Outreach - Cincinnati Waldorf School
Transcription
Outreach - Cincinnati Waldorf School
The Cincinnati Waldorf School Winter 2011 Outreach Special Edition: Our Graduates Welcome to this special edition of Outreach, featuring our Cincinnati Waldorf School graduates. This spring, CWS will graduate its sixth full 8th grade class! Equally exciting is that our first graduating class of 2006 has entered college; therefore it seemed Class of 2006 the perfect opportunity to reflect upon their experiences as Waldorf students and celebrate their accomplishments. We also spend some time in this issue reflecting on the 8th grade year at a Waldorf school, with the intent of sharing with our readers the unique opportunities our graduates experience in their final year at CWS. While many in our society think of the “middle school” years as nothing more than academic preparation for high school, Waldorf schools see these years as incredible opportunities for intellectual, emotional and social growth, as well as enhancing self-esteem through projects and experiences designed to expand the adolescent mind – truly the best preparation for the future! Enjoy reading about our graduates and their lives while learning more about how the Waldorf curriculum touches our children, their families and the world. Class of 2011 Back Row: Jodi Harris, Bill Cordray, Kyle Arthur Front Row: Jonathan Crable, Julian Jordan, Murray Johnson, Erica Patterson, Janela Harris Contents Q&A with Erica Patterson Q&A with Janela Harris A Coming of Age Story Where I am From Our Class Trip to Maine What it Means to be Blessed with a Waldorf Education The 8th Grade Research Project 2 3 4 4 5 5 6 The Honored 8th Grader 7 ANSNA Resources 8 Alumni Updates 2-8 Back Row: Mrs. Connie Davis, Eric Araujo. Oonagh Davis, Savannah Castellano, Lina Macovel, Sierra Curley, Haley Wergers Front Row: Colin Fanselow, Janee Simmons, Zoe Barnhart, Simon Burkey, Caleb Leonard 1 Jonathan Crable ’07 spent a year as an AFS exchange student in northeast Germany. His host father is the director of Mueritz Nationalpark and Jonathan lived in a wood and solar heated 200 year old restored farmhouse. He went to school all year there and even now can still speak fluent German. He was able to spend two weeks near Berlin with another family and went skiing in the Czech Republic. He canoed and tried to sail on the lakes and ice skated for miles on the canals in the winter. He and his brother, Matthew ’09, are both interested in other cultures; this year they’re hosting a boy from Milan, Italy. Their family feels that the Waldorf School helped them to be interested in a wide variety of subjects but not necessarily what the typical American school system offers. The significant interest that was sparked is music. Jonathan is studying guitar and Matthew plans to continue playing viola throughout high school at Walnut Hills. Nick Kammerer ’08 is a junior honor roll student at Clark Montessori High School. He plays varsity soccer, is a long distance track runner and a Life Scout. He is currently working on his Eagle project creating trail markers with the Cincinnati Parks. He works part-time at College Hill Coffee Company … stop in and see him sometime! Mary Kate Norton ’10 is a freshman at Villa Madonna Academy in Villa Hills, Kentucky, where her first-semester grade point average is a 3.8. She is involved in Music Club, Christian Outreach and theater. Katie Olson ’07 is a senior at Turpin High School and has maintained a GPA of 3.78 over the course of her four years there! She is a varsity swimmer and participates in creative writing competitions. Katie is in the midst of her college search and is planning to pursue a double major in creative writing and English education. Grace Rupp ’10 is a freshman at Mason High School and made the Dean’s List with Highest Honors her very first trimester! She is a member of Mason’s Una Vocce women’s choir and plays cello in the Concert Orchestra. Ed Atkinson ’10 is a freshman at Walnut Hills High School, where he excels in history, Spanish, science and art. He sings in his church choir and teaches Sunday School. Hailey Olson ’09 is a sophomore at Turpin High School and maintains a GPA of 3.85. She is a varsity swimmer. Tatum Davis ’07 is a senior at Reading Junior/Senior High School. Her fall quarter 2010 GPA was 4.1!!! She participates in powder puff football, Community Service Club and works at TJ Maxx after school. She is looking forward to college next year and pursuing her interests in photography, architecture and engineering. 