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Soul Economy
Body, Soul and Spirit in Waldorf Education
GA 303

30 December 1921, Stuttgart

VIII. The Waldorf School

Looking back at the past several meetings of this conference, I feel it is necessary to digress a little from our planned program and tell you something about the practical aspects of Waldorf education. From what you have heard so far, you may have gathered that the key to this form of education, both in its curriculum and in its methods, is the understanding of the human constitution of body, soul, and spirit as it develops throughout life. In order to follow this principle, it was necessary to take a new look at education in general, with the result that the Waldorf school is, in many ways, run very differently from traditional schools.

The first point we had to consider was how to make the most of the available time for teaching, especially in regard to the development of the student’s soul life. The usual practice is to split up the available time into many separate lessons, but this method does not bring enough depth and focus to the various subjects. For example, suppose you want to bring something to your students that will have lasting value for them, something they can take into later life. I will use the example of a subject taught in almost every school: history. Imagine that you want to introduce the era of Queen Elizabeth I, including the main events and people usually described to children. A teacher could do this by talking about the facts of that historical period in history lessons, and it might take, say, half a year. But you can also do this in a different way. After methodical preparation at home, a teacher can cultivate within a fine feeling for the salient facts, which then become a kind of framework for this period. The teacher allows these to work upon the soul, thus enabling the students to remember them without much difficulty. All additional material will then fall into place more or less naturally. If one masters the subject in this way, we can say without exaggerating that, in only three to four lessons, it is quite possible to give students something that might otherwise take half a year, and even in greater depth so that the students retain a lasting impression of the subject.

If you do a detailed survey of all that children are supposed to learn in school today, you will agree with the method I just described. In our present state of civilization, what our children are supposed to learn by the age of fourteen is such an accumulation of material that it is really beyond their capacity to absorb it all. No school is truly successful in teaching this much, but this fact is usually ignored. People merely pretend that the present system works, and the curricula are set accordingly.

The aim of Waldorf education is to arrange all of the teaching so that within the shortest possible time the maximum amount of material can be presented to students by the simplest means possible. This helps children retain an overall view of their subjects—not so much intellectually, but very much in their feeling life.

It is obvious that such a method makes tremendous demands on teachers. I am convinced that, if teachers apply this method (which I would call a form of teaching based on “soul economy”), they will have to spend at least two or three hours of concentrated preparation for each half hour they teach. And they must be willing to do this if they want to avoid harming their students. Such preparation may not always be practical or possible, but if the teacher wants to succeed in carrying a comprehensive and living presentation of the subject into the classroom, such private preparation is fundamental. It does make great demands on teachers, but such obligations are intrinsic to this calling and must be accepted in the best way possible.

Before we could practice this basic educational principle in our newly established Waldorf school, it was necessary to create a suitable curriculum and a schedule. Today I would like to outline this curriculum and its application, but without going into details, since this will be our task during the coming days.

And so, having prepared themselves as just described, the teachers enter the school in the morning. The students arrive a little earlier in the summer, at eight o’clock, and a little later in the winter. When they assemble in their classrooms, the teachers bring them together by saying a morning verse in chorus with the whole class. This verse, which could also be sung, embraces both a general human and a religious element, and it unites the students in a mood of prayer. It may be followed by a genuine prayer. In our “free” Waldorf school, such details are left entirely up to each teacher.

Then begins our so-called main lesson, which lasts nearly two hours; in traditional schedules, these are often broken up into smaller periods. But the principle of soul economy in teaching makes it necessary to alter the conventional schedule. Thus, during the first two hours of the morning, students are taught the same subject in “block” periods, each lasting four to six weeks. It is left to the class teacher to introduce a short break during the main lesson, which is essential in the younger classes. In this way, subjects like geography or arithmetic are taught for four to six weeks at a time. After that, another main lesson subject is studied, again for a block period, rather than as shorter lessons given at regular intervals through the year.

Thus one introduces the various main lesson subjects according to the principles we agreed on, which include a carefully planned economy of the children’s soul life. At all costs, one must avoid too much stress on the mind and soul of the child. Children should never feel that lessons are too difficult; on the contrary, there should be a longing in the child to keep moving from one step to the next. Students should never experience an arbitrary break in a subject; one thing should always lead to another. During the four to six weeks of a main lesson block, the class teacher will always try to present the material as a complete chapter—an artistic whole—that children can take into later life. And it goes without saying that, toward the end of the school year before the approaching summer holidays, all the main lesson subjects taught during the year should be woven together into a short, artistic recapitulation.

Just as we provide children with clothing with enough room for their limbs to grow freely, as teachers we should respond to their inner needs by giving them material not just for their present stage but broad enough for further expansion. If we give children fixed and finished concepts, we do not allow for inner growth and maturing. Therefore all the concepts we introduce, all the feelings we invoke, and all will impulses we give must be treated with the same care and foresight we use to clothe our children. We should not expect them to remember abstract definitions for the rest of their lives. At the age of forty-five, your little finger will not be the same as it was when you were eight, and likewise, concepts introduced at the age of eight should not remain unchanged by the time students reach the age of forty-five. We must approach the child’s organism so that the various members can grow and expand. We must not clothe our material in fixed and stiff forms so that, when our students reach forty-five, they remember it exactly as it was presented in their eighth or ninth year. This, however, is possible only if we present our subject with what I call “soul economy.” During the remaining hours of the morning, the other lessons are taught, and here foreign languages play the most important part. They are introduced in grade one, when the children first enter the Waldorf school in their sixth and seventh year. Foreign languages are presented so that the children can really go into them, which means that, while teaching a language, the teacher tries to avoid using the children’s native language.

The foreign language teacher naturally has to take into account that the students are older than they were when they first learned their own language and will arrange the lessons accordingly. This is essential to keep in harmony with the student’s age and development. The children should be able to get into the language so that they do not inwardly translate from their native tongue into the foreign language whenever they want to say something. Jumping from one language to the other should be avoided at all costs. If, for example, you want to introduce a particular word such as table or window, you would not mention the corresponding word in the child’s native language but indicate the object while saying the word clearly. Thus children learn the new language directly before learning to translate words, which might not be desirable at all. We have found that, during the early stages, if we avoid the usual grammar and all that this entails, children find their way into a new language in a natural and living way. More details will be given when we speak about the various ages, but for now I wanted to give you a general picture of the practical arrangements in the Waldorf school.

Another very important subject for this stage is handwork, which includes several crafts. Because the Waldorf school is coeducational, boys and girls share these lessons, and it is indeed a heart-warming sight to see the young boys and girls busy together engaged in knitting, crocheting, and similar activities. Experience shows that, although boys have a different relationship to knitting than do girls, they enjoy it and benefit from such activity. Working together this way has certainly helped in the general development of all the students. In craft lessons that involve heavier physical work, girls also participate fully. This is the way manual skills are developed and nurtured in our school.

Another subject taught during morning sessions could be called “worldview.” Please understand that a Waldorf school—or any school that might spring from the anthroposophic movement—would never wish to teach anthroposophy as it exists today. I would consider this the worst thing we could do. Anthroposophy in its present form is a subject for adults and, as you can see from the color of their hair, often quite mature adults. Consequently, spiritual science is presented through literature and word of mouth in a form appropriate only to adults. I should consider the presentation to students of anything from my books Theosophy or How to Know Higher Worlds the worst possible use of this material; it simply must not happen. If we taught such material, which is totally unsuitable for schoolchildren (forgive a somewhat trivial expression used in German), we would make them want “to jump out of their skin.” Naturally, in class lessons they would have to submit to whatever the teacher brings, but inwardly they would experience such an urge. Anthroposophy as such is not to be taught in a Waldorf school. It’s important that spiritual science does not become mere theory or a worldview based on certain ideas; rather, it should become a way of life, involving the entire human being. Thus, when teachers who are anthroposophists enter school, they should have developed themselves so that they are multifaceted and skillful in the art of education. And it is this achievement that is important, not any desire to bring anthroposophy to your students.

Waldorf education is meant to be pragmatic. It is meant to be a place where anthroposophic knowledge is applied in a practical way. If you have made such a worldview your own and linked it to practical life, you will not become theoretical and alienated from life but a skilled and capable person. I do not mean to say that all members of the anthroposophic movement have actually reached these goals—far from it. I happen to know that there are still some men among our members who cannot even sew on a trouser button that fell off. And no one suffering from such a shortcoming could be considered a full human being. Above all, there are still members who do not fully accept the contention that you cannot be a real philosopher if you cannot apply your hands to anything—such as repairing your shoes—if the need arises. This may sound a bit exaggerated, but I hope you know what I am trying to say.

Those who must deal with theoretical work should place themselves within practical life even more firmly than those who happen to be tailors, cobblers, or engineers. In my opinion, imparting theoretical knowledge is acceptable only when the other person is well versed in the practical matters of life; otherwise, such ideas remain alien to life. By approaching the classroom through anthroposophic knowledge, teachers as artists should develop the ability to find the right solutions to the needs of the children. If teachers carry such an attitude into the classroom, together with the fruits of their endeavors, they will also be guided in particular situations by a sound pedagogical instinct. This, however, is seldom the case in the conventional education today.

Please do not mistake these remarks as criticism against any teachers. Those who belong to the teaching profession will be the first to experience the truth of what has been said. In their own limitations, they may well feel they are the victims of prevailing conditions. The mere fact that they themselves had to suffer the martyrdom of a high school education may be enough to prevent them from breaking through many great hindrances. The most important thing while teaching is the ability to meet constantly changing classroom situations that arise from the immediate responses of one’s students. But who in this wide world trains teachers to do that? Are they not trained to decide ahead of time what they will teach? This often gives me the impression that children are not considered at all during educational deliberations. Such an attitude is like turning students into papier-mâché masks as they enter school, so that teachers can deal with masks instead of real children.

As mentioned before, it is not our goal to teach ideology in the Waldorf school, though such a thought might easily occur to people when hearing that anthroposophists have established a new school. Our goal is to carry our understanding gained through spiritual science right into practical teaching.

This is why I was willing to hand over the responsibility for religion lessons to those who represent the various religions. Religion, after all, is at the very core of a person’s worldview. Consequently, in our Waldorf school, a Roman Catholic priest was asked to give Roman Catholic religion lessons to students of that denomination, and a Protestant minister teaches Protestant religion lessons. When this decision was made, we were not afraid that we would be unable to balance any outer influence brought into the school by these priests, influence that might not be in harmony with what we were trying to do. But then a somewhat unexpected situation arose. When our friend Emil Molt established the Waldorf school, most of our students were from the homes of workers at his factory. Among them were many children whose parents are atheists, and if they had been sent to another school, they would not have received religious instruction at all. As such things often happen when dealing with children and parents, gradually these children also wanted to receive some form of religion lessons. And this is how our free, non-denominational, religion lessons came about. These were given by our own teachers, just as the other religious lessons were given by ministers. The teachers were recognized by us as religious teachers in the Waldorf curriculum. Thus, anthroposophic religious lessons were introduced in our school. These lessons have come to mean a great deal to many of our students, especially the factory workers’ children.

However, all this brought specific problems in its wake, because anthroposophy is for adults. If, therefore, teachers want to bring the right material into anthroposophic religious lessons, they must recreate it fresh, and this is no easy task. It means reshaping and transforming anthroposophic material to make it suitable for the various age groups. In fact, this task of changing a modern philosophy to suit young people occupies us a great deal. It means working deeply on fundamental issues, such as how the use of certain symbols might affect students, or how one deals with the imponderables inherent in such a situation. We will speak more about this later on.

I am sure you can appreciate that one has to make all kinds of compromises in a school that tries to base its curriculum on the needs of growing children in the light of a spiritual scientific knowledge of the human being. Today it would be quite impossible to teach children according to abstract educational ideas, subsequently called the “principles of Waldorf education.” The result of such a misguided approach would be that our graduates would be unable to find their way into life. It is too easy to criticize life today. Most people meet unpleasant aspects of life every day and we are easily tempted to make clever suggestions about how to put the world in order. But it completely inappropriate to educate children so that, when they leave school to enter life, they can only criticize the senselessness of what they find. However imperfect life may be according to abstract reason, we must nevertheless be able to play our full part in it. Waldorf students—who have probably been treated more as individuals than is usually the case—have to be sent out into life; otherwise, having a Waldorf school makes no sense at all. Students must not become estranged from contemporary life to the extent that they can only criticize what they meet outside.

