IF
you were to look back at
the time-tables which were issued fifty or sixty years ago, you
would see that they were comparatively short. A few short
sentences summarized the ground to be covered in every school
year in the different subjects. The time-tables were at the
most two or three or four pages long — all the rest in
those days was left to the actual process of teaching itself,
for this out of its own powers should stimulate teachers to do
the part left to them by the curricula. To-day things are
different. To-day the syllabus for the schools has more and
more increased. The Official Gazette has become a
collection of books. And in this book there is not only a
suggestion of what is required, but there are all kinds of
instructions as to how things should be taught at school. That
is, in the last decades people were on the way to letting State
legislation swallow up the theory of education. And perhaps it
is an ideal of many a legislator gradually to issue as
“Official Publication,” as “Decrees and
Regulations” all the material formerly contained in old
literary works on pedagogy. The Socialist leaders quite
definitely feel this subconscious impulse — however
ashamed they may be to admit it; their ideal is to introduce in
the form of decrees what was until recently common spiritual
property even in the sphere of education.
For
this reason those of us here who wish to preserve the
educational and teaching system from the collapse which has
overtaken it under Lenin — and which might overtake
Central Europe — must approach the curriculum with a
quite different understanding from that in which the ordinary
teacher approaches the Official Gazette. This, even in
the days of the monarchy and in the days of ordinary democratic
Parliamentarianism, he has solemnly studied, but he will study
it with feelings of greater obedience if it is sent to his
house by his Dictator-Comrades. The potential tyranny of
socialism would be felt quite particularly in the sphere of
teaching and education. We have had to approach the curriculum
differently.
That is, it has been incumbent on us to approach this
curriculum with an attitude of mind which enabled us really to
create it for ourselves at every turn, so that we learnt to
tell the needs of all children at any age. Let us put side by
side this ideal curriculum and the curriculum at present in use
in other schools of Central Europe. This we shall do and we
shall have prepared ourselves thoroughly for this estimate if
we have really assimilated into our feelings all that we should
absorb on the way to an understanding of a
curriculum.
Here, again, is a very important aspect which is falsely
estimated in these days in official pedagogy. I concluded my
last lecture
[See
Allgemeine Menschenkunde als Grundlage der Pädagogik,
Lecture 14.]
with a direct talk on the
“Morality of Educational Theory;”
the moral tendencies which must be the basis of all pedagogy.
It will only result in the practice of teaching if the many
examples given in modern books on didactics are ignored. These
speak of “object lessons.” They are quite sound,
and we have referred to the way in which they should be
conducted. But we have constantly had to emphasize the fact
that these object lessons should never become trivial, that
they should never exceed a certain limit. This eternal
cross-questioning of the child on self-evident things in the
form of object lessons simply extends a pall of weariness over
the whole of teaching, and this should not be. And it robs
teaching of precisely what I emphasized at the end of my last
lecture
[Ibid.]
as so necessary: the cultivation of the child's
imaginative faculty or the faculty of fantasy. If, for the sake
of giving an object lesson, you discuss with the children the
shape of any cooking utensil you like to choose, you undermine
his imagination. If you describe the shape or origin of a Greek
vase, you may do more for his understanding of what he finds
around him in daily life. Object lessons, as given to-day,
literally stifle the imagination. And you do not do amiss in
teaching if you simply remember to leave many things
unspoken, so that the child is induced to continue
working with his own soul-force on what he has learnt in the
lesson. It is not at all a good thing to want to explain
everything down to the last dot on the “i.”
The child simply leaves the school feeling that he has learnt
everything already, and looking out for other things to do.
Whereas if you have sown his imagination with seeds of life he
remains fascinated by what the lesson offered him and is less
ready to be distracted. That our children to-day are such rough
tomboys is simply due to the fact that we go in for far too
much false object teaching and too little training of the will
and the feelings.
But
in still another respect we really need to identify ourselves
quite inwardly in our souls with the curriculum.