2 Q&A with Erica Patterson Class of 2006 Describe what first comes to mind when you think back on your years at the Cincinnati Waldorf School (CWS). Small classes. Strings, choir, handwork, woodwork, eurythmy. The block system. A wide variety of learning material. Dog sledding. How did CWS prepare you for high school? I was pretty well prepared for high school, it was a little bit hard going from such a small class (only 5 people) to such a large one (200 people). CWS taught me the value of learning for the sake of learning, not just the grades. How could CWS have better prepared you for high school? I think a little more focus on science would have been helpful - learning the scientific method, and how to draw up a lab report. also knowing not only how to write an essay, but the different components of an essay; intro, thesis, body, conclusion. I knew how to write an essay with all these aspects but I did not know what they were called which led to much confusion when I first came across these terms freshman year. What do you feel was unique about your Waldorf education? All the “special subjects” were unique, as well as the block system. Not to mention the incredible 8th grade class trip to boundary waters Minnesota where I got to go on a dog sledding expedition. Also my teachers and friends were like my family at Waldorf - everyone was on a first name basis. How was your imagination and curiosity affected by your time spent at CWS? At CWS, I picked up the violin in 3rd grade and I haven’t put it down since. Learning to play an instrument, sing, knit, carve wood, and dance enhanced my imagination and curiosity. In high school, a simple presentation became a full blown art project, and my ability to look at problems from many different angles helped me to come up with solutions and better understand the material being presented. What have you gained from your Waldorf education (emotionally, intellectually, spiritually)? I feel that I gained a well rounded education at CWS. All throughout high school I maintained a very high GPA (over 4.0). I believe that I did so well in school because I was able to look at presented material in more than just a strictly academic sense. I did exceptionally well on all the AP classes I took gaining a total of 35 college credits. This meant that I was able to enter my freshman year in college with a sophomore status. Emotionally, the skills I learned in my special subject classes at CWS have helped me ward off stress. All throughout high school, I worked on an enormous handwork project - a crocheted afghan. Whenever I was feeling stressed or overwhelmed by the homework load I would take a break, crochet a couple of rows, and go back to work with my mind clear. Have you maintained any important relationships made through CWS? Please tell us about them. When you are in a class with the same 20 or so people for multiple years, it is hard not to form lasting relationships. I still keep in touch with people from my original first grade class, and Janela Harris (the only other girl from my first grade class to make it all the way to eighth grade) is one of my very closest friends. Over the summer I traveled to Iceland and France with Janela and her mom (Jodi Harris - also my 7th and 8th grade teacher). The trip was a blast and something I will never forget. I do not doubt that I will remain close friends with Janela throughout my entire life. Tell us what you’re doing now. I am attending Colorado State University in Ft. Collins, CO. I am double majoring in Biology and Equine Science. Q&A with Janela Harris Class of 2006 Describe what first comes to mind when you think back on your years at the Cincinnati Waldorf School (CWS). close-knit community, and I definitely credit Waldorf with that comfort and my awareness of it. The first thing I think of is the close sense of community. I remember having the sense that I knew everyone involved with CWS, or if not “knew,” that I’d at least recognize their faces or names. After that, I think of our Main Lesson Books, and how involved I was with my own learning. Intellectually, I am very interested in learning. I am also in love with the idea of learning simply for the sake of learning. The more I interact with people with different educational backgrounds than mine, the more apparent it becomes that Waldorf has instilled in me the idea that the point of learning is to know more, as opposed to the attitude that learning should be molded around another goal, like passing a test or getting a decent job. I’m very grateful for the fact that CWS has instilled in me such a value of knowledge. How did CWS prepare you for high school? CWS prepared me especially well for general class work. I was intimidated by the magnitude of the change in the social setting from Waldorf to Walnut Hills, but overall I was very well prepared. How could CWS have better prepared you for high school? After being at CWS, my biggest issue in high school was lack of knowledge surrounding tests. I didn’t know how to study very well, and I had anxiety about actually taking tests. I think part of this is probably just my personality, but I do believe CWS could have better taught me methods for studying for tests, and a little more about test-taking strategies. What do you feel was unique about your Waldorf education? I