This I can only touch on here. From the very beginning, we had to make the most varied compromises, even in our curriculum and pedagogical goals. As soon as the school was founded, I sent a memorandum to the educational authorities and requested that our students be taught according to the principles of Waldorf education, from the sixth or seventh year until the completion of their ninth year, or the end of the third class, without any outside interference. I meant that the planning of the curriculum and the standards to be achieved, as well as the teaching methods, were to be left entirely in the hands of our teaching staff, the “college of teachers,” which would bear the ultimate responsibility for the running of the school.

In my letter to the authorities, I stated that, on completion of the third school year, our students would have reached the same standards of basic education as those achieved in other schools, and thus would be able to change schools without difficulty. This implies that a child with a broader educational background than the students in this new class will nevertheless be able to fit into any new surroundings, and that such a student will not have lost touch with life in general. For us, it is not only important that teachers know their students well, but that there is also a corresponding relationship between the entire body of teachers and all the students of the school, so that students will feel free to contact any teacher for guidance or advice. It is a real joy, every time one enters the Waldorf school, to see how friendly and trusting the students are, not only with their class teachers but with all the teachers, both in and out of class.

Similarly, I said that our teaching between the end of the ninth and twelfth years—from the end of class three to the end of class six—is intended to achieve standards comparable with those of other schools and that our students would be able to enter seventh grade in another school without falling behind. We do not wish to be fanatical and, therefore, we had to make compromises. Waldorf teachers must always be willing to cope with the practical problems of life. And if a student has to leave our school at the age of fourteen, there should be no problems when entering a high school or any other school leading to a university entrance examination. So we try to put into practice what has been described.

Now, having established our school through the age of fourteen, every year we are adding a new class, so that we will eventually be able to offer the full range of secondary education leading to higher education. This means that we have to plan our curriculum so that young people will be able to take their graduation exams. In Austria, this exam is called a “maturity exam,” in Germany Abitur, and other countries have other names. In any case, our students are given the possibility of entering other schools of higher education. There is still no possibility that we will open a vocational school or university. Whatever we might try to do in this way would always bear the stamp of a private initiative, and, because we should never want to hold official examinations, no government would grant us permission to issue certificates of education without test results. Thus, we are forced to compromise in our Waldorf plan, and we are perfectly willing to acknowledge this. What matters is that, despite all the compromises, a genuine Waldorf spirit lives in our teaching, and this as much as possible.

Because we wanted a complete junior school when we opened our Waldorf school, we had to receive some students from other schools, and this gave us plenty of opportunity to witness the fruits of the “strict discipline” that characterizes other schools. At this point, we have a little more than two years of “Waldorf discipline” behind us, which, to a large extent, consists of our trying to get rid of the ordinary sort of school discipline. For example, just a few weeks ago we laid the foundation stone for a larger school building; until now, we have had to make do with provisional classrooms. To my mind, it seemed right that all our children would take part in this stone-laying ceremony. And, as so often happens in life, things took a little longer than anticipated, and by the time we were just getting ready for the actual ceremony, our students were already in the building. First I had to meet teachers and several others, but the children were there already. The adults had to meet in our so-called staff room. What could we to do with all those children? The chair of the college of teachers simply said, “We’ll send them back to their classrooms. They have now reached a stage where we can leave them unattended without bad consequences. They won’t disturb us.”

So, despite the dubious “discipline” imported from other schools, and despite having rid ourselves of so-called school discipline, it was possible to send the students to their classrooms without any disturbance. Admittedly, this peace was somewhat ephemeral; overly sensitive ears might have been offended, but that did not matter. Children who disturb overly sensitive ears are usually not overly disciplined. At any rate, the effects of imponderables in the Waldorf school became apparent in the children’s good behavior under these unusual circumstances.

As you know, various kinds of punishments are administered in most schools, and we, too, had to find ways to deal with this problem. When we discussed the question of punishment in one of our teacher meetings, one of our teachers reported an interesting incident. He had tried to discover the effects of certain forms of punishment on his students. His students had experienced our kind of discipline for some time, and among them there were a few notorious rascals. These little good-fornothings (as such students are called in Germany) had done very poor work, and they were to be punished according to usual school discipline and given detention. They were told to stay after lessons to do their arithmetic properly. However, when this punishment was announced in class, the other students protested that they, too, wanted to stay and do extra arithmetic because it is so much fun. So you see, the concept of punishment had gone through a complete transformation; it had become something the whole class enjoyed. Such things rarely happen if teachers try to make them happen directly, but they become the natural consequences of the right approach.

I am well aware that the problem of school discipline occupies many minds today. I had the opportunity to closely observe the importance of the relationship between a teacher and his students, a relationship that is the natural outcome of the disposition of both teacher and students. One could go so far as to say that whether students profit from their lessons or how much they gain depends on whether the teacher evokes sympathy or antipathy in the students. It is absolutely open to discussion whether an easygoing teacher—one who does not even work according to proper educational principles—may be more effective than a teacher who, intent on following perfectly sound but abstract principles, is unable to practice them in the classroom. There are plenty of abstract principles around these days. I am not being sarcastic when I call them clever and ingenious; their merits can be argued. But even when slovenly and indolent teachers enter the classroom, if they nevertheless radiate warmth and affection for their students, they may give their students more for later life than would a highly principled teacher whose personality evokes antipathy. Although the students of a genial but untidy teacher are not likely to grow into models of orderliness, at least they will not suffer from “nervous” conditions later on in life. Nervousness can be the result of antipathy toward a teacher—even one using excellent educational methods—who is unable to establish the right kind of contact with the students.

Such points are open to discussion, and they should be discussed if we take the art of education seriously. I once had to participate in a case like this, and my decision may evoke strong disapproval among some people. During one of my visits to the Waldorf school, I was told of a boy in one of the classes who was causing great difficulties. He had committed all kinds of misdemeanors, and none of his teachers could deal with him. I asked for the boy to be sent to me, because first I wanted to find the root of the trouble. You will admit that in many other schools such a boy would have received corporal punishment or possibly something less drastic. I examined the boy carefully and concluded that he should be moved into the next class above. This was to be his punishment, and I have not heard any complaints since. His new class teacher confirmed that the boy has become a model student and that everything seems to be in order now. This, after all, is what really matters. The important thing is that one goes into the very soul and nature of such a child. The cause of the trouble was that there was no human contact between him and his teacher, and because he was intelligent enough to cope with the work of the next class (there was no comparable class in his case), the only right thing was to move him up. Had we put him down into the next lower class, we would have ruined that child.

If one bears in mind the well-being and inner development of a child, one finds the right way teaching. This is why it is good to look at specific and symptomatic cases. We have no intention of denying that, in many ways, the Waldorf school is built on compromise, but as far as it is humanly possible, we always try to educate from a real knowledge of the human being.

Let us return to the curriculum. The morning sessions are arranged as described. Because it is essential for our students to be able to move on to higher forms of education, we had to include other subjects such as Greek and Latin, which are also taught in morning lessons. In these ancient languages soul economy is of particular importance. The afternoon lessons are given over to more physical activities, such as gym and eurythmy, and to artistic work, which plays a very special part in a Waldorf school. I will give further details of this in the coming days. We try, as much as possible, to teach the more intellectual subjects in the morning, and only when the headwork is done are they given movement lessons, insofar as they have not let off steam already between morning lessons. However, after the movement lessons they are not taken back to the classroom to do more headwork. I have already said that this has a destructive effect on life, because while children are moving physically, suprasensory forces work through them subconsciously. And the head, having surrendered to physical movement, is no longer in a position to resume its work. It is therefore a mistake to think that, by sandwiching a gym lesson between other more intellectual lessons, we are providing a beneficial change. The homogeneous character of both morning and afternoon sessions has shown itself beneficial to the general development of the students. If we keep in mind the characteristic features of human nature, we will serve the human inclinations best.

I mentioned that we found it necessary to give some kind of anthroposophic religious lessons to our students. Soon afterward, arising from those lessons, we felt another need that led to the introduction of Sunday services for our students. This service has the quality of formal worship, in which the children participate with deep religious feelings. We have found that a ritual performed before the children’s eyes every Sunday morning has greatly deepened their religious experience.

The Sunday service had to be enlarged for the sake of the students who were about to leave our middle school. In Germany, it is customary for students of this age to be confirmed in a special ceremony that signifies the stage of maturity at which they are old enough to enter life. We have made arrangements for a similar ceremony that, as experience has shown, leaves a lasting impression on our students.

In any education based on knowledge of the human being, needs become apparent that may have gone unnoticed in more traditional forms of education. For instance, in Germany all students receive school reports at the end of each school year, because it is considered essential to give them something like this before they leave for summer holidays. In this case, too, we felt the need for innovation. I have to admit that I would find it extremely difficult to accept the usual form of school reports in a Waldorf school, simply because I could never appreciate the difference between “satisfactory” and “near-satisfactory,” or between “fair” and “fairly good,” and so on. These grades are then converted into numbers, so that in Germany some reports show the various subjects arranged in one column, and on the opposite side there is a column of figures, such as 4½, 3, 3–4, and so on. I have never been able to develop the necessary understanding for these somewhat occult relationships. So we decided to find other ways of writing our school reports.

When our students leave for holidays at the end of the school year, they do receive reports. They contain a kind of mirror image, or biography, of their progress during the year, which has been written by their class teachers. We have found again and again that our children accept these reports with inner approval. They can read about the impression they have created during the years, and they will feel that, although the description was written with sympathetic understanding, they do not tolerate any whitewashing of the less positive aspects of their work. These reports, which are received with deep inner satisfaction, end with a verse, composed especially for each child. This verse is a kind of guiding motive for the coming years. I believe our kind of reports have already proved themselves and will retain their value in the future, even though in some parts of Germany they have already been referred to as “ersatz” reports.

Students have responded to life in the Waldorf school in an entirely positive way. To show how much they like their school, I should like to repeat something I recently heard from one of our mothers, for such an example helps to illustrate more general symptoms. She said, “My boy was never an affectionate child. He never showed any tender feelings toward me as his mother. After his first year in the Waldorf school—while still quite young—his summer holidays began. When they were nearly over and I told him that soon he would be going to school again, he came and kissed me for the first time.” Such a small anecdote could be considered symptomatic of the effects of an education based on knowledge of the human being and practiced in a human and friendly atmosphere. Our school reports also help to contribute towards this atmosphere. As an introduction to life in the Waldorf school, I felt it necessary to digress a little from our planned program. Tomorrow we shall continue with a more detailed account of the child’s development after the change of teeth. Meanwhile, I wanted to include here a description of what by now has become the outer framework of practical life in the Waldorf school.

Achter Vortrag

Ich möchte bemerken, daß ich durch den ganzen Gang unserer Betrachtungen mich genötigt sehe, heute etwas von dem fortlaufenden Programm abzugehen und Ihnen zunächst von der mehr äußerlichen Einrichtung der Waldorfschule zu sprechen. Sie werden ja aus den Betrachtungen, die wir bisher gepflogen haben, entnommen haben, daß der Waldorfschul-Gedanke so ist, daß im strengsten Sinne des Wortes Lehrplan, Lehrziel, überhaupt die ganze Einrichtung der Schule gewissermaßen von dem abgelesen wird, was im menschlichen Lebenslauf an leiblichen, seelischen und geistigen Kräften des Menschenwesens in Erscheinung tritt. Das erforderte eine ganz besondere Einrichtung der Waldorfschule, und diese Einrichtung weicht in mancher Beziehung von dem, was man heute gewöhnt ist, ab.

