ABSTRACT

Waldorf Education: An all-round, balanced approach to education that is equally concerned with intellectual-cognitive and artistic-creative learning. A practice- and experience-based pedagogy. Non-selective and open to all children and young people; offering a stress-free, secure learning environment across 12 grades; embedded in a community of students, teachers, and parents. An alternative education that has been successfully practiced for over a century.

The first Waldorf School was founded in Stuttgart, Germany, in 1919. Today, Waldorf Education is practiced in all countries and cultures around the world: in over 1,000 schools, more than 2,000 kindergartens, and numerous centers for special needs education. This makes Waldorf Education the most prevalent alternative approach to teaching. And yet, despite the success and (now empirically validated) recognition that Waldorf schools enjoy, the theory underlying them remains controversial. Within the academic debate, Waldorf Education is seen as ideologic and unscientific.

This publication sets out to bring clarity to this debate: Renowned researchers explain and discuss Waldorf Education’s foundations in relation to the current discourse on education and core disciplines such as theory of knowledge, anthropology, developmental psychology, learning theory, and the theory of professions. This scientific inquiry into Waldorf Education is breaking new ground, casting light on its fascinating humanistic ideal and holistic potential.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|36 pages

Epistemology

chapter Chapter 2|46 pages

Anthropology

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter |17 pages

Freedom as an Anthropological Perspective

On the Concept of Man in Waldorf Education

chapter Chapter 3|108 pages

Developmental Psychology

chapter Chapter 4|66 pages

Learning Theory

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |23 pages

Waldorf Education and Learning Research

Convergences and Differences

chapter |12 pages

Learning in Waldorf Education

chapter Chapter 5|50 pages

The Art of Teaching

chapter |16 pages

The Waldorf Curriculum

Curriculum, Teaching Plan, or Guideline?

chapter Chapter 6|38 pages

Theory of Professions

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter |9 pages

Teacher Competencies and Professional Success

Ex-post Findings from Dirk Randoll's Waldorf Teacher Study

chapter |11 pages

The Teacher's Path of Development

Toward Mindfulness in Education

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |17 pages

Education Reform and Waldorf Education

Interpreting a Historically Difficult Relationship

chapter Chapter 9|69 pages

Individual Topics