Primary
School
The Class Teacher
Children enter the primary
school in the year they turn 7, coming into the care of their Class
Teacher who will have the responsibility
of guiding them through the next 7 years. A strong, positive relationship
usually develops between the teacher and the child, which carries
the education of the child in a healthy way. The child’s inner
need for trust in the authority of the teacher is met by this relationship
and a sense of respect and love for their teacher calls them to strive
for their best. In turn the teacher draws on their intimate understanding
of the children to guide them through the stormy seas of change that
manifest at particular stages through this time.
In the first year
of the primary school the children's powers of understanding and
memory are ready for more direct teaching of subjects,
including writing, reading and arithmetic. Such subjects are introduced
through stories out of which the skills and concepts to be learned
are abstracted. This allows the children to form an active connection
to the subject through their imagination and their feelings, which
will ripen in the high school into a capacity for flexible, original
thinking.
The Rhythym of the Day
Much of the academic work is done during the first two hours
of school when the children are at their freshest. This period, called
the main lesson, is taken by the class teacher and includes some
time for activities such as singing, speech work, recorder playing,
rhythmic movement games, concentration exercises, drawing and writing
which extend and consolidate the subject being taught. A particular
subject will be taught every morning for 3 - 4 weeks, then a new
subject will be introduced. In this way, students are able to thoroughly
immerse themselves in a rich and diverse picture of the subject being
taught, and to explore it intellectually, artistically and practically
where possible, and it may also be echoed in other lessons throughout
the day.
The middle lessons of the day work more with the artistic
element,
and include music, painting and drawing, eurythmy, form drawing,
foreign languages, (German and Japanese), and practice lessons for
language and maths.
The afternoon lessons bring in the more practical, active element
and include handwork, gardening, games and sport.
It would be neither
possible nor desirable for the class teacher to teach all subjects.
Some subjects, such as eurythmy and foreign
languages, require the skill of specialist teachers and these teachers
play an important role in the life of the school.
The Primary School
Curriculum
In the first two years, time is given to build secure foundations
for literacy and numeracy, and interest in the world. Work is done
to develop the senses, concentration and continue the mastery of
the physical body which was fostered in kindergarten. Main lessons
generally cover three areas each term: writing and reading, arithmetic
and studies of their environment. Writing is taught through painting
and drawing and reading is taught through writing. Ample time is
given for this process so it is common for children to be coming
to the skill of reading only in Class 2. With numbers, the concrete
processes are taught before an attempt is made to work abstractly.
Studies
of their environment awakens children to their surroundings through stories
and activities based on the seasons and rhythms of
nature, which are furthered through the celebration of seasonal festivals
in the school.

A mandala prepared from grain and produce for the Harvest Festival
In Class 3, children turn nine, and at this age there is an
interest in the way people make their home in the world. Practical
subjects are introduced - farming and gardening,
house building, and measurement, where the children grow and harvest
and bake and build. This allows
them to experience how we can work with our world to provide ourselves
with food, clothing and shelter. Ideas of ecology and our dependence
on the earth and each other for our existence, ripple through such
studies without being taught formally.
In Class 4, further changes
occur in the awareness of the children and their interest in the
world and more formal study of geography
and natural science are introduced. Geography begins
with a study of their local area. The physical environment is mapped
and a sense
of the connection to adjoining regions through rivers, roads, mountain
ranges and so on emerges. Something of the history of the place,
the original inhabitants, settlement by later peoples, development
of agriculture or industry is taught through stories of the people
themselves. The beginnings made here with geography widen the students’ gaze
in subsequent years to regions, countries and continents, till eventually
by Class 8, the world is embraced.
Natural science begins in Class 4 with a study
of the animal world in relation to the human being. Here the picture
emerges of the amazing
specialization that occurs in animals that adapts them to their specific
environment, whereas the human being, while not developing special
physical attributes, retains many possibilities. Throughout the sciences
an approach of observation is adopted, so that the children are brought
to appreciate a wide variety of phenomena with a sense of awe and
wonder.
In Class 5, the world of plants is entered, while Class 6
brings studies in the mineral world and the first study of physics through
the phenomena of light, sound, heat, electricity and magnetism. Chemistry begins
in Class 7, setting the stage for all the sciences to be continued
throughout the high school.
History as a subject
in itself begins in Class 5. Before then the children have experienced
a wide range of stories, mythologies and
legends from the world’s rich treasury. Now a study of ancient
cultures, India, Persia, Egypt, and Greece opens a window into our
western cultural heritage, that continues into Rome and Medieval
times in Class 6, the Renaissance in Class 7, and reaches the modern
age in Class 8. Stories of Australian Aboriginal life and culture
weave through different main lessons from Class 1, at times becoming
the focus of a complete main lesson. Stories from other indigenous
cultures are likewise told from time to time in an appropriate context.
Music takes
a natural part in the school day with singing and rhythmical games.
The children are taught the pentatonic recorder and sometimes
the lyre in Class 1. In Class 3 they move onto the descant recorder
and all students learn the violin or viola through the school’s
strings program for Class 3 and 4. Musical notation is first introduced
in Class 3, while the primary school orchestra begins in Class 5.
Art, like music, weaves throughout many subjects
in the younger years. Painting and drawing begin in Class 1 through
imitation and
colour exercises. By Class 7 the children study perspective, shaded
drawing and veil and fresco painting. Modelling with beeswax or clay
is often integrated into the theme of the main lesson.
German and Japanese are taught from Class 1, at
first through song and play and cultural activities. By employing
native-speaking specialists
where possible, excellent pronunciation is encouraged from an early
age, and the teachers can bring a love for the games, songs and stories
from their own childhood Slowly the children are led to a more formal
study of grammar and reading in Class 4, while an appreciation for
the culture continues to be nurtured.
Craft activities begin with sewing and knitting
in Class 1 and continue throughout the primary school with crochet,
weaving, dyeing and design,
moving into woodwork by Class 6. Boys and girls learn all skills,
which increase in complexity from year to year.
Eurythmy is the art of bringing speech and music
into movement. Each consonant, each vowel, each tone, each interval
has its own gesture
and movement. The practice of eurythmy, which begins in kindergarten
and continues through to Year 12, helps the children with co-ordination,
spatial awareness, listening and social skills, graceful movement
and deepens their appreciation of music and the spoken word.
Games begin in Class 1 as the simple and enjoyable
games of childhood that encourage co-ordination, social awareness,
and security in the
physical body. They lead on to gymnastics or circus skills (where
possible) around Class 3 and sport from Class 6.
Drama
is simple story plays, puppet shows and the like in Class 1, but
moves on to performance of stories, often from the main lesson,
as a formed play in the older classes.
Gardening is part of class activities in the younger classes, becoming
a structured lesson from Class 6.
Throughout the primary and high
school, what is taught when is guided by the inner developmental
stages of the students.