Zunächst kommt es ja darauf an, in dem Sinne zu unterrichten und zu erziehen, den ich den seelisch-ökonomischen nennen möchte. Heute, im gewöhnlichen Erziehungs- und Unterrichtswesen, zersplittert man den Unterricht sehr stark, und dadurch wirkt er nicht konzentriert genug auf das heranwachsende Kind ein. Es handelt sich um folgendes. Nehmen Sie einmal an, man will irgend etwas in der Schule mit dem Kinde durchnehmen, das für das Kind dann einen bleibenden Besitz des Lebens bedeuten soll. Nun, ich will jetzt etwas herausgreifen, was auch im gewöhnlichen Unterrichtsplan liegt, und zwar etwas aus dem Geschichtlichen. Man nehme einmal an, man wollte mit den Kindern das Zeitalter der Königin Elisabeth durchnehmen mit allem, was dazugehört und was gewöhnlich im Zusammenhang mit diesem Zeitalter an die Kinder herangebracht wird. Sie werden zugeben, daß man das so tun kann, daß man in den historischen Stunden durch ein halbes Jahr hindurch die Einzelheiten dieses Zeitalters der Elisabeth bespricht. Man kann es aber auch noch anders machen. Man kann es so machen, daß man zunächst als Lehrer in einer wohlgeordneten Vorbereitung sich ein feines Gefühl von den Tatsachen aneignet, die für dieses Zeitalter in Betracht kommen. Da haben die einen ein gewisses Schwergewicht; kennt man sie, läßt man sie auf die Seele wirken, dann prägen sie sich in leichter Weise der Seele ein, und die anderen Tatsachen kommen dann wie von selber dazu. Und man kann unter Umständen, wenn man wirklich mit einer freien Beherrschung als Lehrer diesen Stoff in die Schule hineinträgt, es ist nicht einmal übertrieben, in drei, vier Stunden nicht nur dasjenige an die Kinder heranbringen, was man sonst in einem halben Jahr an die Kinder heranbringt, sondern man kann es sogar besser heranbringen, so daß die Kinder dann davon für das ganze Leben einen bleibenden Eindruck haben.

Wer sich jemals einen Überblick darüber verschafft hat, was alles unsere Kinder lernen sollen, der wird ohne weiteres zugeben, was ich eben angedeutet habe. Denn das, was unter unseren heutigen Zivilisationsverhältnissen unsere Kinder in dem vierzehnten Jahre schon gelernt haben sollten, das ist, so wie man es gewöhnlich in der Form des angehäuften Stoffes hat, etwas, was ja ohnedies nicht bewältigt wird. Es wird ja nirgends bewältigt, aber es wird so getan, als ob, und es werden vor allen Dingen die Lehrpläne und Lehrziele so aufgestellt, als ob man es bewältigen könnte und sollte.

Es handelt sich darum, daß im Sinne des Waldorfschul-Gedankens der ganze Unterricht so veranlagt werde, daß in der möglichst kürzesten Zeit möglichst viel mit den allereinfachsten Mitteln an die Kinder herangebracht werde, so daß dem Kinde nirgends die innere seelische, nicht einmal die verstandesmäßige, meine ich hier, sondern die innere seelische, empfindungsgemäße Überschau verlorengeht.

Sie begreifen, daß das gerade an die Lehrerschaft besondere Anforderungen stellt. Und ich habe zum Beispiel aus dem, was ich seelisch-ökonomischen Unterricht nenne, die Überzeugung gewonnen, die ich dezidiert - sie ist ja vielleicht nicht immer so dezidiert realisiert -, die ich aber so dezidiert aussprechen möchte, daß ich sage: Will man in einer halben Stunde in der richtigen ökonomischen Weise, so daß das Kind keinen Schaden erleidet, irgend etwas an das Kind heranbringen, so braucht man dazu mindestens eine Vorbereitung als Lehrer von zwei bis drei Stunden, um das Ganze in einen solchen lebendigen inneren organischen Zusammenhang zu bringen, den man dann durch die Schultüre in die Klasse hineinzutragen hat. - Es stellt also an die Lehrerschaft ein solches Erziehungsprinzip allerdings große Anforderungen. Aber diese großen Anforderungen werden von der Sache selbst gestellt, und sie müssen einfach, so gut es geht, befriedigt werden.

Nun erfordert das aber eine ganz besondere Einrichtung und Verteilung des Unterrichtens und des Erziehens in dem Falle, wo man diesen pädagogisch-didaktischen Grundgedanken in die Realität umsetzen will, wenn so etwas an einen herantritt, wie die Einrichtung der Stuttgarter Waldorfschule war. Ich möchte Ihnen diese Einrichtung nun in großen Zügen schildern, nicht die Einzelheiten heute schon rechtfertigen — das wird der Gegenstand eben der nächstfolgenden Betrachtungen sein —, aber ich möchte Ihnen zunächst sozusagen einen allgemeinen Umriß geben, wie es eigentlich in der Waldorfschule zugeht.

Der Lehrer also betritt, in der gekennzeichneten Weise vorbereitet, am Morgen das Schulgebäude. Die Kinder erscheinen etwas früher in der Sommerszeit, um acht Uhr, etwas später im Winter, und nachdem sie sich in den Klassen versammelt haben, werden sie zunächst dadurch gesammelt, daß jeder Lehrer, jede Lehrerin in ihrer Klasse mit einem möglichst an das allgemein Menschliche und auch Religiöse herangehenden Spruch beginnt, der entweder in Sprach- oder Gesangsform, aber zugleich mit einer Art Gebetscharakter von der ganzen Klasse im Chore vorgebracht wird. Ein wirkliches Gebet kann sich dann daranschließen. Die Einzelheiten sind ja in unserer Freien Waldorfschule immer ganz der Individualität des betreffenden Lehrers überlassen.

Dann beginnt der sogenannte Hauptunterricht, jener Hauptunterricht, der ja nach den gewöhnlichen Lehrplänen vielfach zerschnitten ist. Gerade das seelisch-ökonomische Prinzip, auf das ich aufmerksam machte, macht nötig, wenn man es zu Ende denkt, daß man sich von dem, was man gewöhnlich Stundenplan nennt, gründlich abwendet. Im gewöhnlichen Sinne haben wir für den Hauptunterricht keinen Stundenplan, sondern das Kind wird, je nachdem ein Gebiet so oder so abgeschlossen werden kann, durch vier bis sechs Wochen in den ersten zwei Stunden, zwischen denen eine Pause liegen kann, für die kleineren Kinder auch liegen muß, in seiner Klasse unterrichtet. Also vier bis sechs Wochen lang nimmt man ein geographisches Gebiet oder ein Rechengebiet durch. Sind diese vier bis sechs Wochen vorüber, dann wird ein anderes Gebiet begonnen, das wiederum seine entsprechende Zeit hat, das aber nicht fortwährend stundenplanmäßig von irgend etwas anderem durchbrochen wird.

So wird zeitraummäßig das Jahr hindurch dasjenige, was der Lehrplan nach den entsprechenden Grundsätzen enthalten soll, an das Kind in seelisch-ökonomischer Weise herangebracht, so daß nicht große Anforderungen nach der Richtung hin gestellt werden, daß das Kind in irgendeinem Augenblick das Gefühl hat, es habe Mühe, mitzukommen. Dieses Gefühl soll es nie bekommen. Es soll das Innere des Unterrichtens so eingerichtet werden, daß das Kind nie das Gefühl hat, es bereite ihm Schwierigkeiten, vorwärtszukommen, sondern es soll immer die Sehnsucht haben, wirklich von dem einen zu dem anderen zu kommen. Und niemals ist das Kind dadurch eigentlich versucht, etwas als abgebrochen zu betrachten, sondern überall ist Anschluß zu erreichen.

Es ist ja wiederum selbstverständlich, daß dann, wenn der Jahresschluß vor den Ferien herannaht, in einer Art Rekapitulation alles das wiederum an die Seele des Kindes herangebracht wird - man kann das in einem hübschen Zusammenhang tun -, was in den verschiedenen Zeiträumen während des Jahres dem Kinde, wie man sagt, beigebracht worden ist.

Alles das also, was eigentlicher Hauptunterricht ist, fällt in diese Kategorie hinein. Und es wird immer darauf gesehen, daß in solchen vier bis sechs Wochen dem Kinde etwas Ganzes überliefert werden kann, was gerade deshalb, weil es ein Ganzes ist, ihm dann etwas gibt, was es ins Leben mitnimmt, wie es die Dinge ins Leben mitnehmen soll.

Denken Sie doch nur einmal, wenn wir die Gliedmaßen der Kinder ordentlich pflegen wollen, so werden wir es vermeiden, sie in solche Bekleidungen zu stecken, durch die sie in ihrem Wachstum behindert werden. Wir wollen die äußere Leiblichkeit des Kindes so pflegen, daß der Mensch sich nach den in ihm liegenden Wachstumsprinzipien bis ins späteste Alter hinein frei entwickeln kann. Dasselbe muß auch mit allem Seelischen und Geistigen gemacht werden. Geben wir dem Kinde fertige, scharf umrissene Vorstellungen, so können die ja nicht mitwachsen mit dem zunehmenden menschlichen Leben. Die Vorstellungen, die Empfindungen, die Willensimpulse, die wir ihm mitgeben, die müssen so behandelt werden wie menschliche Glieder. Sie müssen nicht in steif-abstrakte Definitionen gekleidet werden, die dann behalten werden, so daß man im fünfundvierzigsten Jahre noch denselben Begriff hat von einer Sache, die man im achten Jahre vermittelt erhalten hat, geradesowenig wie man seinen kleinen Finger im fünfundvierzigsten Jahr noch in der Konstitution hätte, wie man ihn im achten Jahre hatte! Es handelt sich darum, daß wir den kindlichen Organismus auch seelisch so aufbauen, daß seine einzelnen Glieder wirklich wachsen können, daß wir ihm also nicht etwas so Steifes, Festes beibringen, daß wir im fünfundvierzigsten Jahre noch so über die Sache denken und empfinden, wie man im achten, neunten Jahre gedacht und empfunden hat. Das ist aber nur möglich, wenn wir in der angedeuteten seelisch-öskonomischen Weise die Dinge an die Kinder heranbringen.

Der weitere Vormittag ist dann den freieren Gegenständen gewidmet. — Es ist mir zwar ein Greuel, den Ausdruck Gegenstand zu verwenden, aber er ist nun schon einmal üblich geworden. — Da spielen vor allen Dingen die modernen fremden Sprachen die größte Rolle. Diese modernen fremden Sprachen werden, weil sie sich wirklich praktisch einleben sollen in das kindliche Leben, vom Eintritt der Kinder mit dem sechsten, siebenten Jahre an gepflegt, und sie werden so gepflegt, daß das Kind sich wirklich einleben kann in die fremde Sprache, daß also beim Erlernen der fremden Sprache die Vermittlung durch die Muttersprache vermieden wird.

Es muß ja natürlich, weil man jetzt ältere Kinder vor sich hat als damals, da sie ihre Muttersprache gelernt haben, der Unterricht in einer anderen Sprache etwas anders eingerichtet werden. Gerade wenn man auf die Lebensalter sieht, so muß das sein. Aber die Kinder müssen doch die Sprache so mit sich vereinigen, daß sie nicht, indem sie irgend etwas in der fremden Sprache zum Ausdruck bringen, im geheimen immer übersetzen. Dieses Übersetzungsprinzip, das soll vollständig vermieden werden. Wenn also dem Kind ein Wort oder eine Wortfolge beigebracht wird, sagen wir im einfachsten Falle: Tisch, Fenster —, so wird dieses «Tisch» nicht an das deutsche Wort angeknüpft, sondern an den wirklichen Tisch, oder das «Fenster» an das wirkliche Fenster. Unmittelbar in Heranbringung an die Sache, an die Gegenstände, wird die fremde Sprache beigebracht, so daß das Kind zunächst sprechen und dann übersetzen lernt, wenn das letztere sich überhaupt als irgend etwas Wünschenswertes in dem einen oder anderen Fall herausstellt.

