"Receive the children in reverence, Educate them in love, Let them go forth in Freedom" - Rudolf Steiner
 
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Kindergarten

 

The Kindergarten is located in a secure, designated area adjacent to the Primary School, within a separate fenced play area. The children attending kindergarten turn six years of age after January 1, in that year.

Children attend kindergarten 4 full days per week, between Tuesday and Friday, starting at 9am and finishing at 2.45pm.

On Mondays the home:school programme provides a bridge between home and school, when the child participates in activities at home in a similar way to school, but with parental guidance. The teacher conducts interviews, meets with parents and visits children at their home on Mondays.

For more details on the Home:School Programme, click here.

To read the Kindergarten Handbook, which gives comprehensive information about many aspects of the Kindergarten, click here.

Playgroup for children between 2 and 5 years is offered on Monday during Term in the Kindergarten between 9.30 and 12 noon.

For more information about the Playgroup, click here.

 

The Incarnating Child

Steiner: " True observation of man sees in the growing human being a work of divine creation." (A Modern Art of Education 1923)

Rudolf Steiner, Austrian born philosopher, scientist, and educator gave indications for the care and education of the young child according to the needs of the child's developing physical body and its growing capacities for movement. Steiner's picture of the young child emphasizes the incarnating process of the soul and spirit of the child, and he describes the openness of the child to the environment in such a way that we see the child as "all sense-organ". By this we mean that the  child literally builds into himself not only the objective outer side of things, but also their inner nature and even the moral atmosphere of the environment. In this "openness to the world", the child has a much more immediate connection with these subtle qualities than the more intellectual adult. For this reason, the Kindergarten teachers strive to ensure that everything that is made available to the child is imbued with goodness, beauty and truth.

  

Engaging the Will Forces

Steiner: "By a proper application of fundamental educational principles during the first seven years of childhood, the foundation is laid for the development of a strong and healthy will; for a strong and healthy will must have its support in well -developed forms of the physical body" (Education of the Child 1907)

The Kindergarten environment and program is structured in such a way as to meet the needs of each individual child, as they make the transition between pre-school and the formal learning environment of the primary school. From our observations we see that
the young child wants to be physically active, learns by imitation, and lives in a world of "doing", of will activity. For this reason Kindergarten provides an environment where learning through imitation is seen as a fundamental key to one's work with children at this stage of childhood. Cognitive, social, emotional and physical skills are afforded equal value in the kindergarten and many different competencies are developed.The child needs time and opportunity to practice new skills: engaging in domestic activities... cleaning, sweeping, digging, weeding, building, kneading... all the things in fact that a child would see done and wish to imitate in the home; Kindergarten offers various artistic experiences, including water-colour painting, beeswax modeling, singing games and rhymes, story-telling, puppetry, sewing and wool crafts; and a joyous  experience of the seasons and special occasions through Family festival celebrations.

Play

Rudolf Steiner " If a child plays so that they are satisfied, they will have the foundation for health, and the ability to do what they need to do in later life" (The Spiritual Ground of Education 1922)

A healthy balance between structured group activities and self-directed play is maintained. The Kindergarten environment provides time and materials  that allows the child to use their fantasy and imagination. Play materials that have their origin in nature, eg wood with a variety of size, shape, form and colour, stones, shells, seed pods, pine cones; simple toys ie  dolls and puppets, carved wooden animals, simple pieces of furniture and hand-crafted objects. In their play, the children create what happens around them; they child create and build from these materials, houses and cubbies, shops, rafts and boats, machines, hospitals, factories, and plays on the floor with known storylines or made up scripts.

 

 

 
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