Waldorf Without Walls

Misty morning at Taproot, photo Lea Kushwara

Waldorf Without Walls presents

Homeschool Teacher Training

At Taproot Farm, Barbara and Quimby's home

Grades 1–8     $350

August 1-4, 2013

Three day course. Tuition includes room and board.

Come and enjoy life in the country, while you learn. Other amenities include the use of Barbara's extensive library, ability to prepare for two grades, canoe, swim, hike, evening activities, such as campfire, discussions and games.

It is our purpose to offer a training to suit the unique situation of homeschooling parents and teachers of small groups, keeping in mind the advantages of working in a home, applying Steiner's philosophy to the needs of the homeschooling family.

These are comfortable accommodations, like a youth hostel. We are not a hotel.  You may be sharing a room, perhaps on an air mattress on the floor, and will need to bring your own bedding or sleeping bag and towels.  You will be assigned to a KP (Kitchen Party) group to help with simple meal prep and cleanup for a few meals during your stay.  You are also welcome to camp if you prefer the privacy of a tent!

We are unable to provide child care at this time. Nursing infants are welcome, however, with a participant caregiver who is familiar with the child and able to remove the child if it becomes disruptive.

Grades Training — August 1-4, 2013

Arrive Thursday evening, August 1, between 3 and 5:30 to settle in, have dinner and enjoy the evening program.

Photo by Lea Kushwara

 

Thursday
Dinner 5:30
All meals served in Barnhouse
Clean-up KP volunteers 6:15
Crafts in the Farmhouse 7:00 — 8:00
Orientation 8:00 — 8:30
Lights out 10:00 pm
Friday
Wake-up 6:45 am
Exercises (or KP) 7:15
(or walk in the country)
Breakfast 8:00
Clean-up KP 8:45
Morning song, Eurythmy 9:15 – 10
with Jean and Royse
Grade Session One 10:15 - 12

Options:
Grade 1 with Barbara Dewey
Grade 4 with Royse Crall
Grade 5 with Alison Manzer
Grade 7 with Jean Miller
Simple Chemistry with Quimby
Recorder, Grade 2 with Jenny Sage

KP 12:00 pm
Lunch 12:30 pm
Clean-up KP or rest time 1:15–1:45
Afternoon Session One 2:00 – 4:00
Options:
Grade 2 with Barbara Dewey
Grade 3 with Royse Crall
Grade 6, 7, 8 with Jean Miller and Alison Manzer
Botany basics (Wildflowers) with Quimby
Recorder grade 1 with Jenny Sage
Afternoon Electives 4:15–5:30
Options:
Beginning recorder -- Jenny Sage
Simple woodworking -- Quimby
Painting — Royse Crall
Animals -- Alison Manzer
Form Drawing -- Jean
KP 5:30
Dinner 6:15
Clean-up 7:00
Evening program 7:45 – 9:00
What DID Steiner Say? Cafe -- Jean, Alison
Lights out 10:00 pm
Wooded Trail — by Lea Kushwara

 

 

Saturday
Wake-up 6:45 am
Exercises (or KP) 7:15
(or walk in the country)
Breakfast 8:00
Clean-up KP 8:45
Morning song, Eurythmy 9:15 – 10:00
with Jean
Morning Session Two 10:15 – 12:00
Options:
Grade 1 with Barbara Dewey
Grade 4 with Royse Crall
Grade 5 with Alison Manzer
Physics with Quimby (if any grade 6-8, otherwise wildflowers)
Recorder grade 3 with Jenny Sage
KP 12:00 pm
Lunch 12:45
Clean-up KP or rest time 1:30–2:00
Afternoon Session Two 2:15 – 4:00
Options:
Grade 2 with Barbara Dewey
Grade 3 with Royse Crall
Grade 6, 7, 8 with Jean Miller and Alison Manzer
Plants and Trees with Quimby
Recorder grade 4 with Jenny Sage
Afternoon Electives 4:15–5:30
Options:
Intermediate Recorder -- Jenny Sage
Geometric Drawing -- Barbara
Insects -- Quimby
Painting -- Jean Miller
KP 5:30
Dinner 6:15
Clean-up 7:00
Evening program 7:45 – 8:45
Waldorf with Multiple Aged Children, Cafe - Staff
Lights out 10:00 pm

Frick & Frack, our Scottish Highlander cows
Sunday
Wake-up 6:45 am
Exercises (or KP) 7:15
(or walk in the country)
Breakfast 8:00
Clean-up KP 8:30
Morning song, Eurythmy 9:15 – 10:00
with Jean
Morning Session One 10:15 – 11:15
Planning and ORganizing -- Barbara and staff
Morning Session Two 11:15 – 12:00
Inner Work and Artistic Envisioning -- Jean
KP 12:00
Lunch 12:45
Clean-up 1:30 - 2:00
Closing 2:15
Safe travels!