Man kann durchaus bemerken, daß mit der Vermeidung der gewöhnlichen Grammatik und so weiter da etwas erreicht wird, was die Kinder in ganz lebendigem Sinn aufnehmen. — Das einzelne wird dann bei der Besprechung der einzelnen Lebensalter ja Gegenstand der Betrachtungen der nächsten Tage sein. Ich will jetzt mehr nur einen allgemeinen Überblick über die äußeren Einrichtungen geben.

In diese Zeit fällt dann auch noch dasjenige hinein, was als besonders wichtig gehalten werden muß: der Handarbeitsunterricht; auch zum Teil dasjenige, was man gewöhnlich als den Handfertigkeitsunterricht bezeichnet. Der Handarbeitsunterricht wird gemäß dem Prinzip der Waldorfschule, das ja in einer Klasse Knaben und Mädchen vereinigt, auch für Knaben und Mädchen gleichmäßig getrieben. Und es ist im Handarbeitsunterricht eine große Freude für einen, wenn die Knaben und Mädchen zusammen stricken, häkeln und andere ähnliche Arbeiten machen. Man kann durchaus aus der Schulpraxis heraus die Versicherung geben, obgleich der Knabe etwas anderes hat von dem Stricken als das Mädchen, daß dennoch der Knabe auch viel hat davon, und daß er es vor allen Dingen mit großer Freude tut. Es ist dieses Zusammenarbeiten für die Gesamtentwickelung eines Menschen, wie sich bisher gezeigt hat - ich werde auch das in den Einzelheiten noch besprechen -, von einem ganz besonderen Vorteile. In dem Handfertigkeitsunterricht müssen dann wiederum die Mädchen genau dasselbe mitmachen, was die Knaben machen, schwerere Arbeiten, so daß überall auf die Geschicklichkeit, auf das Geschicktwerden des Menschen hingesehen werden kann.

Dann fällt in diese Zeit der späteren Vormittagsstunden auch noch dasjenige herein, was man den eigentlichen Weltanschauungsunterricht nennen kann. Sehen Sie, die Waldorfschule, und überhaupt jede Schule, die aus anthroposophischer Bewegung hervorgehen würde, legt natürlich keinen Wert darauf, etwa Anthroposophie den Kindern beizubringen, in der Form wie sie heute da ist. Sie würde das sogar für das Allerverkehrteste betrachten, zu dem man sich wenden könnte. Denn Anthroposophie, wie sie heute vorliegt, hat man ja zunächst mit den Erwachsenen, manchmal schon mit recht grau gewordenen Menschen zu besprechen. Sie ist daher auch so eingerichtet in ihrer Literatur und in der Art und Weise, wie sie an den Menschen herantritt, daß sie die Form hat, wie man zu Erwachsenen spricht und wie man Erwachsene eben anredet. Ich würde es daher für das Allerverkehrteste ansehen müssen, wenn man dasjenige, was in meiner «Theosophie» steht oder in meinem Buche «Wie erlangt man Erkenntnisse der höheren Welten?», irgendwie dem Kinde vermitteln wollte. Das kann niemals der Fall sein, denn man würde das Kind, verzeihen Sie den etwas trivialen Ausdruck, dadurch, daß man etwas ganz Ungeeignetes für dieses Alter an es heranbringt, zum — man sagt im Deutschen — Aus-der-Haut-Fahren bringen. Das kann es dann nicht ausführen, aber es steckt in ihm diese Sehnsucht, aus der Haut zu fahren.

Nicht darauf kommt es also an, in die Schule als solche etwas hineinzutragen, was heute anthroposophischer Inhalt ist, sondern darauf kommt es an, daß Anthroposophie ja nicht eine Theorie, nicht eine theoretische, in Ideen bloß sich ergehende Weltanschauung ist, sondern Lebenssystem ist, den ganzen Menschen in Anspruch nimmt. Wenn also der Lehrer als Anthroposoph in die Schule kommt, so ist er ein geschickter Mensch geworden, und er handhabt eine pädagogisch-didaktische Kunst, und auf diese pädagogisch-didaktische Kunst kommt es an.

Also eine methodische Schule soll gerade die Waldorfschule sein, und das Methodische soll herausgeholt werden aus der anthroposophischen Weltanschauung. Es ist schon so, wenn man eine solche lebenspraktische Weltanschauung in sich aufnimmt, dann wird man dadurch nicht ein weltabgekehrter Theoretiker, sondern ein geschickter Mensch. Nun will ich nicht behaupten, daß schon alle diejenigen, die sich innerhalb der anthroposophischen Bewegung befinden, in dieser Richtung alle Ideale erfüllen. Es ist nicht der Fall. Ich kenne noch immer Männer innerhalb der anthroposophischen Bewegung, die nicht in der Lage sind, wenn ihnen ein Hosenknopf, verzeihen Sie den harten Ausdruck, abreißt, ihn auch selbständig nach allen Regeln der Kunst wieder anzunähen. Man ist natürlich kein vollständiger Mensch, wenn man das nicht kann. Und vor allen Dingen, die Gesinnung fehlt noch vielfach, die sich mit dem Worte ausspricht: Man kann kein Philosoph sein, wenn man nicht in der Lage ist, wenn es nötig ist, sich auch die Stiefel selbst zu flicken. — Es ist natürlich etwas im Extrem ausgedrückt, aber es sagt dasjenige, was Sie ja verstehen werden.

Derjenige, der irgend etwas Theoretisches behaupten will, muß viel mehr im Leben drinnenstehen als derjenige, der zum Beispiel Schneider oder Schuster oder Ingenieur oder dergleichen ist. Ich möchte sagen: man kann es einem nur verzeihen, daß er etwas Theoretisches äußert, wenn der Betreffende auch ein Lebenspraktiker ist. Sonst wird alles Aussprechen in Gedanken gleich etwas, was mit dem Leben eigentlich nicht mehr viel zu tun hat. Dadurch, daß in dieser Art die Lehrer anthroposophische Lebenspraxis in die Schule hineintragen, dadurch sollen sie als Künstler geeignet werden, immer das Richtige zu finden, was nach den Äußerungen des Kindes eben vorgenommen werden muß. Da übt ja dann das Beste im einzelnen Fall der Instinkt aus, wenn man den ganzen Duktus eines Erziehungs- und Unterrichtskünstlers in die Schule hineinträgt. Das ist heute im äußeren Leben nicht im weitesten Maße eigentlich erfüllt.

Bitte, betrachten Sie das, was ich sage, nicht als etwas, was dem einen oder dem anderen nahetreten will. Derjenige, der heute in die Schule hineingestellt wird, muß das ja am allermeisten selbst empfinden, was ich sage; er muß sich mehr als ein Opfer seiner Zeit betrachten, weil er eben nicht anders kann. Er kann schon dadurch nicht anders, daß er durch das Martyrium des Gymnasiums und der Hochschule durchgegangen ist. Aber beim praktischen Handhaben des Unterrichts kommt es ja darauf an, daß man in jedem Augenblicke etwas anderes tun kann, je nachdem das Kind es einem sagt, was man zu tun hat. Aber erzieht man denn in der weiten Welt so? In der weiten Welt erzieht man so, daß man von vornherein weiß: das hat zu geschehen, das hat man an das Kind heranzubringen. Auf mich macht es oftmals den Eindruck, daß das Kind von diesem Erziehungsstandpunkte aus gar nicht dabei zu sein braucht bei dem, was da eigentlich vollzogen wird. Man könnte ganz gut nach den heutigen Schulprinzipien Abdrücke aus Papiermaché von den Kindern machen lassen, wenn sie in die Schule aufgenommen werden, und dann hat man dasselbe, es ist ja von vornherein bestimmt, ganz dasselbe an den Abdrücken vorzunehmen, was man jetzt an den wirklichen Kindern von Fall zu Fall vornimmt.

Also eine Weltanschauungsschule wollten wir ganz gewiß nicht schaffen, wie man leicht denken könnte, wenn man äußerlich hört: da haben die Anthroposophen eine Schule begründet; sondern es handelt sich darum, Anthroposophie in die pädagogische Praxis hineinzutragen.

Daher war es mir auch verhältnismäßig gleichgültig, den Gipfelpunkt des Weltanschauungslebens, die religiöse Weltanschauung, einfach den entsprechenden Vertretern der traditionellen Religionsbekenntnisse zu überlassen. Und so wurde denn der katholische Religionsunterricht ruhig dem katholischen Pfarrer, der evangelische dem evangelischen Pfarrer zur Verfügung gestellt. Wir hatten keine Angst, daß nicht dasjenige, was sie verderben, wieder gutgemacht werden kann durch ein anderes. Aber es stellte sich dabei die Sache so heraus, daß, als unser Freund Emil Molt die Waldorfschule in Stuttgart begründete, zunächst das Hauptkontingent der Kinder die Proletarierkinder seiner Fabrik waren. Es waren zum großen Teil Dissidentenkinder, Kinder die, wenn sie in eine andere Schule gegangen wären, eben an gar keinem Religionsunterricht teilgenommen hätten, die religionslos aufgewachsen wären. Für die stellte sich sowohl bei den Kindern selbst in der Art, wie das eben bei Kindern in Erscheinung treten kann, wie bei den Eltern der Kinder das Bedürfnis ein, nun doch so etwas zu haben, und da mußten wir doch unseren freien Religionsunterricht für die Kinder einrichten. Er wird dann, geradeso wie der evangelische Unterricht vom evangelischen Pfarrer, der katholische Unterricht von einem katholischen Priester erteilt wird, von unseren Lehrern erteilt, die sich dann auch als gegenüber dem übrigen Lehrplan zugelassene Religionslehrer betrachten. So wird dann anthroposophischer Religionsunterricht erteilt. Und wir haben es dazu gebracht, daß dieser freie, anthroposophische Religionsunterricht, heute schon für viele andere Kinder auch, aber gerade sehr Vielversprechendes für Proletarierkinder bedeutet.

Da tritt nun eine besondere Schwierigkeit auf; denn wir haben eine Anthroposophie für Erwachsene, und der Lehrer hat heute, wenn er seinen anthroposophischen Religionsunterricht erteilt, nun damit zu ringen, für dasjenige, was er da mit den Kindern durchzunehmen hat, Inhalte zu schaffen. Es ist dasjenige, was anthroposophische Weltanschauung ist, erst in die Form zu gießen, in der es an das Kind herangebracht werden kann. Und an dieser Bearbeitung, nun einer modernen, dem Menschengeiste entsprechenden Weltanschauung für das Kind, arbeiten wir vielfach. Da ist es in der Tat notwendig, tief einzugehen, wie weit zum Beispiel Symbole, die man gebrauchen muß, auf das Kind wirken, und wie da Imponderabilien in Betracht kommen. Nun, davon werden wir gleich sprechen.

