This is the workbook-scrapbook of Miss Ashton-Warner's Creative Teaching Scheme which she developed in a small Maori school,...

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This is the workbook-scrapbook of Miss Ashton-Warner's Creative Teaching Scheme which she developed in a small Maori school, some of which was the substratum of Spinster, all of which defends and demonstrates Anna Vorontosoy's conviction in the earlier book- ""I must do what I believe and I believe in what I do."" This can be very simply reduced to the concept that all education must be part of the child's world- integral and organic; so it is that her small children wrote their own primers and learned to read through the words of their own experience, not Dick and Jane's. This record is in part an amplification of the program which she developed and in part a day to day view of life in the school where she taught for almost twenty years and where her husband was headmaster. Some of the concepts are older ones (i.e. the teacher can only provide the external framework for the creative force- Plato; the emphasis on the natural child- Roussoau; etc.) but her book is remarkable for the quality of spontaneity she elicits and protects in her children, and for its own it is filled with many random illuminations (""What about when the illusions of life drop off? Some time before death? They're better on."") It also reflects, expectedly, her own remarkable receptivity- (""The least thing stirs me; the greatest cannot make me quake"") and mobile awareness of life on the wing.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: 0671617680

Page Count: -

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 1963

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