think the structure of days at Waldorf was very unique; the combination of block main lesson periods, and shorter special subject classes. Making main lesson books is something I’ve never heard of anyone else doing, but which I thought was very useful. Simply… how integrated my ‘normal’ learning was with creative and artistic expression. How was your imagination and curiosity affected by your time spent at CWS? I have held on to my imagination and curiosity much longer, and value it much more, because of being at CWS. I think that many other styles of education don’t give students a chance to explore their creativity as CWS does. As a result, students mature, and lose some of their imagination and curiosity without ever really appreciating it. At Waldorf, I not only continued to exercise my imagination and curiosity longer than most children, but I also learned to appreciate things which are sometimes seen as childish. What have you gained from your Waldorf education (emotionally, intellectually, spiritually)? Emotionally, I have gained a true appreciation of community. I am well aware of the fact that I am most comfortable when I have a sense of being included in a small and but I do know that we always got along, and even after our graduation from 8th grade, we’ve remained close. Erica and I went to France and Iceland this past summer, which was my high school graduation gift, and in addition to commenting on each other’s Facebook pages, we have been sending each other postcards since college started this year. I think my relationship with Erica is so close not only because our personalities are compatible, but also because we went through so much of the CWS experience together and that naturally creates a common background. Do you feel CWS cultivated a love of learning? If so, how? CWS gave me a great awareness of flexibility in spirituality. I am very open to and aware of variations in spirituality between different people, and I believe Waldorf taught me about some less common or mainstream ideas about spirituality (or, if not an understanding of the ideas, at least of the fact that they exist), where my peers have basic understandings of major world religions, but seem to be somewhat narrowminded about what counts as religious or spiritual beliefs. CWS has definitely cultivated a love of learning, for me. It’s hard to say if this is a personality trait I’d have without Waldorf, but I definitely love all kinds of learning. Throughout high school and my first semester of college, I’ve never disliked all aspects of a class, and I think that as long as something is being taught, I’m pretty interested. CWS contributed to this by allowing for so much personal specificity in each class that I’ve developed the idea that any given class is what I make it. Have you maintained any important relationships made through CWS? Please tell us about them. Tell us what you’re doing now. I have maintained some relationships from CWS, but most of my CWS relationships have petered away as I’ve grown apart from people who either left Waldorf before I did, or remained a larger part of the community longer than I did. One of my favorite friendships, however, is with Erica Patterson. We were both in Miss Susan’s kindergarten class in 1996, and according to Erica, we played kittens together all the time. I don’t remember that, I am attending Haverford College, a liberal arts college of about 1200 students, located about 30 minutes outside of Philadelphia. I’m undecided on my major, but as of now I am leaning toward majoring in psychology, with a career as a clinical child psychologist, or anthropology. Here at Haverford, I was selected as an outstanding member of the class of 2014. I gave an interview, took pictures, and there is now a profile of me on the Haverford College web site on a page designed to give prospective students an idea of the Haverford student body. You can view my profile at the following link: http:// www.haverford.edu/admission/profiles/ freshmen/harris.php Teacher’s Response: As our 8th grade classes grow larger and the Cincinnati Waldorf School sends more students off to high school each year, we have refined our curriculum as necessary to be certain our students are well prepared for high school. Study skills and test-taking strategies are now part of our Upper Grades curriculum. CWS has incorporated an introduction to the scientific method, lab equipment and reports into its 8th grade science blocks. The vocabulary of expository essays is also used much more frequently now. ~Jodi Harris, CWS Upper Grades Teacher 3 9th grade English project by Ruthie Arthur ’10 A Coming of Age Story told by Ms. Chris Sekely, CWS Kindergarten Teacher, at Graduation 2010 Once upon a time, a king and a queen had many sons and daughters who wanted to go out into the world to seek adventure. All but the youngest is allowed to go. The elder princes and princesses set out on their journey