Sie werden begreifen, daß eine solche Schule wie die Waldorfschule, wenn sie auch im allgemeinen den Grundsatz verfolgen muß, Lehrplan, Lehrziele von dem abzulesen, was als Menschenerkenntnis vorhanden ist, dennoch heute nicht im Sinne eines Ideals eingerichtet werden kann. Man muß die mannigfaltigsten Kompromisse schließen, denn es ist ja unmöglich, daß man heute etwa ein Kind ganz so erzieht und unterrichtet, wie man es nach einem abstrakten Ideal, etwa als Waldorfschulgedanke unterrichten könnte. Es würde so in das Leben hineingestellt werden, daß es sich einfach in das Leben nicht hineirfinden würde. Es ist verhältnismäßig leicht, über das Leben in der heutigen Gegenwart die mannigfaltigste Kritik zu sagen. Vieles kann einem da nicht gefallen, und man kann sich ergehen in sehr scharfsinnigen, geistreichen Kritiken, wie alles anders sein soll. Aber man kann nicht Menschen erziehen, die dann, wenn sie aus der Schule ins Leben hinaustreten, bloß Sinn für eine Kritik haben für den sinnlosen Sinn des Lebens. Mag das Leben noch so unvollkommen sein vor einer abstrakten Verstandeskritik, man muß im Leben drinnenstehen. Die Waldorfkinder müssen allerdings ins Leben hinaus entlassen werden — sonst würde die Waldorfschule keinen Sinn haben -, indem auf ihre Menschlichkeit mehr Rücksicht genommen ist, als das sonst in unserem heutigen Zeitalter der Fall ist; aber sie dürfen nicht in dem Sinne zu lebensfremden Menschen ihres Zeitalters gemacht werden, daß sie sich nur als lebensfremde Kritikaster hineinstellen. Das will ich andeuten. Und daher mußten gleich im Anfange die mannigfaltigsten Kompromisse geschlossen werden auch in bezug auf Lehrplan und Lehrziel. Man konnte nur das Mögliche ansetzen. Ich habe daher gleich bei Begründung ein Memorandum ausgearbeitet, welches dann der hohen Schulbehörde vorgelegt wurde und welches ungefähr das Folgende besagt: Von dem Eintritt des Kindes in die Schule, vom sechsten, siebenten Lebensjahr bis zum vollendeten neunten Jahre, also bis zur Vollendung der dritten Klasse etwa, wird das Kind in den einzelnen Jahren möglichst frei nach dem, was man für das Richtige hält, unterrichtet. Da steht Verteilung des Lehrstoffes, Festsetzung der Lehrziele frei im Ermessen des Lehrers beziehungsweise Lehrerkollegiums, das in ganz repräsentativer Weise eingerichtet ist und wirkt. Es wird überhaupt ein großer Wert darauf gelegt, daß der einzelne Lehrer nicht bloß seine Kinder kennt, sondern daß zwischen dem Lehrerkollegium und den Kindern ein entsprechendes Verhältnis angebahnt werden kann, das sich dann auch auf die Zwischenstunden erstreckt, daß diese oder jene Kinder auch bei dem Lehrer, der ihnen gerade gefällt, ihre Ratschläge suchen und so weiter. Es ist eine wahre Freude, wenn man in die Waldorfschule hineinkommt, wie zutunlich sich die einzelnen Kinder zu den Lehrern verhalten in den Zwischenstunden und auch dann, wenn kein Unterricht erteilt wird.

Also in dieser Zeit, etwa vom sechsten, siebenten Lebensjahr bis zum neunten, zehnten Lebensjahre wird der Unterricht nach dem Prinzip erteilt. Aber es wird zu gleicher Zeit angestrebt, daß nach Vollendung der dritten Klasse jedes Kind so weit ist, daß es auch in die vierte Klasse einer anderen Schule eintreten kann. So daß also das Kind nicht herausgenommen wird aus dem Leben, sondern daß ihm etwas gegeben wird, was es vor den übrigen voraus hat, aber doch nicht etwa sich nicht wiederum an das übrige Leben anschließen kann.

Ebenso wird darauf gehalten, daß vom vollendeten neunten Jahre, der dritten Klasse, bis zum zwölften Jahre, der vollendeten sechsten Klasse, der Unterricht streng nach dem Prinzip verläuft, daß das Kind nach dem vollendeten zwölften Jahre wiederum in der Lage ist, in einer anderen Schule, in die siebente Klasse etwa, eintreten zu können und dann gut mitkommt. Solche Kompromisse mußten geschlossen werden, weil wir nicht Fanatiker sein wollen, sondern eben lebenspraktische Menschen gegenüber den Bestrebungen der Waldorfschule sein wollten. Und wenn die Volksschule mit dem vierzehnten Jahre absolviert ist, soll das Kind eintreten können in die entsprechenden Klassen der Realschule, Gymnasium und so weiter, wie alle die schönen Dinge heißen, die da sind, so daß alles dasjenige wirklich befolgt wird, was ich eben angedeutet habe.

Nun sind wir ja bestrebt, die Waldorfschule so auszubauen - wir setzen jedes Jahr, nachdem wir erst eine vollständige Volksschule begründet hatten, wo Kinder bis zum vollendeten vierzehnten Jahre drinnen waren, eine neue Klasse daraufhin an -, daß wir wirklich zunächst so weit kommen, wie die jungen Leute kommen, wenn sie das Gymnasium oder die Realschule vollendet haben, also an eine Universität oder eine Hochschule gehen wollen.

Da müssen wir natürlich auch die gesamte Erziehung und den Unterricht so einrichten, daß dann die jungen Leute, wie man in Österreich sagt, ihre Maturitätsprüfung oder, wie man in Deutschland sagt, ihr Abiturium ablegen können. In anderen Ländern werden solche schönen Dinge ja noch anders genannt. Jedenfalls aber, die Kinder sollen so weit gebracht werden, daß sie dann in eine Hochschule aufsteigen können. Wir haben ja noch nicht die Möglichkeit, eigene Hochschulen zu begründen, denn, was wir nach dieser Richtung auch tun, hat durchaus überall einen privaten Charakter. Es würde uns ja kein Staat gestatten, irgendwie an selbstgegründeten Hochschulen gültige Zeugnisse über die nicht stattgefundenen Examina auszustellen; denn natürlich würden wir keine Prüfungen abhalten.

Nun, so sind wir eben genötigt, durchaus den realen WaldorfschulPlan in einer kompromißartigen Weise auszubauen, und wir wollen das auch durchaus nicht verleugnen. Dasjenige, um was es sich handelt, ist aber, daß nun in diesem Rahmen so viel von dem Geist, den ich vorhin charakterisiert habe, hineingebracht werde, als nur irgend möglich ist. Wir haben, als wir die Waldorfschule begründeten, weil wir sie gleich als vollständige Schule begründeten, natürlich Kinder bekommen, die von allen möglichen Schulklassen entlassen worden sind. Wir haben ja reichlich Gelegenheit gehabt, die Früchte der ja so strengen Disziplin in den Schulen an unseren Waldorfschul-Kindern noch zu sehen. Jetzt haben wir etwas mehr als zwei Jahre Waldorfschul-Disziplin hinter uns. Ich werde über die Einzelheiten auch der Schuldisziplin noch sprechen. Wir haben diese Waldorfschul-Disziplin hinter uns, die größtenteils ja darinnen besteht, daß wir die Disziplin abgeschafft haben, und wir haben doch zum Beispiel so etwas zu verzeichnen, wie das, was ich wie symptomatisch erwähnen möchte.

Vor einigen Wochen erst hatten wir — wir waren ja durchaus noch in provisorischen Räumen — den Grundstein für ein größeres Schulgebäude zu legen. Diese Grundsteinlegung erforderte für mein Gefühl, daß auch die sämtlichen Kinder dieser Grundsteinlegung beiwohnten. Nun, im Leben geht es halt so, es dauert alles länger, als man sich es gewöhnlich vornimmt, und so waren alle Kinder schon da in der Zeit, als wir erst anfingen, die vorbereitenden Schritte zu machen für diese Grundsteinlegung. Ich mußte zunächst mit dem Lehrerkollegium und einigen anderen Leuten zusammensein. Nun waren aber schon alle Kinder da. Wir mußten uns zusammensetzen im sogenannten Konferenzzimmer, im Lehrerzimmer. Was mit den Kindern tun? Der Verwalter der Schule sagte einfach: Wir tun die Kinder in die Klassen. Sie sind jetzt so weit, daß wir sie ruhig in die Klassen tun können, da werden sie schon ordentlich sein und das tun, was uns nicht stört.

Also, wir waren immerhin mit der sehr anfechtbaren Disziplin, die uns hereingebracht worden ist, nach unserer Art der Abschaffung der Disziplin so weit, daß wir die Kinder in die Klassen tun durften, und sie störten uns gar nicht. Das ist natürlich etwas ephemär zu nehmen; für nervöse Ohren würde es ja vielleicht auch noch jetzt stören, aber das schadet ja auch nichts. Kinder, die nervöse Ohren nicht stören, sind ja in der Regel nicht gerade von einer guten Disziplin. Nun, es stellt sich überhaupt heraus durch die imponderable Einwirkung einer solchen Schulhaltung, daß sich manches verändert, was sonst selbstverständlich da ist und auch gehandhabt wird in der Schulpraxis.

Man soll ja, wie Sie vielleicht auch schon gehört haben, in der gewöhnlichen Schulpraxis manche Art von Strafen haben. Natürlich mußte anfangs auch manches herumexperimentiert werden, um erst daraufzukommen, wie man vorzugehen hat. Und so hat denn einer der Lehrer einmal, als eine solche Sache zur Diskussion gekommen ist, eine recht schöne Auskunft geben können, die ich Ihnen hier wiederholen will. Er hat probieren wollen zunächst, was Strafen einer bestimmten Art auf die Kinder für einen Eindruck machen; es war, als die Kinder schon einiges der Waldorfschul-Disziplin mitgemacht hatten, gerade in einer Klasse, in der ganz furchtbare Rangen sind. Diese Rangen — so nennt man ganz besondere Nichtsnutze in Deutschland -, diese Nichtsnutze, die haben nun etwas schlecht gemacht und sollten bestraft werden, so ein bißchen nach dem Muster, wie man das in anderen Schulen auch macht. Sie sollten nachsitzen, wie man sagt, etwas nachbleiben und da Rechnungen machen während der Zeit. Und als diese Strafe nun über einzelne Mitglieder der Klasse verhängt worden war, siehe, da kamen alle anderen und sagten, sie wollten nun auch da bleiben und rechnen, denn das Rechnen wäre etwas so Schönes.

Sie sehen, der Begriff der Strafe hatte eine vollständige Metamorphose durchgemacht. Er war etwas ganz anderes geworden, etwas sehr Begehrenswertes für die ganze Klasse. Das sind in der Tat Dinge, die man nicht erreicht, wenn man sie, ich möchte sagen, in direkter Weise beabsichtigt, sondern sie stellen sich ein als eine Folge, wenn das andere selber in der richtigen Weise gepflegt wird. Ich weiß, daß über manche Art der disziplinarischen Handhabung man im äußeren Leben heute sich ganz besondere Gedanken machen würde.

So war ich einmal in der Lage, ganz stark zu beobachten, wieviel davon abhängt, wie der naturgemäße, durch die verschiedenen charakterologischen Beschaffenheiten von Schülern und Lehrern, Erziehern herbeigeführte Kontakt zwischen dem Lehrer und dem Schüler ist. Man kann ja in der Tat sagen, von der Art, wie aus dem ganzen Geiste der Schulpraxis heraus der Lehrer des Morgens die Schule betritt, ob ihm die Kinder Sympathien entgegenströmen lassen oder Antipathien, davon hängt das ab, ob sie überhaupt etwas profitieren oder nicht. Und man kann sogar diskutieren darüber, ob ein schlampiger Lehrer, der gar keine richtigen Prinzipien handhabt, mehr nützt, oder ein Lehrer, _ der furchtbar gute, aber abstrakte, nicht in die Lebenspraxis übergehende, ausgezeichnete pädagogisch-didaktische Prinzipien handhaben will. Solche Prinzipien gibt es ja heute zur Genüge. Ich spotte auch gar nicht, wenn ich sie sehr geistreich nenne, es kann ja darüber diskutiert werden; aber wenn ein schlampiger, ein nachlässiger Lehrer in die Klasse hineinkommt, der aber doch durch sein ganzes Wesen etwas von Liebe ausstrahlt auf seine Klasse, dann werden die Kinder zwar auch nicht ganz besonders ordentlich, aber für das Leben nehmen sie noch mehr Nützliches mit, als wenn ein Lehrer, der durch sein ganzes Wesen Antipathie hervorruft, mit ausgezeichneten Erziehungsgrundsätzen in die Klasse hineinkommt und dann seine Dinge an die Kinder heranbringt. Da kann man erleben, daß gerade durch ausgezeichnete Erziehungsprinzipien, wenn das Leben des Lehrers Antipathie hervorruft, die Kinder eine furchtbare, wie man es heute nennt, Nervosität sich ins spätere Leben hinein mitbringen.