When you receive a child in the first years at the elementary
school he is quite a different being from the same child in the
last years of the school course. In his first years he is still
very much immersed in his body, he is still very much part of
his body. When the child leaves school you must have enabled
him to cling no longer to his body with all the fibres of his
soul, but to be independent of his body in thinking, feeling,
and willing. Try to penetrate rather more deeply into the
nature of the growing being and you will find, relatively
speaking, particularly when the children have not been spoilt
in their very first years, that they still have very sound
instincts. They have then not acquired the craving to stuff
themselves with sweets and so on. They still have certain sound
instincts with regard to their food, as, of course, the animal
too, because he is still very much dominated by his body, has
very good instincts in the matter of his own nourishment. The
animal, just because he is limited to his body, avoids what is
hurtful to him. The animal world is not likely to be overrun by
any evil like the spreading of alcoholic consumption in the
human world. The spread of evils such as alcohol is due to the
fact that man is so much a spiritual being that he can become
independent of his bodily nature. For physical nature, in its
reasonableness, is never tempted to become alcoholic, for
instance. Comparatively sound food instincts are active in the
first years at school. These cease in the interests of human
development with the last years of school life. When puberty
comes upon the individual he loses his food-instincts; he must
find in his reason a substitute for his earlier instincts. That
is why you can still intercept, as it were, the last
manifestations of the food and health instincts in the
last school years of the growing being. Here you can still
steal a march on the last manifestations of the sound
food-instincts, of the instinct of growth, etc. Later you can
no longer find an inner feeling for the right care of food and
health. That is why particularly the last years of the
elementary school course should include instruction in
nourishment and the care of personal health. Precisely in this
connection object lessons should be given. For these object
lessons can reinforce the fantasy or imagination quite
considerably. Put before the child three different substances;
place these before him, or remind him of them, for he has, of
course, already seen them: any substance which is
composed primarily of starch or sugar, a substance
composed primarily of fat, a substance composed primarily of
albumen. The child knows these. But remind him that the human
body owes its activity primarily to these three constituents.
From this explain to him in his last years of school the
secrets of nutrition. Then give him an accurate description of
the breathing and enlarge on every aspect of nutrition and
breathing connected with the care of personal health. You will
gain an enormous amount in your education and teaching if you
undertake this instruction precisely in these years. At
this stage you are just in time to intercept the last
instinctive manifestations of the health and food instincts.
That is why you can teach the child in these years about the
conditions of nutrition and health without making him egoistic
for the rest of his life. It is still natural to him to satisfy
instinctively the conditions of health and nutrition. That is
why he can be talked to about these things and why they still
strike a chord in the natural life of the human being and so do
not make him egoistical. If the children are not taught in
these years about matters of nutrition and health they will
have to inform themselves later from reading or from other
people. What the child learns later, after puberty, about
matters of nutrition and health, makes him egoistic. It cannot
but produce egoism. If you read about nutrition in physiology,
if you read a synopsis of rules about the care of the health,
in the very nature of the case this information makes you more
egoistic than you were before. This egoism, which continually
proceeds from a rationalized knowledge of how to take personal
care of oneself, has to be combated by morality. If we had not
to care for ourselves physically we should not need to have a
morality of the soul. But the human being is less exposed to
the dangers of egoism in later life if he is instructed in
nutrition and health in his last years at the elementary
school, where the teaching is concerned with questions of
nutrition and health rules, and not with egoism — but
with what is natural to man.
You
see what very far-reaching problems of life are involved
in teaching a particular thing at the right moment. You really
provide for the whole of his life if you teach a child what is
right at his particular age. Of course, if one could imbue
children of seven or eight with precepts of nutrition, with
precepts of health, that would be the best way of all. They
would then absorb these rules of nutrition and health in the
most unegoistic way, for they are hardly aware at that moment
that the rules refer to themselves. They would see themselves
as objects, not as subjects. But they cannot understand it so
early. Their power of judgement is not yet sufficiently
developed to be able to understand it. For this reason you
cannot take rules for nutrition and health at this age, and you
must save them up for the last school years, when the fire of
the inner instinct of food and health is already dying down,
and when, in contrast to these dying instincts, there has
already emerged the power to comprehend what comes into
consideration. At every turn it is possible to intermingle for
the older children some reference to rules of health and
nutrition. In natural history, in physics, in the lessons which
expand geography to its full scope, even in history lessons,
every moment lends itself to an opportunity of instruction in
dietetics and health. You will see from this that we do not
need to accept it as a subject in the school time-table, but
that much of our teaching must contain such vitality that it
absorbs this with it. If we have a right feeling for what the
child is to learn — then the child himself, or the
community of children in school, will remind us every day of
what we have to introduce into the rest of our teaching. And
for this purpose we have to cultivate and practise, because we
are teachers, a certain alertness of mind. If we are drilled as
specialists in geography or history we shall not develop this
mental alertness, for then we are exclusively concerned, from
the beginning of the history lesson to the end of the history
lesson, with teaching history. And then there can come into
play those extraordinarily unnatural conditions whose injurious
effects on life are not by any means fully appreciated.
It
is profoundly true that we do the human being a service, and
one that discourages his egoism, when we teach him the rules of
dietetics and health, as I have explained, in the last years at
the elementary school.
But
here, too, it is possible to refer to many aspects which
permeate the whole of teaching with feeling. And if you attach
a certain amount of feeling to every step of your teaching, the
results at which you are aiming will persist throughout life.
But if in the last years at the elementary school you only
teach things of interest to the reason, to the intellect, very
little lasting impression will be made. You will have to
permeate your own self with feeling whenever you give
something to the children in the years from twelve to fourteen.