and come upon three old women. One woman is stuck in the rocks. One woman is stuck in the water. The third is being whisked off by the wind. The elder princes and princesses pass by all three women without aiding them and end up in an enchanted castle where they all fall into an enchanted sleep. Now when the brothers and sisters do not return home, the youngest prince begs to go out and look for them. This prince is not so self-consumed, so when he sees the three old women, he stops and helps them out as he makes his journey. Each woman thanks the youngest prince and gives him a gift that helps break the enchanted spell and frees his siblings from their enchanted sleep. As our Waldorf students leave our protective kingdom, I see them as the youngest princes and princesses. I hope for them not to fall into the enchanted sleep of “just getting it done.” Let their hearts inspire how 4 they do it! Before our graduates leave the Cincinnati Waldorf School, it is good to reflect upon their own journeys and the gifts they’ve received along the way. A few gifts they may remember from their early days are: • Kindergarten bread with honey butter • Stone soup • Walking to Spring Grove • Farm days at Ms. Leslie’s • The rock and stick collection they gathered along their journeys • Being allowed to play in all kinds of weather • Being allowed to smell flowers, climb trees, and fully appreciate the earth I know these experiences have given our graduates strength and courage, as well as making them unique in a world that’s consumed with taking care of “me” first. I’d like to close by sharing a verse we say in our Faculty meetings here at CWS which encompasses my wish for our graduates: “Imbue thyself with the power of imagination. Have courage for the truth. Sharpen thy feeling for responsibility of soul.” I wish all our graduates well and that they may live happily ever after! Our Class Trip to Maine by Grace Rupp ‘10, written for 9th grade English Class After three years of raising money by selling coffee and baked goods, our Cincinnati Waldorf School Class of 2010 had enough money at the perfect time for our 8th grade class trip to Maine. We were all looking forward to purchasing and organizing our gear, then arriving in Maine to learn how to kayak on the ocean and camp in the wilderness of the beautiful islands. As we bolted out of the airport bus, the pungent smell of oysters and seaweed welcomed us to Maine! We were on the coast near Bangor and our first night was spent in a rustic cabin on the rocky beach. The next morning we awoke surrounded by our expedition guides who were playing flutes and singing. They told us about what we would be doing for the next week. We went through the basic drills and then we were off! After the first few days, we all got used to living off the land and we settled in. Then one night, out of nowhere, a huge rainstorm rolled in!!! Our tarps were flying everywhere, all of our water was knocked over and we had to struggle to keep everything dry and warm - including our own bodies! We tied the tarps to trees in order to shelter our food and gear. We lit a fire under the tarps to prevent shivering and to get somewhat dry, although it was an uncomfortable night. The next morning, we used nature’s clothes dryer: the sun! Working together as a team and helping each other out was a great experience for all of us. We came to the realization that if we did not have each other, we wouldn’t have been able to face the difficulties of an expedition in the middle of nowhere. In many ways, I believe that storm made us stronger and helped us to fully realize how easy we have it back at home. The weather was nice from then on and we learned many great survival skills, including how to build a fire, swim in a 30 degree ocean, entice seals to follow our kayaks, and how to work together during a scavenger hunt for the reward of a bucket of chocolate pretzels! We even learned how to carve our own spoons from chunks of wood. I’m sure that nobody in our class will ever forget that trip because it made us appreciate the earth we live upon and how to work with one another in order to accomplish our goals. We had an amazing time that I will never forget! What it Means to be Blessed with a Waldorf Education Adapted from a graduation speech presented by Dick Norton, CWS Parent Dear Students, It has been your privilege to have had such a wonderful Waldorf Education with your many excellent teachers. As parents, it has been our privilege to watch you all grow and thrive. This education is truly unique. Where else would you have been able to… • dig a giant mud pit in 2nd grade, and get completely covered in mud at the Medieval Games in 6th grade? • build a working bread oven in 3rd grade? • go rock climbing and camping in 7th and 8th grades? • perform such marvelous plays every year, including even Shakespeare? • freely do such diverse and interesting (and in some cases