Faculty

Royse Crall

Royse has taken one class through Spring Garden Waldorf School (grades one to eight) and has just completed grade 5 for the second time. Royse taught Waldorf lessons in painting, knitting and history to fourth graders in the public school from 1995-1997. She taught Waldorf main lesson blocks to homeschooled children grades kindergarten to 5th from 1997-1999. She received her Waldorf training from the Great Lakes Regional Training Center (2000-2002) and has attended numerous Waldorf grades trainings and conferences from 1993 until today. She has taught at Taproot Farm since 2007. Royse has three grown children of her own. She loves knitting, Eurythmy and drama, and working on her art.

Barbara S. Dewey

Barbara, of Waldorf Without Walls, consults with homeschooling families throughout the world, publishes a quarterly newsletter, writes publications, provides training workshops at her farm, and spends her spare time with her husband, Quimby, family and friends, enjoying her unique solar home, and developing her farmland. She is the mother of four and grandmother to six. Barbara holds an M.S. in Waldorf Education from the Waldorf Institute of Sunbridge College in Spring Valley, N.Y. She has been teaching for 53 years.

Alison Manzer

Alison Manzer resides in Austin, Texas.  She has been homeschooling her three sons with Waldorf inspired ideas and methods for the past eleven years.  Sam, now twenty two, is pursing a doctorate in Chemistry at Berkeley.  Jack is seventeen and has two loves: art and music.  James is fifteen and is passionate about the environment, science, and keeping fish.  While Rob, her husband, does an amazing job of keeping this rather eccentric household together!

     Alison is passionate about studying history and literature and endeavors to use this enthusiasm to inspire her family as well as her other students.  Currently, she leads a lively historical fiction book club in her home for middle school and high school students.  She has homeschooled in three different states, and over the years has gained experience in adapting the Waldorf “head, heart, and hands” ideal of education to a variety of children and educational settings.

Jean Miller

As the mother of three home schooled children, Jean has been on this Waldorf-inspired journey for almost 20 years. She has a Master of Arts in Teaching and has taught in public and private schools, home schooled, and taught small groups. She has also been a leader in a number of Waldorf-inspired groups over the years -- Bridgeways, Cedar Creek Community School, and Rainbow’s Edge, a small Waldorf-inspired cooperative. Jean recently launched a website, www.waldorfinspiredlearning.com, to share with others on this path. Since 1992, Jean has been studying and practicing Waldorf methods; she has attended local and national conferences and workshops, read extensively, planned and implemented many lessons, and enjoys writing and exploring curriculum. For the past six summers, Jean has taught at the Taproot Teacher Training. She lives in Northeastern Ohio with her husband of 25 years and their youngest child who just finished eighth grade; her two older children are out on their own. Jean also loves to sing, garden and bird watch. And she loves meeting people from all over the country who come together at Taproot for a weekend in the summertime!

John Quimby

After earning degrees in Entomology and Forestry from the University of Michigan, he was the State Forest Entomologist and Chief of the Forest Health Program of Pennsylvania for 30 years, and a Forester for the U.S. Forest Service in Alaska, Minnesota, Michigan, Colorado, and South Dakota for five years.

Since retiring from forest entomology in 1999 'Quimby' (as he is called), has been devoting his time to cabinet making, planting trees, social action, and environmental education for youngsters. He has worked part time/full time for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, and was named "Environmental Educator of the Year" by that organization in 2007. Several past summers have been spent guiding canoe trips for youngsters in the Adirondacks of upstate New York State. In that capacity he has run workshops on wildflower identification, tree identification, and other environmental education themes, as well as taken youth out into the wilderness for a week at a time. This will be his fourth summer teaching as Taproot, where he has built several buildings from materials on the farm. The content of Quimby's sessions will be determined by the needs of the group. Come with your science questions in mind!

Jenny Sage

Jenny is the director of Maple Tree Waldorf, a program for homeschoolers in upstate New York. She went through the grades herself as a student in a Waldorf school, where she first began seriously studying the recorder. She went on to obtain a Bachelor of Music in performance on the recorder from Oberlin Conservatory of Music, and has been teaching private music lessons to all ages for nearly fourteen years. She is also a graduate of Resonare, a Foundation in Music out of Anthroposophy, and has taught as a first grade teacher in a small Waldorf school. Having attended the Taproot training for two years as a student, Jenny joined us last year to teach recorder.  we are happy to have her back again this year!

Registration form:

Tuition includes all meals, program and accommodations. You will be sent a confirmation packet with more details upon registration. Couples receive a 25% discount, enter 2 adults and check the box for the discount.

Total


You can register with PayPal or print this form and mail a check to Barbara Dewey, 89900 Mill Hill Road, Bowerston, OH 44695

Need more information? Contact Barbara at 740-269-3038

Taproot Farm