You must try to teach, not only graphically, but with vivid
feeling, geography, history, natural history, in the last
school years. Imagination or fantasy is not enough without
feeling.
Now
in actual fact the curriculum for the elementary school (aged
seven to fourteen) falls into three distinct periods which we
have traced: first, up to nine years of age, when we introduce
to the growing child chiefly conventionalities, writing,
reading; then up to twelve, when we introduce to him the uses
of this conventionality, and on the other hand to all learning
based on the individual power of judgement. And you have seen
that into this school period we put the study of animals, and
nature-study, because the individual at this stage still has a
certain instinctive feeling for the relationships here
involved. I laid down lines for you on which to develop, from
the cuttle-fish, the mouse, the lamb, and the human being, a
feeling of the relationship of man with the whole of the world
of nature. We have taken great pains, too — and I hope
not in vain, for they will flower and come to fruition in the
teaching of botany — to develop man's relation to the
plant world. These ideas of things must be rooted in feeling
during the middle period of the elementary school course, when
the instincts are still alive to this feeling of intimacy with
the animals, with the plants, and when, after all, even if the
experience never emerges into the ordinary light of reasoning
consciousness, the child feels himself now a cat, now a
wolf, now a lion or an eagle. This identification of oneself
now with one animal, now with the other, only occurs up to
about the age of nine. Before this age it is even more
profound, but it cannot be used, because the power to grasp it
consciously is non-existent. If children are very precocious
and talk a great deal about themselves when they are still only
four or five, their comparisons of themselves with the eagle,
with the mouse, etc., are very common indeed. But if we start
at the ninth year to teach natural history on the lines I have
suggested, we come upon a good deal of the child's instinctive
feeling of relationship with animals. Later this instinctive
feeling ripens into a feeling of relationship with the plant
world. Therefore, first of all the natural history of the
animal kingdom, then the natural history of the plant
kingdom. We leave the minerals till the last because they
require almost exclusively the power of judgement. So it is in
accordance with human nature to arrange the curriculum as
I have suggested. The intermediate school period, from eight to
eleven, presents a fine balance between the instincts and the
powers of discernment. We can always assume that the child will
respond intelligently if we rely on a certain instinctive
understanding, if we are not — especially in natural
history and botany — too obvious. We must avoid drawing
external analogies particularly with the plant world, for that
is really contrary to natural feeling. Natural feeling is
itself predisposed to seek psychic qualities in plants;
not the external physical form of man in this tree or that, but
soul-relations such as we tried to discover in the plant
system.
[See
The Art of Education
(“Erziehungskunst”),
No. 7; Rudolf Steiner,
The Training of Teachers
(“Pädagogisches Seminar”).]
And
the actual power of discernment, the rational,
intellectual comprehension of the human being which can
be relied on, belongs to the last school period. For this
reason we employ precisely the twelfth year in the child's
life, when he is gravitating in the direction of the power of
discernment, for merging this power of judgement in the
activities still partly prompted by instinct, but already very
thickly overlaid with discerning power. These are, as it were,
the twilight instincts of the soul, which we must overcome by
the power of judgement.
At
this stage it must be remembered that man has an instinct for
gain, for profiteering, for the principle of discount,
etc., which appeals to the instincts. But we must be sure to
impose the power of discernment very forcibly upon this, and
consequently we must use this stage of development for studying
the relations existing between calculation and the circulation
of commodities and finance, that is, for doing percentage sums,
interest sums, discount sums, etc.
It
is very important not to give the child these ideas too late,
for that would really be appealing to his egoism. We are not
yet reckoning on his egoism if we teach him at about the age of
twelve to grasp to some extent the principle of promissory
notes and so on, commercial calculations, etc. Actual
book-keeping could be studied later; this already requires more
intelligence. But it is very important to bring out these ideas
at this stage. For the inner selfish appetite for interest,
bills of exchange, promissory notes, and so on, is not yet
awake in the child at this tender age. These things are more
serious in the commercial schools when he is older.
You
must absorb these facts quite completely into your being as
instructors, as teachers. Try not to do too much, whatever your
inclination may be, let us say, in describing plants. Try to
teach about plants so that a great deal is left to the child's
imagination, that the child can still imagine for himself, in
terms of his own feeling, the psychic relations prevailing
between the human soul and the plant world. The person who
enthuses too freely on object lessons does not know that there
are things to be taught which cannot be studied externally. And
when people try to teach the child by object lessons things
which ought only to be taught through moral influence and
through the feelings, this very object teaching does him harm.
We must never forget, you see, that mere observation and
illustration are a very pronounced by-product of the
materialistic spirit of our age. Naturally, observation must be
cultivated in its proper place, but you must not apply the
method when it would only spoil the intimate relation between
the child and the world in the sphere of his imaginative
mind.
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