has been dissected. It cannot be done.
Nor can it be done by trying anatomy on the human
soul-activity. It is interesting, of course, and in another
connection it can be extremely valuable for science, to
practise anatomy on the activity of the human soul — but
it does not make educators. For this reason there can proceed
from this experimental psychology no new true building up of
education; this can only proceed from an inner
understanding of man.
I
had to say this for fear lest you should misunderstand me when
I make a statement which will naturally cause annoyance to a
supporter of modern opinion. The statement is one-sided in its
way, and its one-sidedness must, of course, be counterbalanced.
What do the experimental psychologists get, when they have
split up into atoms like this the soul of their subject and
have made a martyr of him — this process is not pleasant
if it is inflicted on you — what good do they get out of
it? According to them they have obtained an extraordinarily
valuable result, which is constantly being impressed by italics
in educational textbooks as a conclusion arrived at. This
statement, translated into decent German, runs roughly
like this: You can remember a reading passage better when you
have understood the meaning than when you have not
understood the meaning. It has been “determined by
research” — to use scientific jargon — that
it is useful firstly to understand the meaning of a reading
passage if you want to learn it easily. And here I must make
the heretical declaration that, in as far as this theory is
correct, I could have known it before, for I should like to
know what person with a normal human intelligence does not know
for himself that a reading passage can be remembered better
when its meaning has been understood than when this has not
been understood. Every single one of the conclusions of
experimental psychology is an appalling platitude. The
platitudes printed in the textbooks of experimental
psychology are sometimes of such a kind that only those people
can have anything to do with them who have already trained
themselves in the pursuit of science to submit to intense
boredom for an occasional striking point. You are easily
trained to do this by the drill of the school-system —
for even the elementary school has this defect, although it is
less conspicuous here than at the universities.
This heretical statement is meant particularly for the
educationist: It is to some extent self-evident that one must
first understand the meaning of a thing which is to be
remembered. But there is this to consider: that what has been
assimilated by understanding the meaning, only affects the
observation, only affects thought-perception, and that this
elevation of the human being to the level of
sense-comprehension educates him one-sidedly to a mere
observation of the world, to a thought-perception. And if
we teach simply and solely in accordance with this theory we
shall get nothing but weak-willed people. The statement, then,
is in a sense correct — and yet not conclusively correct.
It ought, as a matter of fact, to be further expressed in these
terms: If you want to do the best possible thing for the
thinking perception of the individual you can do it by
analysing the meaning of everything that he absorbs. And, in
fact, if we were to analyse merely the meaning of things, we
could go very far in educating human observation of the world.
But we should never educate a man's will — volitional man
— for the will cannot be forced by simply throwing the
light on the meaning of a thing. The will likes to sleep, and
it does not wish to be fully awakened by what I should like to
call the perpetual unchaste laying bare of the meaning. And the
point is, that the very inevitability of life breaks in
upon this simple truth of the value of revealing meanings, so
that with the child, too, we must study subjects which do not
lay bare the meaning. Then we shall educate his will.
The
mischievous effects of the one-sided application of the
principles of explaining the meanings have been
particularly active in movements like the Theosophical
Movement. You know how much I have protested for years
against a certain mischievous influence in Theosophical
circles. I have even had to see Hamlet, for instance, a
pure work of art, explained in terms of theosophical cant like
this: “This is Manas, this is the Ego — that is the
astral body. This character represents one thing — that
one another.” Such explanations were particularly in
favour. I protested against them because it is a sin against
human life to interpret symbolically what is meant to be
taken directly, in its elements, as art. It leads to a
mischievous reading of a meaning into things, and this is
dragged to the level of mere observation to which it should not
be dragged. This all arises from the fact that the actual
Theosophical Movement is a decadent movement. It is the
furthest-flung offshoot of a declining culture; in its entire
attitude it has nothing to do with Anthroposophy. Anthroposophy
aims at being the opposite: at being an ascending movement, the
beginning of an ascent. That is a radical difference. That is
why so much is written in the field of Theosophy which is
really an extreme symptom of decadence. But that there exist
people at all who contrive to interpret Hamlet
symbolically, character by character, is the result of
the appalling way in which we have been educated only to look
for meanings.
Human life makes it indispensable that we should not only be
educated in terms of the meaning, but from what the will
experiences in the sleeping life: by rhythm, measure, melody,
harmony of colours, repetition, in fact all spontaneous
activity which does not seek to comprehend. When you let the
child repeat sentences which he is far from understanding
because of his tender age, when you encourage the child to take
in these sentences just by memory itself, you certainly do not
influence his comprehension — because you are
unable to enter into their meaning, for that must only dawn
later — but you influence his will, and that is what you
should do; that is what you must do. You must try first of all
to acquaint the child with things which are first and foremost
artistic: music, drawing, plastic art, etc.; but on the other
hand you must also give the child things which can have some
abstract form of meaning in such a way that he does not, it is
true, understand this at once, but only later in life.