Diese Dinge können alle diskutiert werden und müssen diskutiert werden, wenn man es mit Lehr- und Erziehungskunst seriös meint. Und deshalb war ich einmal in einem besonderen Fall, der natürlich wie etwas Greuliches von mancher Seite beurteilt werden wird. Es wurde mir erzählt, als ich eben wiederum einmal in der Schule war, daß ein Junge einer Klasse absolut nicht zurechtzubringen sei, alle möglichen Schlechtigkeiten verübt hatte, und die Lehrerschaft der Klasse wußte nichts mit ihm anzufangen. Ich ließ mir den Jungen kommen und wollte sehen, wie es eigentlich mit dem Jungen steht. Sie werden zugeben, in vielen Schulen gäbe es tüchtige Prügel in einem solchen Fall oder vielleicht gelindere Strafen oder so etwas dergleichen. Nun, ich prüfte den Jungen ganz genau, und das Ergebnis meiner Prüfung war dieses, daß ich ihn aus der einen Klasse, in der er war, in die nächsthöhere hinaufversetzte; das war seine Strafe. Nun, ich habe seither nicht klagen hören. Sein Lehrer bestätigt, daß er jetzt sogar ein Musterjunge ist. Es ist ja wohl jetzt alles in Ordnung und darauf kommt es doch eigentlich an.

Sie sehen, es kommt auf das richtige Hineinschauen in das kindliche Gemüt und auf die ganze kindliche Natur an. Es war einfach kein Kontakt zu bekommen zwischen diesem Jungen und der entsprechenden Lehrkraft, und da der Junge durch seine Intelligenz zuließ, ihn in die nächste Klasse hinaufzusetzen, eine Parallelklasse war nicht da, so mußte man gerade dieses tun. Man hätte ihn gründlich verdorben, wenn man ihn in die nächstniedere Klasse hinunter versetzt hätte. Wenn man also bei all diesen Dingen Menschenwohl und Menschenentwickelung im Auge hat, dann gibt das eben die richtige Unterrichts- und Erziehungspraxis. Und deshalb muß man immer, ich möchte sagen, in symptomatischer Weise das einzelne anführen. Die Waldorfschule, das wollen wir durchaus nicht verleugnen, ist in vieler Beziehung durchaus auf Kompromissen aufgebaut; aber soviel als heute möglich ist, wird im Sinne einer wirklichen Menschenerkenntnis erzogen und unterrichtet.

So also wird der Vormittag in der Weise ausgefüllt, wie ich es Ihnen schon angedeutet habe, und es muß ja manches, zum Beispiel auch der Unterricht in den antiken Sprachen, aus dem Grunde eingefügt werden, der auch daraus hervorgeht, daß wir eben die Schüler und Schülerinnen bis zur Hochschule bringen müssen. Es wird gerade bei diesem Unterricht notwendig sein, das ganz besonders zu berücksichtigen, was seelische Ökonomie ist. Auch dieser lateinische und griechische Unterricht fällt dann in die Vormittagsstunden.

Die Nachmittagsstunden sind dann dem gewidmet, was sich auf das Leiblich-Physische bezieht: auf Gymnastisches, auf das Eurythmische, auf dasjenige, was zum Künstlerischen im Speziellen gehört. In einzelnen Fällen wollen wir dies in den nächsten Tagen besprechen. Gerade das Künstlerische also spielt in unserem Gesamtunterricht in der Waldorfschule eine sehr ausschlaggebende Rolle.

Es kommt durchaus in Betracht, daß alles dasjenige, was sozusagen Kopferziehung und Kopfunterricht ist, in den Vormittagsstunden mit den Kindern bewältigt werden soll, und erst nachdem dieses eben absolviert ist, werden die Kinder an das Leiblich-Physische nachmittags, insofern sie es nicht austoben in den Zwischenstunden am Vormittag, geführt. Und nachdem diese mehr physisch-gymnastische Erziehung Platz gegriffen hat, wird das Kind nicht wiederum zum Kopfunterricht zurückgeführt. Ich habe es ja schon angedeutet, daß das zerstörerisch wirkt auf das Leben; denn während die Kinder gerade dasjenige pflegen, was sich auf das Leiblich-Physische bezieht — die Details werden wir in den nächsten Tagen ausführen —, arbeitet ein unbewußtes Übersinnliches in dem Kinde, und der Kopf ist nicht mehr in der Lage, nachdem er sich dieser leiblich-physischen Erziehung hingegeben hat, nach dieser Betätigung wiederum zur Kopfarbeit zurückzukehren. Etwa eine Turnstunde mitten in den übrigen Unterricht hineinzuschieben, auch wenn es nicht gerade eine ganze Stunde ist, und sich dem Glauben hingeben, daß dadurch für den Unterricht durch Abwechslung etwas erzielt werde, ist durchaus falsch. Der einheitliche Charakter, den dadurch der Vormittags- und Nachmittagsunterricht erhalten, erweist sich als etwas durchaus Förderliches für die Entwickelung des Menschen. Gerade wenn in einer solchen Weise überall auf das Menschliche Bezug genommen wird, stellen sich ja auch die menschlichen Affinitäten, diese menschlichen inneren Neigungen in der allerbesten Weise bei den zu erziehenden Menschen ein.

Ich habe gesagt, wie wir selber genötigt waren, auch eine Art anthroposophischen Religionsunterrichtes für die Kinder zu geben. Aber sehr bald stellte sich gerade zu diesem anthroposophischen Religionsunterricht hinzu ein anderes Bedürfnis ein, und wir mußten dazu übergehen, eine Sonntagshandiung einzuführen, die etwas Kultartiges hat und an der die Kinder mit einer großen religiösen Inbrunst teilnehmen. Das Kultmäßige, das im Bilde an den Menschen herantritt, ist ja wirklich etwas, was von der Seite der Anschauung her in das Gemüt, in die religiöse Empfindung sich hineinzieht. Und so übt diese kleine Kultushandlung, die an jedem Sonntagvormittag mit den Kindern vorgenommen wird, auch einen außerordentlich vertiefenden Einfluß auf das Kindergemüt aus.

Das mußte ja beim Schulabgang erweitert werden. Im übrigen Deutschland ist man gewohnt, daß ja die Kinder zur Konfirmation gebracht werden, das ist eine Art Firmung, ein Reifwerden für das Leben durch eine zeremoniell unterrichtliche Handlung. Auch wir haben etwas Ähnliches eingerichtet für die Kinder, welche die Volksschule absolviert haben, und auch das hat einen außerordentlichen und vor allen Dingen einen bleibenden Eindruck auf die Kinder hervorgerufen, wie auch schon konstatiert werden konnte.

Es ist so, daß sich durch eine solche, auf Menschenerkenntnis beruhende Unterrichts- und Erziehungspraxis manches als notwendig einstellt, was sonst nicht bemerkt wird. Zum Beispiel: es ist in Deutschland so, daß die Kinder am Ende des Schuljahres Zeugnisse bekommen. Nun, Zeugnisse muß man ihnen schon geben, damit sie irgend etwas in die Ferien nach Hause tragen können. Aber gegenüber diesen Zeugnissen waren wir doch auch genötigt, eine ganz besondere Stellung einzunehmen. Ich muß gestehen, daß es mir außerordentlich schwer werden würde, zurechtzukommen in der Waldorfschule, wenn ich die in Deutschland übliche Zeugnismode mitmachen müßte. Ich könnte es nicht gut, aus dem einfachen Grunde: ich konnte mir nie einen Unterschied aneignen zwischen dem, was eine «befriedigende», «fast befriedigende», «genügende», «fast genügende», «kaum genügende» und so weiter Leistung in der Schule ist, was dann noch in Ziffern gebracht wird, so daß dann in Deutschland manche Schulzeugnisse so ausschauen, da stehen einerseits die Gegenstände, dann folgt daneben: 4½, 3, 3-4 und so weiter. Für diese okkulten Zusammenhänge hatte ich nie im Leben ein Verständnis entwickeln können! Und so mußten wir die Schulzeugnisse eben anders einrichten.

Das Kind bekommt, wenn es am Schluß des Jahres in die Ferien geht, allerdings ein Zeugnis. Da steht aber eine Art vom Lehrer ganz individuell für das Kind verfaßtes Spiegelbild drinnen, etwas Biographisches über das Jahr, und es hat sich überall gezeigt, die Kinder nehmen das mit einer großen Befriedigung auf. Sie lesen da ihr Bild, das man entwirft mit einem entsprechenden Wohlwöllen, aber durchaus nicht gefärbt, nicht etwa, daß man etwa irgendwelche Schönfärberei dabei übt. Sie nehmen das mit einer großen Befriedigung hin. Und dann lassen wir einen Spruch folgen, ganz individualisiert für jedes Kind, den jedes Kind in sein Zeugnis hineingeschrieben bekommt. Und dieser Spruch bildet dann für das nächste Jahr eine Art Lebensgeleitspruch. Das ist etwas, was sich, wie ich glaube, schon bewährt hat und auch später noch bewähren wird, mag man es auch sonst nach einem in den letzten Jahren in Deutschland beliebt gewordenen Ausdrucke einen «ZeugnisersatZz» nennen.

Nun, die Kinder sind unter dem Einflusse dieser WaldorfschulPraxis eigentlich gern in der Schule, und es kann immerhin als ein Symptom, wie gern sie in der Schule sind, gelten - ich erzähle gern Einzelheiten, um durch Symptome zu charakterisieren -, daß mir zum Beispiel eine Mutter sagte: Mein Junge hat sich im Leben gar nicht angewöhnt gehabt, irgendwie mit mir zärtlich zu sein; er konnte nicht zärtlich werden. Er ist nun in die Waldorfschule gekommen, hat das Schuljahr mitgemacht, ist in die Ferien gegangen; die Ferien gingen zu Ende, und siehe da, als die Ferien zu Ende gingen und dem Jungen, der noch ziemlich jung ist, gesagt wurde, er dürfe wieder in die Schule gehen, da war es das erste Mal, daß mich der Junge geküßt hat. — Immerhin ein Symptom für dasjenige, was sich in das Gemüt derjenigen Kinder hineinschiebt, die aus Menschenerkenntnis in Menschenfreundlichkeit erzogen und auch durch Zeugnisgebung und so weiter darinnen gehalten werden.

Diese Dinge, die, ich möchte sagen, mit der Außeneinrichtung der Waldorfschule zusammenhängen, wollte ich Ihnen, bevor ich in der Schilderung der Einzelheiten weitergehe, heute vorbringen, Ihnen gewissermaßen die Waldorfschule als solche vorstellen. Ich hielt das für notwendig, und in diesem Punkte mußte ich abgehen von dem ursprünglich aufgestellten Programm, nach dem auf die heutige Stunde die Schilderung des kindlichen Alters, das unmittelbar auf den Zahnwechsel folgt, hätte entfallen sollen. Das wird morgen nachgeholt werden. Aber ich wollte schon einmal eben die folgende Schilderung in dasjenige hineinstellen können, was sich als ein äußerer, praktischer Rahmen für die Waldorfschule ergeben hat.

Eighth Lecture

I would like to note that, in light of the course of our considerations thus far, I feel compelled to deviate somewhat from the planned program today and speak to you first about the more external aspects of the Waldorf school. You will have gathered from our discussions so far that the Waldorf school concept is such that, in the strictest sense of the word, the curriculum, the teaching objectives, indeed the entire structure of the school, are derived, as it were, from what appears in the course of human life in terms of the physical, soul, and spiritual forces of the human being. This required a very special structure for the Waldorf school, and this structure differs in many respects from what we are accustomed to today.

First of all, it is important to teach and educate in a way that I would like to call spiritual-economic. Today, in the conventional education and teaching system, lessons are highly fragmented, and as a result, they do not have a sufficiently concentrated effect on the growing child. The issue is as follows. Suppose you want to teach children something at school that will remain with them for the rest of their lives. Let me pick out something that is also part of the usual curriculum, namely something from history. Suppose you want to teach the children about the age of Queen Elizabeth, with everything that goes with it and that is usually taught to children in connection with this age. You will admit that this can be done by discussing the details of the age of Elizabeth in history lessons over a period of six months. But there is another way of doing it. As a teacher, you can first prepare yourself thoroughly and acquire a keen sense of the facts that are relevant to this era. Some of these facts are particularly important; if you know them and let them sink into your soul, they will easily become engraved in your mind, and the other facts will then follow naturally. And under certain circumstances, if you really bring this material into the school with a free command as a teacher, it is not even an exaggeration to say that in three or four hours you can not only teach the children what you would otherwise teach them in half a year, but you can even teach it better, so that the children will have a lasting impression of it for the rest of their lives.