death-defying) projects in 8th grade? • spend a week ocean kayaking and wilderness camping off the coast of Maine with your classmates? At the Waldorf School, you had all this and more, in addition to learning the usual reading, writing and arithmetic and learning them with beauty, spirit and grace. You truly have done some pretty amazing and difficult things! But now you’re moving on to different schools, with perhaps some different ideas about education, and frankly there are some things you need to know about your future classmates out there… • You need to know that some of them may not be able to tell the difference between a knitting needle and a crochet hook. • You may meet people who can’t put their colors in rainbow order, or who think you play indoors on a rainy day, or who think a Gnome is a town in Alaska. • You may come across folks who think needle felting is some form medieval torture, ORFF is an embarrassing bodily function, or that eurythmy is a medical condition. • You’re certain to encounter people who think that a letter grade is more important than the knowledge it’s supposed to represent. Have patience with these people! Work with them. Do your best. Listen with an open mind and an open heart. And just remember, not everyone is blessed with a Waldorf Education! Jackson Savage ’10 is an honor roll freshman at Walnut Hills High School. He plays bass in the Senior String Orchestra. He is also involved in Clifton recreational soccer, Boy Scouts and My Nose Turns Red Youth Circus. Ellie Paulsen ’09 is a sophomore at Walnut Hills High School, where she plays violin in the orchestra. They are going to be playing at Carnegie Hall in New York City this year! Eric Risk ’08 moved to Moscow with his family soon after graduating from CWS. He is now a junior at the Anglo-American International School of Moscow, where he is involved in theatre and soccer. Eric still keeps in touch with many of his CWS friends, in spite of the distance! Max Gust ‘09 is a sophomore at Turpin High School and an honor roll student. He plays football and runs track. You may have seen him at our last May Faire … first in line to send Mr. Olson into the dunk tank! Janela Harris ’06 graduated with honors from Walnut Hills High School last spring, where she participated in the debating forum. She is now a freshman at Haverford College in Pennsylvania. Don’t miss her Q&A about her Waldorf experience in this issue of Outreach! Malcolm Harris ’09 is a sophomore at Purcell Marian High School. He loves theater and has already been in four school plays! Anna Kaiser ’09 is a sophomore at Walnut Hills High School, where she plays cello in the school orchestra. She is also a soccer player and a member of My Nose Turns Red Youth Circus. Gus Merrell ’09 is a sophomore at St. Xavier High School, where he participates in school plays, Yearbook Club, two music ensembles and fencing. Jackie Jackson ’10 moved to Alabama with his family this past summer, where Jackie attends Columbia High School. He is an honor roll student and is involved in his school’s Global Arts Club. Jackie participated in the Poetry Out Loud National Recitation Contest. He won 1st place in his high school and went on to take 1st place in the regional competition. His original poem will be copyrighted and he is slated to recite the poem on the radio soon. He will go on to compete in the upcoming state competition. Collin Leonard ’09 is a sophomore at the School for the Creative and Performing Arts. He is on the honor roll and participates in the Running Club and Thespian Society. Collin was cast in multiple productions last year as a freshman including SCPA’s major production of Macbeth. He was awarded a scholarship to attend the Thespian Society’s state competition in Columbus and is applying again this year. Cameron Leonard ’10 is being homeschooled through Connections Academy. He is maintaining a 3.7 GPA. 5 The Eighth Grade Research Project by Lori Kran, CWS 2nd grade teacher, Chair College of Teachers Collin Leonard ’09 Trebouchet Kes Baladad-Binns ’10 Dress Design Mary Kate Norton ’10 Original Piano Composition The Eighth Grade Research Project and Presentation exemplifies a fundamental tenet of Waldorf education: to cultivate a passion for life-long learning. The intentions of this year-long assignment are for eighth graders to research a topic about which they are passionate; to acquire new knowledge and new skills; and to create something useful, beautiful, handy, or innovative. Students are also expected to ask an adult who is an expert in their field of interest to mentor them throughout the year. This fosters a meaningful relationship between mentor and student. It further cultivates the well-known Waldorf student quality of interacting easily with adults. Those of us lucky enough to have had personal experience with Waldorf graduates know that these fine young women and men look adults in the eye, expect and give firm