Then he will understand it because he has assimilated it
by repetition, and can remember, and later understand, with his
greater maturity, what he could not understand before. There
you have worked upon his will. And quite especially you have
worked upon his feeling — and you should not forget this.
Just as feeling — this can be observed of the soul as
well as of the spirit — lies between willing and
thinking, so does the education of feeling lie midway
between the methods of educating the thinking and those of
willing. For the thinking knowledge or thinking perception we
must definitely practise subjects concerned with revealing
meanings: reading, writing, etc.; for action inspired by will
we must cultivate everything which does not aim at a mere
interpretation of meanings but at a direct impression through
the whole being, for instance, of artistic subjects. What lies
midway between the two (i.e. thought and will) will chiefly
influence the development of feeling, the formation of
its disposition. You can produce a strong effect on the
education of the feeling nature when the child is made to
assimilate something first of all only by rote, uncomprehended,
without tampering with its meaning. For only after some time,
when he has matured through other processes, and remembers it,
can he understand what he absorbed earlier. This is a
subtlety of education which must absolutely be respected,
if we are to educate people with inner feelings. For feeling
plays a peculiar role in life. In this sphere, too, people
should make observations. But they do not observe rightly. I
will indicate an observation which you can easily, with a
little industry, make for yourselves.
Suppose you are trying to get a clear idea of the state of
Goethe's soul in 1790. You can do this by studying a selection
of the works composed by Goethe in the year 1790. You find, of
course, at the end of every edition of Goethe a chronological
index of his poems, in their order of composition; so you take
out the poems written in 1790 and the plays written in 1790 and
study them. You remember that in precisely this year he
finished the beautiful essay,
Die Metamorphose der Pflanzen
(“The Metamorphosis of Plants”);
you recall that just at that time he conceived the first idea
of the Farbenlehre
(“Theory of Colour”);
you imagine from all this the state of his soul in 1790 and ask
yourselves: “What were the influences active on Goethe's
psychic life in 1790?” You will only be able to answer
this question if you cast a critical glance on all Goethe's
previous experiences from 1749 to 1790 and on what followed
after this year — of which Goethe at the time was still
unaware, but which you now know — during the period from
1790 to 1832, that is, to his death. Then there emerges the
remarkable realization that the actual state of his soul in the
year 1790 was a combination of what was to come later, the
conquests remaining for the individual to make, and those
he had already experienced. This is an extraordinarily
significant discovery. People only avoid it because it leads
into provinces which they quite naturally do not like to enter
for observations of this kind. Try to extend your observations
in this way to the soul-life of an individual who died recently
and whom you have known for some time. If you train yourself to
a more careful study of the soul you will then find this: A
man, a friend of yours, died, let us say, in 1918. You have
known him for some time, so that you can ask yourselves:
“What was the state of his soul in 1912?” If you
consider everything that you know of him you will find that the
state of his soul in 1912 was such that the preparation for his
approaching death was unconsciously reflected in his
psychic disposition at that time; it was unconsciously
reflected in his feelings. Taken as a whole I call the life of
the feelings the psychic disposition, “Mood of
Soul” (Seelenstimmung). A man who is soon to die has a
quite different inner disposition from one who has still long
to live.
You
will now understand that people do not like to study these
things, for it would create a very unpleasant impression
— to put it mildly — if we were to observe the
signs of approaching death in people's psychic disposition.
These, however, can be observed. But in everyday life it is not
wise for people to notice these things. That is why they are
usually hidden from this life just as the will is withdrawn, as
a sleeping power, even when we are awake, from the waking
consciousness. But the educator must, after all, take up a
position outside ordinary life to some extent. He must not be
afraid to take up his stand detached from his usual life and to
absorb truths for his teaching which are rather
disturbing, rather tragic, for everyday life. In this
connection there is lost ground to cover in the educational
system of Central Europe. You know that especially the teachers
in the universities in the early decades of this Central
European system of education and teaching were people on whom
the actual man of the world rather turned up his nose in scorn.
Unworldly, pedantic fellows, who could not adapt
themselves properly to the world, who always wore long,
black frock-coats and never evening dress; these were the
former educators of youth, especially the teachers of more
mature youth. In these days things have changed. The university
professors have begun to wear correct evening dress and to
adapt themselves to worldly custom, and it is considered a
great mark of progress that their former state is at last a
thing of the past. It is a good thing. But it must be a thing
of the past in other senses, too; it must in future be a thing
of the past to the extent that the detachment from life does
not merely consist, as it did formerly, in the teacher's
wearing the invariable long pedantic frock-coat when other
people did not. The detachment from life can remain to some
extent, but it must be bound up with a profounder conception of
life than that of people who wear evening dress for dinner. I
am only speaking figuratively, of course, for I have nothing
against “evening dress.”