Anyone who has ever gained an overview of everything our children are supposed to learn will readily admit what I have just suggested. For what our children should have learned by the age of fourteen in today's civilization, as it is usually presented in the form of accumulated material, is something that cannot be mastered anyway. It is not mastered anywhere, but it is pretended that it is, and above all, the curricula and teaching objectives are set up as if it could and should be mastered.

The point is that, in accordance with the Waldorf school philosophy, all teaching should be designed in such a way that as much as possible is brought to the children in the shortest possible time using the simplest possible means, so that the child does not lose their inner spiritual, not even their intellectual, I mean here, but their inner spiritual, intuitive overview.

You understand that this places special demands on the teaching staff. And I have gained the conviction from what I call soul-economic teaching, for example, which I would like to express so decisively – it may not always be realized so decisively – that I say: If you want to teach a child something in half an hour in the right economic way, so that the child does not suffer any harm, you need at least two to three hours of preparation as a teacher in order to bring the whole thing into such a lively inner organic context, which you then have to carry into the classroom through the school door. This educational principle therefore places great demands on the teaching staff. But these great demands are imposed by the subject matter itself, and they simply have to be met as best as possible.

However, this requires a very special structure and distribution of teaching and education in cases where one wants to put this pedagogical-didactic basic idea into practice, as was the case with the establishment of the Stuttgart Waldorf School. I would now like to describe this institution to you in broad strokes, without going into the details today—that will be the subject of the next set of considerations—but I would first like to give you a general outline, so to speak, of how things actually work at the Waldorf School.

The teacher, prepared in the manner described, enters the school building in the morning. The children arrive a little earlier in the summer, at eight o'clock, and a little later in the winter, and after they have gathered in their classrooms, they are first brought together by each teacher beginning with a saying in their class that is as universal and religious as possible, which is recited either in spoken or sung form, but at the same time with a kind of prayerful character, by the whole class in chorus. This can then be followed by a real prayer. The details are always left entirely to the individuality of the teacher concerned in our Free Waldorf School.

Then the so-called main lesson begins, the main lesson that is often fragmented according to the usual curricula. The spiritual-economic principle that I pointed out makes it necessary, if one thinks it through to its conclusion, to turn away completely from what is usually called a timetable. In the usual sense, we do not have a timetable for the main lesson, but depending on how a subject can be completed, the child is taught in his or her class for four to six weeks in the first two lessons, between which there may be a break, which is also necessary for the younger children. So, for four to six weeks, a geographical area or a mathematical area is covered. Once these four to six weeks are over, another area is started, which again has its corresponding time, but which is not continuously interrupted by anything else according to a timetable.

In this way, throughout the year, what the curriculum should contain according to the relevant principles is presented to the child in a psychologically economical way, so that no great demands are made in the sense that the child feels at any moment that they are struggling to keep up. They should never have this feeling. The teaching should be structured in such a way that the child never feels that it is difficult to progress, but always has the desire to really move from one thing to the next. And the child is never actually tempted to regard anything as interrupted, but can always find a connection.

It goes without saying that when the end of the school year approaches before the holidays, everything that has been taught to the child during the various periods of the year is brought back to the child's mind in a kind of recapitulation – this can be done in a nice context.

Everything that is actually part of the main lesson falls into this category. And care is always taken to ensure that in these four to six weeks, the child is taught something that is complete, something that, precisely because it is complete, gives them something to take with them into life, as they should take things with them into life.

Just think, if we want to take proper care of children's limbs, we will avoid putting them in clothing that hinders their growth. We want to care for the child's outer physicality in such a way that the human being can develop freely according to the principles of growth inherent in him or her until late in life. The same must also be done with everything spiritual and mental. If we give the child ready-made, sharply defined ideas, they cannot grow along with the developing human life. The ideas, feelings, and impulses of will that we give them must be treated like human limbs. They must not be clothed in rigid, abstract definitions that are then retained, so that at the age of forty-five one still has the same concept of a thing that one received at the age of eight, just as one would not still have one's little finger at the age of forty-five in the same condition as it was at the age of eight! It is a matter of building up the child's organism spiritually in such a way that its individual members can really grow, so that we do not teach them something so rigid and fixed that at the age of forty-five they still think and feel about things as they did at the age of eight or nine. But this is only possible if we approach things in the spiritual-economic way I have indicated.

The rest of the morning is then devoted to the freer subjects. — I hate to use the term “subject,” but it has become commonplace. — Above all, modern foreign languages play the greatest role here. Because these modern foreign languages are intended to become a practical part of the children's lives, they are taught from the age of six or seven, and they are taught in such a way that the child can really become familiar with the foreign language, so that when learning the foreign language, mediation through the mother tongue is avoided.

Of course, because we are now dealing with older children than before, since they have already learned their mother tongue, teaching in another language must be organized somewhat differently. This is necessary, especially when you consider their age. But the children must assimilate the language in such a way that they do not secretly translate everything they express in the foreign language. This principle of translation should be avoided completely. So when a child is taught a word or a phrase, let's say in the simplest case: table, window —, this “table” is not linked to the English word, but to the real table, or the “window” to the real window. The foreign language is taught directly in relation to the thing, to the objects, so that the child first learns to speak and then to translate, if the latter turns out to be desirable in one case or another.

It is quite noticeable that by avoiding the usual grammar and so on, something is achieved that the children take in in a very lively way. — The individual will then be the subject of discussion over the next few days when we talk about the different stages of life. For now, I would like to give a more general overview of the external facilities.

This period also includes what must be considered particularly important: handicraft lessons, and to some extent what is usually referred to as manual dexterity lessons. In accordance with the principle of the Waldorf school, which unites boys and girls in one class, handicraft lessons are taught equally to boys and girls. And it is a great joy in handicraft lessons when boys and girls knit, crochet, and do other similar work together. Based on school practice, one can assure you that although boys get something different out of knitting than girls, boys nevertheless also benefit greatly from it and, above all, enjoy doing it very much. This working together is of particular benefit for the overall development of a person, as has been shown so far – I will also discuss this in detail later. In handicraft lessons, the girls must then do exactly the same as the boys, more difficult work, so that attention can be paid everywhere to dexterity, to the development of a person's skills.

Then, in the late morning hours, there is also what can be called the actual worldview lessons. You see, the Waldorf school, and indeed any school that would emerge from the anthroposophical movement, naturally does not attach any importance to teaching anthroposophy to children in the form in which it exists today. In fact, they would consider this to be the worst possible approach. For anthroposophy, as it exists today, must first be discussed with adults, sometimes with people who are already quite gray-haired. It is therefore structured in its literature and in the way it approaches people in such a way that it takes the form of how one speaks to adults and how one addresses adults. I would therefore consider it the most wrong thing in the world to try to convey to children what is written in my “Theosophy” or in my book “How to Know Higher Worlds.” in some way. That can never be the case, because, forgive the somewhat trivial expression, by introducing something completely unsuitable for this age, one would cause the child to — as we say in German — “jump out of its skin.” It cannot then carry this out, but it has this longing to jump out of its skin.

So it is not a matter of bringing something into the school as such that is anthroposophical content today, but rather that anthroposophy is not a theory, not a theoretical worldview that merely indulges in ideas, but rather a system of life that engages the whole human being. So when the teacher comes to school as an anthroposophist, he has become a skilled person, and he wields a pedagogical-didactic art, and it is this pedagogical-didactic art that matters.

So a Waldorf school should be a methodical school, and the methodical aspect should be drawn from the anthroposophical worldview. It is true that when one takes in such a practical worldview, one does not become a theorist turned away from the world, but a skilled person. Now, I do not want to claim that all those who are part of the anthroposophical movement fulfill all ideals in this direction. That is not the case. I still know men within the anthroposophical movement who are not able, when a trouser button breaks off, forgive the harsh expression, to sew it back on themselves according to all the rules of the art. Of course, you are not a complete human being if you cannot do that. And above all, the attitude is still lacking in many cases, which is expressed in the words: You cannot be a philosopher if you are not able, when necessary, to mend your own boots. — This is, of course, expressed in extreme terms, but it says what you will understand.

Anyone who wants to make a theoretical claim must have much more experience of life than someone who is, for example, a tailor or a shoemaker or an engineer or the like. I would like to say that one can only forgive someone for expressing something theoretical if that person is also a practitioner of life. Otherwise, everything that is expressed in thought becomes something that no longer has much to do with life. By bringing anthroposophical life practice into the school in this way, teachers should become skilled artists, always able to find the right thing to do in response to what the child expresses. In each individual case, instinct then comes into play when the whole style of an educational and teaching artist is brought into the school. Today, this is not really fulfilled to any great extent in external life.

Please do not take what I am saying as something intended to offend anyone. Those who are sent to school today must feel what I am saying most keenly themselves; they must consider themselves more than victims of their time, because they cannot do otherwise. They cannot do otherwise because they have gone through the ordeal of high school and college. But in the practical handling of teaching, it is important that one can do something different at any moment, depending on what the child tells one to do. But is that how we educate in the wider world? In the wider world, we educate in such a way that we know from the outset: this has to happen, this has to be brought to the child. It often strikes me that, from this educational point of view, the child does not need to be involved in what is actually being done. According to today's school principles, one could very well have the children make papier-mâché impressions when they are admitted to school, and then one would have the same thing, because it is determined from the outset to do exactly the same thing to the impressions as one now does to the real children on a case-by-case basis.

So we certainly did not want to create a worldview school, as one might easily think when hearing from the outside that the anthroposophists had founded a school; rather, it is a matter of bringing anthroposophy into educational practice.

Therefore, I was relatively indifferent to simply leaving the pinnacle of worldview life, the religious worldview, to the corresponding representatives of traditional religious denominations. And so Catholic religious instruction was quietly made available to the Catholic priest, and Protestant religious instruction to the Protestant pastor. We were not afraid that what they spoiled could not be made good by something else. But it turned out that when our friend Emil Molt founded the Waldorf School in Stuttgart, the main contingent of children were initially the proletarian children from his factory. Most of them were children of dissidents, children who, if they had gone to another school, would not have received any religious instruction at all and would have grown up without religion. For them, both the children themselves, in the way that children can express themselves, and their parents felt the need to have something like this, and so we had to set up our free religious instruction for the children. Just as Protestant lessons are given by Protestant pastors and Catholic lessons by Catholic priests, these lessons are given by our teachers, who then also consider themselves to be approved religious education teachers in relation to the rest of the curriculum. This is how anthroposophical religious education is taught. And we have managed to make this free, anthroposophical religious education available to many other children today, but it is particularly promising for proletarian children.

This is where a particular difficulty arises, because we have anthroposophy for adults, and today, when teachers give anthroposophical religious instruction, they have to struggle to create content for what they have to go through with the children. It is a matter of first molding the anthroposophical worldview into a form that can be presented to the child. And we are working hard on this task of creating a modern worldview for children that corresponds to the human spirit. It is indeed necessary to delve deeply into, for example, the extent to which symbols that must be used affect the child and how imponderables come into play. Well, we will talk about that in a moment.