handshakes, and expect to be taken seriously by the adults in their lives. This is why so many high school teachers report that Waldorf students exude confidence in their studies and genuine enjoyment for learning. The projects culminate in an evening of demonstrations as students are expected to present their research to the CWS community. Most students delve into this project enthusiastically. It is an opportunity for them to individuate their interests and studies and to work on a long-term project. My students, the Class of 2009, impressed me not only with their interests, but also with the results of their research, planning, practice, and hard work. Projects included: building a trebuchet, a terrarium, remote airplane, telescope, sewing a quilt, learning: to cook, be an excellent “handy man,” the piano, the electric and acoustic guitar, to sketch, to hunt, research and write poetry, improving martial arts skills, and master a difficult song. Every presentation demonstrated how seriously students took their research project. Anna Kaiser ’09 Quilt Design Max Gust ’09 Electric Guitar Rishabh Goud ’09 Martial Arts Nayonika Goud ’10 Indian Dancing 6 Hailey Olson ’09 Piano Performance Jackson Savage ’10 Recycled Race Car The Honored Eighth Grader by Beth Norton, parent of 3 CWS Children During the 2009-10 school year, I got to experience the culmination of 12 years of Waldorf education. I also got to experience two new things about Waldorf! After the ups and downs of 6th and 7th grade, we weren’t sure what to expect for our daughter’s final year. We knew the curriculum would be very challenging (and it was). We knew the kids would have more freedom and responsibility (and they did). And we knew there would be the 8th grade trip (which exceeded our every hope). Beyond this, we just figured it was a year to wrap things up and begin the moving on Photograph by Tatum Davis ’07 process. What we came to realize was that the 8th grade year is a very special year of honoring the graduates. This was the first new thing I learned. I started to realize this during Wintergarden. The 8th graders were last to walk the spiral. The parents all crowded in front exchanging hugs, a little misty-eyed. The kids walked the spiral with their “self-portrait” candles they had made and returned to the classroom. When I turned around to go, I saw that the back rows were full of teachers and support staff - Early Childhood, Special Subjects, other Lead teachers - exchanging hugs, a little misty-eyed. They too had come to honor these students. These “honorings” continued throughout the school year as privileges, invitations to join other classes for special events and opportunities to be of service to the school. In Eurythmy, they had fun experiencing their favorite stories and dances again. In Games, they got to train for the traditional 8th grade vs. Faculty softball game. They were asked to be special visitors to the EC classes. In April, the class put on an amazing performance of Much Ado About Nothing. And then came the 8th grade trip. I wish I could show you what those kids looked like when we met them (after a week of sea-kayaking off the coast of Maine) in the airport. They all looked so confident and happy and proud - not at all the usual picture of a group of 13- and 14-year olds. The trip was the rite of passage every parent hopes his or her child will experience in adolescence. It was an experience that will stay with them always. (You just can’t say this about a trip to DC with a busload of parents!) After the trip, there was a rush to finish the 8th grade projects - projects of their choice that had been in the works since Fall. It was amazing to see what the kids achieved. And again, the kids were honored with a wonderful turnout from the community and tons of applause and enthusiasm. Graduation was a week later and Mr. Cordray honored the students by allowing them to design the graduation ceremony. It was beautiful and unique, just like their special class. The parents and 8th graders spent at least a month on cloud nine remembering their last few months at CWS. The second thing I learned happened while visiting high schools with my eighth-grader. Inevitably, the question of grade point average and class rank would be asked. We would explain that Waldorf does not give grades and go into a long drawn-out explanation of the 8-year cycle etc. Without fail, the high school administrator would look confused and say, “That can’t work. How do you motivate a child without giving a grade?” End of conversation. I started to think about this and realized that here was another big divide between Waldorf and traditional education. Waldorf doesn’t seek to motivate the child. Waldorf seeks to bring forth the light of self-motivation within the child. In the early years, the child is motivated by a love of the teacher. Around 6th grade, this love changes and the child must pull forth his or her own