An
educator must be able to study life more profoundly, otherwise
he will never give appropriate and fruitful attention to
the growing child. Consequently, he will have to accept, among
others, such truths as I have just mentioned. Life itself, to a
certain extent, demands the presence of mysteries. We need no
diplomatic secrets in the near future. But for education we
need the knowledge of certain mysteries of life. The old
Mystery teachers withheld such secrets of life esoterically
because these could not be revealed directly to life. But in a
certain degree every teacher must know truths which he cannot
impart directly to the world, because the world would be
confused in normal progress, if it had access to such truths
all the time. But you do not fully understand how to treat the
growing child if you cannot estimate the influence on him of
something imparted in such a way that he does not fully
understand it at the time. He will understand when it is
returned to later, and when he is told, not only what he then
realizes, but what he had assimilated earlier. This makes a
profound impression on the feelings and disposition.
For
this reason the custom should be followed in every school as
faithfully as possible — wherever possible — of the
teacher retaining his same pupils; of taking them over for the
first form, of keeping them the next year in the second form,
of going up with them again in the third year, etc., as far as
this is possible in conjunction with outside regulations. The
teacher, after finishing with the eighth class, should then
begin anew with the first class. For one must sometimes be able
to come back years later in a positive way to what was
instilled into the children's souls years before. In any case,
the formation of the disposition or feeling life suffers
greatly when the children are passed every year to a fresh
teacher who cannot himself develop what he instilled into
children in earlier years. It is part of the teaching method
itself that the teacher should go up with his own pupils
through the different school-stages. Only in this way can we
enter into the rhythm of life. And in the most comprehensive
sense life has a rhythm. This manifests itself even in everyday
decisions, in the rhythm of day to day itself. If you have
accustomed yourself, for instance, only for a week, to eat a
buttered roll every day at half-past ten in the morning, you
will probably feel hungry for the buttered roll at the same
time in the second week. The human organism conforms as closely
as this to a rhythm. But not only the external organism, but
the whole being, is rhythmically organized. For this reason,
too, it is a good thing throughout life as a whole — and
that is what we are concerned with when we educate and teach
children — to be able to attend to rhythmical repetition.
For this reason we do well to think that even every year is not
too often to return to quite definite educational themes.
Therefore select subjects for the children, make a note of
them, and come back to something similar every year. Even in
more abstract things this method can be followed. You teach,
let us say, in a way suited to the child's disposition,
addition in the first school year; you come back to addition in
the second, and teach more about it, and in the third year you
return to it in the same way, so that the same act takes place
repeatedly, but in progressive repetition.
To
enter like this into the rhythm of life is of quite particular
importance for all education and teaching — far more
important than continuously repeating: Do build up your lessons
according to the principle of meaning — thus
inartistically pulling to bits whatever you deal with. You can
only divine what is demanded here by gradually developing a
feeling for life itself. But you will then part company very
markedly, precisely as educationists, from the external
experimental aims so frequent to-day even in education. Again,
not to condemn, but to correct, certain tendencies which have
proved detrimental to our spiritual culture, do I emphasize
these things. You can embark on modern textbooks of education
where the results are worked out which have been obtained
through experiments on memory. The “subjects”
— people experimented upon — are treated in a
strange way. Tests are made on them to show how they can
remember something of which they have understood the meaning;
then they are given words written one after the other with no
connecting sense, and they have to learn these, etc. These
experiments for ascertaining the laws of the memory are
practised very extensively to-day. Again a result has
been obtained which is committed to formulae in scientific
form. Just as, for instance, in physics, the Law of Gay-Lussac,
among others, is formulated, people are anxious to
formulate such laws in experimental education or
psychology. You find, for example, very learnedly expounded,
the gist of conclusions about a certain scientific yearning
which is quite justified, namely, to prove the existence of
types of memory. Firstly, the quickly or slowly assimilating
memory; secondly, the quickly or slowly reproducing memory. So
a “subject” is tormented to furnish evidence for
the fact that there are people who memorize easily and people
who memorize with difficulty; then other “subjects”
are tormented to prove that there are people who can call back
to mind easily, and people who can call back to mind only with
difficulty, what they have once learnt. Now it has been
determined by research that there are such types of memory;
those showing a rapid or a slow assimilation, and those showing
an easy or painful recollection or reproduction of what was
assimilated. Thirdly, there are also types of memory
which can be called “true and exact;” fourthly,
there is a comprehensive memory; fifthly, a retentive and
reliable memory, in opposition to the type which easily
forgets. This answers very satisfactorily to the craving of
modern science to systematize. The scientific result has now
been obtained. We can ask: “What has been discovered
scientifically in exact psychology about the types of
memory?” And we learn: firstly, there is a type of memory
which assimilates easily or laboriously; secondly, a type which
reproduces easily or laboriously; thirdly, there is a true or
exact memory; fourthly, a comprehensive memory, that is, there
are people who can remember great passages of prose in contrast
to those who can only remember short ones; fifthly, a retentive
memory, which has perhaps remembered things from years ago, in
contrast to the kind which forgets quickly.
