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On Reading and Writing

towards a phenomenology and pathology of literacy
Karl König
In these meditations on hand and eye, attention and uprightness, light and sound,
death and resurrection, Karl König attempts to reveal the phenomena out of
which writing and reading manifest - or fail to develop.
König's observations lead directly to pathways of education. He notes correctly
that the extreme modern pressures on children to achieve types of literacy can
often stunt the development of healthy imagination, feeling and willing. All teachers
and interested parents will want to read this remarkable book -- it's depth and
accessiblity will not only increase your awareness of the phenomena of reading
and writing, I believe you'll find that König's presentation will open your
heart as well. This is an amazing work.
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Waldorf Curriculum Guides
English, Language Arts, and Literature
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The Wise Enchanter
A Journey through the Alphabet
Shelley Davidow
Illustrated by Krystyna Emilia Kurzyca
Softbound
$15.00 |
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I can't begin to describe how much I love this story and the fact
that Shelley Davidow has so much insight and such an understanding of children that
she created it. The Wise Enchanter actually makes me wish that I could go
back to the time before I learned to read and enter the magic world of words through
this rich and wonderful door. I especially love that the story is so very like the
worlds I created for myself in those pre-written-word days, yet carries with it the
assurance that there are depths of goodness in the world and that searching for them
is a worthy, yea, necessary thing to do. What could be a better way to introduce
our written language to a child? This book is a beautiful creation and a gift to
treasure.
Here's a small sample, from the Prologue:
[The Wise Enchanter is on his magical island, and is troubled. He has called his
daughter, Gadrun, to him.]
Gadrun ran to her father. A frown creased her brow. "Dear father," she
said, "I see that you are worried."
"I am getting old," he replied. "Without Wisdom, there can be no
new Enchanters after I am gone. No children have come to my island for many years.
It is happening just as I feared. Wisdom is fading in the world. Words are disappearing.
The brightness in the sky is vanishing and the dark Cloud of Ignorance has grown
suddenly dense. A new darkness is looming. Someone is being created in the deep.
He is growing stronger every minute. If he is not stopped, he will grow immense.
If he grows strong enough, he will rise up and devour every word and sound. The
earth will become a cold, silent place, too terrible to imagine."
"Who are you talking about?" Gadrun whispered.
"I do not like to utter his name," her father whispered. "But I
will say it for you. His name is the Master of Ignorance and Shadows. His name is
Urckl!"
Gadrun grew pale and silent at the mention of Urckl. Once, some time ago, Urckl
had found enough strength to send one of his messengers to the end of the world.
Something terrible had happened then in the Enchanted Islands and Gadrun's heart
had been broken.
And thus, the adventure begins.
I should add that The Wise Enchanter is filled with soft black-and-white
drawings that you can easily transform into main lesson drawings for the child(ren)
you are teaching to recreate as each letter is rescued from darkness.
This is a wonderful, vibrant, masterful book -- may your journey through it be
rich and rewarding! |
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An English Grammar
The Language before Babel
Rudolf Schmid
Softbound
$16.00 |
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This is an incredibly fascinating, lively, original,
and in many ways, the most memorable English grammar I've ever seen. It is also
perhaps the best example of the sheer usefulness of employing Rudolf Steiner's
method of understanding things by approaching them as threefold, fourfold, sevenfold,
etc. entities. When Schmid applies this to conventional English grammar, the structure
of the language springs to life and, because it is placed into relationship with
other aspects of human experience, it becomes much easier to grasp and remember
and use correctly. Anyone teaching grammar to any class, whether in a school or
at home, will find that using this approach opens vistas of understanding - for
teacher as well as students. Very highly recommended!
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An English Manual
for the Elementary School
New Edition
Dorothy Harrer
Softbound
$14.00 |
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A classic guide to teaching English language arts in
the elmentary grades. Contains a master teacher's suggestions for presenting English
grammar, punctuation, and composition for grades 2-8. Includes sample lessons.
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Teaching English
Roy Wilkinson
$10.50 |
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England's most proflific master teacher offers a concise
overview of the task and method of imparting a sound understanding of English (or
any mother language) to students in grades 1 through 8.
Topics Covered:
- Teaching English
- The Origin of Language
- The Various Aspects of Language
- Child Development
- Practical Work - General
- Speaking
- Writing
- Grammar
- Compositions
- Literature
- Discussions of Class Work, grade by grade
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The Power of Grammar
A Phenomenological Approach
Proceedings of a Colloquium of Waldorf Teachers
Compiled and largely presented by Anne Greer
Spiral Bound
$24.00 |
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This is an energetic and exciting compendium of questions, answers, practical approaches and deeper understand - in short, it is everything anyone who is in love with language and wishes to teach it well could wish for.
Between two modest covers you'll find both food for thought and examples to be emulated. This was truly a colloquium where minds met and understand and purpose developed. Anyone engaged in teaching English grammar will find many years of resources in The Power of Grammar, whether that teaching is in a classroom or a home. The Power of Grammar is a powerhouse in and of itself.