You will understand that a school such as the Waldorf School, even though it must generally follow the principle of basing its curriculum and teaching objectives on what is known about human nature, cannot be established today in the sense of an ideal. One has to make the most diverse compromises, because it is impossible today to educate and teach a child entirely according to an abstract ideal, such as the Waldorf school concept. It would be placed in life in such a way that it simply would not be able to find its way into life. It is relatively easy to express the most diverse criticism of life in the present day. There is much that one cannot like, and one can indulge in very astute, witty criticism of how everything should be different. But one cannot educate people who, when they leave school and enter life, have only a sense of criticism for the senseless meaning of life. No matter how imperfect life may be in the face of abstract intellectual criticism, one must be part of life. Waldorf children must, of course, be released into life — otherwise Waldorf schools would have no meaning — with more consideration given to their humanity than is otherwise the case in our present age; but they must not be turned into people who are alienated from life in their age, in the sense that they only present themselves as critics who are alienated from life. That is what I mean. And that is why, right from the start, the most diverse compromises had to be made, also with regard to the curriculum and teaching objectives. Only what was possible could be set as a goal. I therefore drew up a memorandum right at the start, which was then submitted to the higher school authorities and which says roughly the following: From the child's entry into school, from the age of six or seven until the age of nine, i.e., until the end of the third grade, the child is taught as freely as possible in each year according to what is considered appropriate. The distribution of the teaching material and the setting of teaching goals are left to the discretion of the teacher or teaching staff, which is set up and operates in a very representative manner. Great importance is attached to the fact that the individual teacher not only knows his or her children, but that a corresponding relationship can be established between the teaching staff and the children, which then also extends to the breaks between lessons, so that this or that child can seek advice from the teacher they like best, and so on. It is a real joy to enter a Waldorf school and see how naturally the individual children interact with the teachers during breaks and even when no lessons are being taught.

So during this period, from about the age of six or seven to the age of nine or ten, lessons are taught according to this principle. At the same time, however, the aim is that after completing the third grade, every child should be ready to enter the fourth grade of another school. This means that the child is not taken out of life, but is given something that gives them an advantage over the others, without preventing them from rejoining the rest of life.

Similarly, from the age of nine, the third grade, to the age of twelve, the sixth grade, teaching is strictly based on the principle that after the age of twelve, the child is again in a position to enter another school, for example the seventh grade, and then keep up well. Such compromises had to be made because we do not want to be fanatics, but rather practical people in our approach to the aspirations of the Waldorf school. And when the child has completed elementary school at the age of fourteen, they should be able to enter the corresponding classes of secondary school, high school, and so on, as all the wonderful things are called, so that everything I have just indicated is actually followed.

Now we are striving to expand the Waldorf school in such a way – every year, after first establishing a complete elementary school where children stay until they reach the age of fourteen, we add a new class – that we really do get as far as the young people get when they have completed high school or secondary school and want to go to university or college.

Of course, we also have to organize the entire education and teaching system in such a way that young people can then take their Maturitätsprüfung, as it is called in Austria, or their Abiturium, as it is called in Germany. In other countries, such wonderful things are called by different names. In any case, however, the children should be brought to a level where they can then go on to college. We do not yet have the opportunity to establish our own colleges, because whatever we do in this direction is entirely private in nature. No state would allow us to issue valid certificates for exams that have not taken place at colleges we have established ourselves, because of course we would not hold any exams.

Well, we are simply forced to develop the real Waldorf school plan in a compromise-like manner, and we do not want to deny that at all. What is important, however, is that as much of the spirit I characterized earlier as possible is brought into this framework. When we founded the Waldorf school, because we founded it as a complete school, we naturally got children who had been dismissed from all kinds of school classes. We have had ample opportunity to see the fruits of the strict discipline in schools on our Waldorf school children. We now have a little more than two years of Waldorf school discipline behind us. I will also talk about the details of school discipline. We have this Waldorf school discipline behind us, which largely consists of the fact that we have abolished discipline, and yet we have something to report, for example, which I would like to mention as symptomatic.

Just a few weeks ago, we laid the foundation stone for a larger school building, although we were still in temporary premises. I felt that all the children should be present at the laying of the foundation stone. Well, that's how life is, everything takes longer than you usually plan, and so all the children were already there when we started to make the preparatory steps for this laying of the foundation stone. First, I had to be with the teaching staff and a few other people. But now all the children were already there. We had to sit down together in the so-called conference room, the teachers' room. What to do with the children? The school administrator simply said: We'll put the children in the classrooms. They are now ready for us to put them in the classrooms, where they will be well-behaved and do things that don't disturb us.

So, with the highly questionable discipline that had been imposed on us, we were, in our own way of abolishing discipline, ready to put the children in the classrooms, and they didn't disturb us at all. Of course, this is to be taken with a grain of salt; for nervous ears, it might still be disturbing, but that doesn't hurt either. Children who do not disturb nervous ears are not usually particularly well-behaved. Well, it turns out that the imponderable influence of such an attitude to school changes many things that are otherwise taken for granted and also practiced in school.

As you may have heard, in normal school practice, there are supposed to be certain types of punishment. Of course, in the beginning, some experimentation was necessary to figure out how to proceed. And so, when such a matter came up for discussion, one of the teachers was able to provide some very interesting information, which I would like to repeat here. He wanted to try out first what effect certain types of punishment had on the children; this was when the children had already experienced some of the Waldorf school discipline, in a class where there were some very terrible rascals. These troublemakers — that's what we call particular good-for-nothings in Germany — these good-for-nothings had done something wrong and were to be punished, a little bit like they do in other schools. They were to stay behind after school, as they say, and do math problems during that time. And when this punishment had been imposed on individual members of the class, lo and behold, all the others came and said they wanted to stay and do math too, because math was such a wonderful thing.

You see, the concept of punishment had undergone a complete metamorphosis. It had become something completely different, something very desirable for the whole class. These are indeed things that cannot be achieved by, I would say, directly intending them, but they arise as a consequence when the other is cultivated in the right way. I know that in today's world, people would have very specific concerns about some types of disciplinary measures.

I was once in a position to observe very closely how much depends on the natural contact between teacher and student, which is brought about by the different characterological qualities of students and teachers, educators. In fact, it can be said that the way in which the teacher enters the school in the morning, based on the whole spirit of school practice, determines whether the children show him sympathy or antipathy, and this in turn determines whether they benefit at all or not. And one can even discuss whether a sloppy teacher who does not apply any real principles is more useful than a teacher who wants to apply excellent pedagogical and didactic principles that are terribly good but abstract and do not translate into practical life. There are plenty of such principles today. I am not mocking them when I call them very ingenious; that is open to debate. But when a sloppy, careless teacher enters the classroom, yet radiates love for his class through his whole being, then the children may not become particularly well-behaved, but they will take away more useful things for life than if a teacher who arouses antipathy through his whole being enters the classroom with excellent educational principles and then teaches the children his subject. In such cases, we can see that, precisely because of excellent educational principles, if the teacher's life evokes antipathy, the children carry a terrible nervousness, as it is called today, into their later lives.

All these things can and must be discussed if we are serious about the art of teaching and education. And that is why I once found myself in a special case, which of course will be judged by some as something horrible. I was told, when I was at school again, that a boy in a class was absolutely unmanageable, had committed all kinds of misdeeds, and the teachers in the class did not know what to do with him. I had the boy brought to me and wanted to see what the situation with him was actually like. You will admit that in many schools there would be a good beating in such a case, or perhaps milder punishments or something similar. Well, I examined the boy very closely, and the result of my examination was that I moved him up from the class he was in to the next higher one; that was his punishment. Well, I haven't heard any complaints since then. His teacher confirms that he is now even a model student. Everything is fine now, and that's what really matters.

You see, it depends on looking into the child's mind and into the whole child's nature. There was simply no contact between this boy and the teacher, and since the boy's intelligence allowed him to be moved up to the next class, and there was no parallel class, this was the only thing to do. Moving him down to the next lower class would have thoroughly spoiled him. So if you keep human welfare and human development in mind in all these things, then that is precisely what gives you the right teaching and educational practice. And that is why, I would say, you always have to take a symptomatic approach to the individual. We do not want to deny that the Waldorf school is, in many respects, built on compromises; but as far as possible today, education and teaching are based on a true understanding of human nature.

So the morning is filled in the way I have already indicated to you, and some things, such as the teaching of ancient languages, must be included for the reason that we have to prepare the pupils for university. In these lessons in particular, it will be necessary to pay special attention to what constitutes a healthy soul economy. These Latin and Greek lessons also take place in the morning.

The afternoon hours are then devoted to what relates to the physical body: gymnastics, eurythmy, and what belongs to the arts in particular. We will discuss this in more detail in the coming days. The arts in particular play a very decisive role in our overall teaching at the Waldorf school.

It is entirely conceivable that everything that is, so to speak, head education and head teaching should be dealt with in the morning hours with the children, and only after this has been completed should the children be led to the physical in the afternoon, insofar as they do not let off steam in the breaks between lessons in the morning. And once this more physical and gymnastic education has taken place, the child is not returned to intellectual education. I have already indicated that this has a destructive effect on life; because while the children are engaged in physical activities — we will go into the details in the next few days — an unconscious supersensible force is at work in the child, and the head is no longer able to return to intellectual work after it has devoted itself to this physical education. It is quite wrong to insert a gym class in the middle of the other lessons, even if it is not a whole hour, and to believe that this will achieve something for the lessons by providing variety. The uniform character that this gives to the morning and afternoon lessons proves to be something that is thoroughly conducive to human development. It is precisely when reference is made to the human in this way that human affinities, these inner human inclinations, develop in the very best way in the people being educated.

I have said how we ourselves were compelled to give a kind of anthroposophical religious instruction to the children. But very soon another need arose in connection with this anthroposophical religious instruction, and we had to introduce a Sunday activity that has something cult-like about it and in which the children participate with great religious fervor. The ritualistic aspect that approaches people in the image is really something that, from the point of view of perception, draws itself into the mind, into religious feeling. And so this little ritual, which is performed with the children every Sunday morning, also has an extraordinarily deepening influence on the children's minds.

This had to be expanded upon when they left school. In the rest of Germany, it is customary for children to be brought to confirmation, which is a kind of confirmation, a coming of age for life through a ceremonial teaching act. We have also established something similar for children who have completed elementary school, and this too has had an extraordinary and, above all, lasting impression on the children, as has already been noted.

The fact is that such teaching and educational practices, based on knowledge of human nature, make many things necessary that would otherwise go unnoticed. For example, in Germany, children receive report cards at the end of the school year. Well, report cards have to be given to them so that they can take something home with them during the holidays. But we were also forced to take a very special position with regard to these report cards. I must admit that I would find it extremely difficult to cope in a Waldorf school if I had to go along with the usual practice of giving report cards in Germany. I couldn't do it, for the simple reason that I could never grasp the difference between what constitutes a “satisfactory,” “almost satisfactory,” “sufficient,” “almost sufficient,” “barely sufficient,” and so on in school, which is then converted into numbers, so that in Germany some school report cards look like this: on one side are the subjects, followed by 4½, 3, 3-4, and so on. I have never been able to understand these occult connections! And so we had to organize school report cards differently.

At the end of the year, when the children go on vacation, they do receive a report card. However, it contains a kind of reflection written individually for each child by the teacher, something biographical about the year, and it has been shown everywhere that the children receive this with great satisfaction. They read their picture, which is drawn with appropriate benevolence, but not colored at all, not in the sense of whitewashing anything. They accept this with great satisfaction. And then we add a saying, completely individualized for each child, which is written into each child's report card. And this saying then forms a kind of life motto for the next year. This is something that, I believe, has already proven itself and will continue to do so in the future, even if it is sometimes referred to as a “report card substitute,” an expression that has become popular in Germany in recent years.

Well, under the influence of this Waldorf school practice, the children actually enjoy being at school, and it can certainly be seen as a symptom of how much they enjoy being at school – I like to give details in order to characterize symptoms – that, for example, a mother told me: My boy has never been in the habit of being affectionate with me in any way; he couldn't be affectionate. He has now come to the Waldorf school, completed the school year, and gone on vacation; the vacation came to an end, and lo and behold, when the vacation ended and the boy, who is still quite young, was told he could go back to school, it was the first time the boy kissed me. — At any rate, this is a symptom of what is entering the minds of those children who are educated in human kindness based on knowledge of human nature and are also kept in it through testimony and so on.

I wanted to bring up these things, which I would say are related to the external structure of the Waldorf school, before I go on with the details, in order to introduce you to the Waldorf school as such. I considered this necessary, and on this point I had to depart from the originally planned program, according to which today's lesson should have been devoted to the description of childhood immediately following the change of teeth. This will be made up for tomorrow. But I wanted to be able to place the following description within what has emerged as an external, practical framework for the Waldorf school.