This scientific method of observation scrupulously and very
conscientiously maltreats innumerable victims, and sets to work
most ingeniously to obtain results, in order that education,
too, after having tested the children in experimental
psychology, may know what various types of memory are to be
differentiated. But with all due respect for such a science, I
should like to make the following objection. Anyone
endowed with a little sound common sense must know that there
are people who commit things to memory easily or with
difficulty; there are also those who easily or laboriously
recall things once known, and again there are people who can
recount things truly and accurately, in contrast to those who
muddle everything they try to tell. There are people with an
extensive memory, who can remember a long story, in contrast to
those who can only remember a short one; and there are also
people who can remember a thing for a long time, even years,
and people who have forgotten everything in a week! It is part,
in fact, of the fairly ancient wisdom of sound common sense,
but it is discovered again in a science which inspires us with
respect, because the methods which it applies are so
ingenious.
There are two conclusions to be drawn from this: firstly, let
us, above all, prefer to cultivate sound common sense in
education and teaching, rather than expend it on such
experimenting, which will, it is true, develop ingenuity very
considerably, but which will not bring the teacher in touch
with the quality of individuality in the child. But we can also
draw a second conclusion: our age is actually in a sorry plight
if we have to assume that the people who are going to become
our teachers and educators have so little healthy human
intelligence that they can only learn in this roundabout
way that there are the different kinds of memory which we have
just mentioned. Moreover, these things must undoubtedly be
considered symptoms of the state of our present spiritual
standard.
I
had to draw your attention to these things. For people will say
to you: “Well, you have let yourself be appointed at this
Waldorf School. It is only a dilettante institution; the people
there don't even want to know anything about the greatest
conquest of our time: about the methods of experimental
psychology. The study of this experimental psychological method
is for experts, but the methods of the Waldorf School are
quackery in comparison!” You will have to realize that
you will sometimes have to acknowledge the connection of
science — which must not be respected any the less for
that — with what remains to be built up by us on an inner
educational theory and method, but which, compared with the
external relations which are set up by experiment, inspires an
inner loving attentiveness towards the child. Certainly this
quality has not completely disappeared; it prevails even
more than is realized. But it definitely prevails in opposition
to the ever-encroaching aims of scientific educational theory.
To a certain extent it is true that the pursuit of science can
destroy a good deal in modern life, but it has not the power to
drive out all healthy human intelligence. This healthy human
intelligence or sound common sense should be our
starting-point, and when this is properly cultivated it will
produce an inner connection with the ideals of teaching. We
must realize, of course, that we live at the beginning of a new
age, and we must completely master this fact. Down to the
middle of the fifteenth century the surviving traditions of the
Greek and Latin-Roman times were preserved. After the middle of
the fifteenth century these are only the clattering after
traditional repetition. But the people whose life is in
this “clattering” still feel, in certain
sub-regions of their consciousness, the craving to return to
the Graeco-Latin age, which we can admire profoundly in its
place, of course, but whose persistence into our age is no
longer a living thing. Just think for a moment how
self-satisfied the person is in these days, who has learnt
something and can descant on it in the following terms:
“A good teacher must not merely bring out the rhythm, and
the rhyme in a poem; he must comment technically on the
text; he must introduce the meaning, and only when he has
unravelled the meaning will the pupils absorb it as an inner
activity.” After such a person has long held forth on the
importance of starting with the meaning, he concludes with:
“As the old Latin said: rem tene, verba
sequuntur, if you have understood the question,
words will follow of themselves.” These are tactics which
you will frequently find in people who imagine that they have
learnt a great deal, that they have gone far beyond
dilettantism in enunciating something first as a piece of
sublime contemporary wisdom, and then following it up with,
“as the old Latin said. ...” And, of course, he has
only to say it in Greek for people to believe implicitly that
it is something quite extraordinary. For the fourth
post-Atlantean period of civilization, this attitude was
desirable; it is unbecoming in our age. The Greek did not
introduce his children, first of all, to old grammar schools
where they could learn, let us say, ancient Egyptian; he made
them learn Greek. But to-day we begin by introducing people to
ancient tongues before their own. That is a fact which must be
realized.
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