Very highly recommended. |
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The Australian Word
A Resource Manual for Teachers of English and Anyone Who Loves Language, Its
Body, Soul and Spirit
Alan Whitehead
$18.95
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Don't let the title fool you! This is not a manual peppered with "g'day mate" and
other aspects of language unique to Australia. Save that many of the stories take
place in Australia, The Australian Word could as easily be titled The Universal
English Language. It is an excellent guide to teaching the wonders of the English
language in story and rhyme. Included are: speech, humour, the novel, names, mime,
poetry, Aussie slang (ok, so there is a chapter that covers "g'day mate"),
St. John, a story workshop, the short story, 19th Century Australian poetry, sound
and hearing. |
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One Way to Teach the Writing of Poetry
Christy Barnes
Softbound
$5.00 |
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A priceless article from one of the most inspiring
teachers of English and literature. Her suggestions will inspire any teacher to
bring the art and craft of creating one's own poetry to life for your students.
This is one of those little treasures that will live in your heart long after you've
worn out its pages.
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The Art and Science of Teaching Composition
Dorit Winter
Softbound
$10.00 |
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This small but insightful book explores rich and stimulating
methods for the teaching of English composition skills in Waldorf elementary schools.
It offers writing exercises and examples. Compact, it is filled with wisdom all
teachers will want to apply.
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The Spirit of the English Language
A Practical Guide for Poets, Teachers and Students
John H. Wulsin, Jr.
Softbound
$35.00 |
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Here is a fascinating journey through the English language and its literature,
born of John Wulsin's lifelong interest “how sound works in English and American
poetry.” Wulsin traces the many changes, both subtle and radical, in how English
has sounded over the past thirteen centuries, while also showing how those changes
are related to the evolution of human consciousness in Western, English-speaking
peoples.
The Spirit of the English Language is never dry but filled with the textures
of the lives and works of the great English-language poets. Wulsin describes the
evolving activity of poetry in the biography of each poet, beginning with the Old
Anglo–Saxon in Beowulf and the later works of Chaucer, and following
the spirit of the English language through to the nineteenth century’s “primal/modern” language
of Gerard Manley Hopkins and Dickinson’s diamond-distilled language. Along
the way, we discover how the very sounds of English have changed the ways in which
not only poets think and express themselves, but, more important, how sound works
and changes our human consciousness. The author also discusses specifically how,
in teaching poetics, stages of the developing English language quicken corresponding
stages of thinking in maturing adolescents.
Twelve years in the making, The Spirit of the English Language is the
fruit of John Wulsin’s thirty years of teaching language and literature to
adolescents. The book is further informed and fructified by the author’s fifteen
years of teaching poetics to adults, as well as decades of writing poetry and participating
in numerous poetry workshops.
This practical guide will become a classic for all poets, teachers of poetry and
language, and students. It is a beautiful resource for anyone interested in English,
its development, its effects on consciousness, and how sound works in poetry.
Contents:
- Introduction
- Part I
- A Language Is Born
- Old Anglo-Saxon
- Evolving Language in Evolving Adolescents: Ninth and Tenth Grades
- The Norman Conquest
- Chaucer’s Middle English
- The Language Wakes up, Renewed
- Elizabethan English: Shakespeare
- Expansion and Contraction: King James Bible
- Part II
- Lyric Activity in Metaphysical Poetry: John Donne
- The English Epic: Milton
- The Eighteenth Century and Blake
- Wordsworth
- Coleridge
- Byron
- Shelley
- Keats
- Elizabeth Barrett Browning
- Robert Browning
- Tennyson
- Gerard Manley Hopkins
- Eleventh Grade(Ages 16–17)
- Part III
- Alteration of the Early American Mind
- Poetry in American Prose: The Novel
- Whitman
- Emily Dickinson
- Twelfth Grade(Ages 17–18)
- Contemporary American Speech
- Speech and Drama in High School
- Conclusion
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The Language of English Literature
How English Sounds
John Wulsin
Folder Bound
$14.00 |
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In Part 1, Wulsin explores the language of poetry in
English as it developed from 800 AD thru the 1800's AD. His key question is "What
do changes in the language reflect or suggest about changing consciousness in English-speaking
peoples?"
In Part 2, he reflects on the relationship between the evolving stages of the English
language and the developmental stages of adolescents. How might the evolution of
English poetry both reflect, and especially affect, the development of a teenager?
How can the Spirit of the English language best help adolescents in their develoment
in the context of a Waldorf education? |
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The Laws of the Living Language
John Wulson, Jr.
Spiral Bound
$7.00 |
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Waldorf high school English teacher John Wulsin examines
some common contemporary errors of speech, the significance of the correct forms,
and what parents and teachers can do to help students regain their footing in the
spoken word.
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Splinters of the Sun
Teaching Russian Literature to High School Students
Betty Staley
Softbound
$18.00 |
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Betty Staley passionately loves Russian literature and deeply believes that it
holds many "splinters of the sun" - many loving pieces of light that illuminate
the souls of readers as they speak of a world that is and vastly different in history
and outlook from that of the Anglo-European worlds. It is this combination of beauty
and cultural landscape that makes the great works of Russian literature so very appropriate
for high school students.
Anyone wishing to teach this literature will be helped enormously by Splinters
of the Sun. In it, Staley picks key authors and works and explores them through
the windows of history, culture, biography and literary content and style. It is
in many ways like walking through a park where the trees are stories planted by
authors of genius. I believe that lovers of literature have good reason to rejoice
at the coming of this book. |
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