motivation in order to succeed. An adolescent, who at age 14 can motivate himself or herself to succeed without the outside judgment of grades or ranking, will be able to draw upon self-motivation his/ her entire life. And this may be the greatest gift of a full 8 years of Waldorf education. Artwork by Lisa Patterson ’09 Ruthie Arthur ’10 is a freshman at Lakota West High School where she is currently maintaining a 3.75 GPA. She was most recently seen captivating the imaginations of our youngest students as a Fall Fairy at the Autumn at Meshewa Festival, along with her CWS classmates, Grace Rupp and Nayonika Goud. Erica Patterson ’06 graduated from Highlands High School in Ft. Thomas, KY, in June of 2010. She is now a freshman at Colorado State University, with a double major in Biology and Equine Science. Don’t miss her Q&A about her Waldorf experience in this issue of Outreach! Rishabh Goud ’09 is a sophomore maintaining a B+ average at Sycamore High School and is quite active in sports at his school. He plays football, volleyball and is on the wrestling team. Alyssa Thompson ’10 is a freshman at the School for the Creative and Performing Arts, where she is a Visual Arts major. She made the A Honor Roll her first quarter! She is pursuing her interest in acting by taking the Acting Certificate Program through the CCM drama department and participating in Groundlings at the Cincinnati Shakespeare Company. Jacob Wergers ’09 is a sophomore at Anderson High School where he plays football, baseball and is on the Student Athlete Leadership Team. He also maintains a 4.0 GPA and was voted “Student of the Month” last April. He recommends that CWS students transitioning to large high schools join a team, club or organization right away as this is the best way to meet new people and develop a new group of friends with similar interests. 7 Resources for Alumni Families WARM GREETINGS TO ALL WALDORF SCHOOL ALUMNI FROM THE ASSOCIATION OF WALDORF SCHOOLS OF NORTH AMERICA We all know that “Alumni” means any of you who have attended a Waldorf school for any length of time at any level of schooling, and who wish to remain in touch with the Waldorf Education community. Please join us! We’ll keep your contact information private and secure, and we’ll keep you informed of news and events. We’d also love the opportunity to share your news. What have you been up to? This is a great way to keep us and you in the Waldorf loop. If you contacted us before on our old website, awsna.org, please know that we have your information securely on file. Rest assured that no one else has access to your information. So please tell all the alums you know to join the site. The more the merrier! Our community of Waldorf attendees is a highly creative, social, and effective one. Connected through this website, much can happen: http://www.whywaldorfworks.org/alumni/index.php! WARM GREETINGS TO ALL WALDORF EDUCATION ALUMNI PARENTS FROM THE ASSOCIATION OF WALDORF SCHOOLS OF NORTH AMERICA Parents of Waldorf Alumni include some of the most cherished members of our community. Not only have they generously given over and over both financially and emotionally for many years to ensure the wellbeing of the school of their choice, but they continue to care about the healthy future of teaching and learning in the Waldorf way long after their children have left their Waldorf environment. So, welcome to the Parent Alumni page on our website: http://www.whywaldorfworks.org/. We hope you’ll use this resource to remain in touch with the Waldorf Education community. On this web site you’ll find stimulating publications, thought-provoking news articles, information about Waldorf Education around the globe, and how our Waldorf graduates are faring. Lisa Patterson ’08 is a junior at Highlands High School in Ft. Thomas, KY, where she has maintained a GPA of 4.1! She is involved in track, Spanish Club, National Honors, Art Honors Club and plays cello in the orchestra. She also teaches cello lessons and is a Spanish tutor and English as a second language tutor. She was most recently seen as the “Pocket Fairy” at our 2010 Holiday Faire. Dylan Miller ’07 is a senior at King Kekaulike High School in Maui, Hawaii. He is on the B Honor Roll and a member of the varsity wrestling team. He is interested in returning to Ohio for college to study Sports Management. Elyse Wergers ’07 is a senior at Anderson High School where she has maintained a 3.8 GPA and is in the National Merit Society. She is a member of the Young Democrats Club, the Culinary Club, and is currently doing an internship at November Strategies for her business class. She plans to attend University of Cincinnati next year as a Business major with a minor in Spanish. Nayonika Goud ’10 is a freshman at Sycamore High School and is off to a great start with a 3.8 GPA. She is a swimmer and continues to do Indian dancing and beautiful artwork. The Cincinnati Waldorf School is a candidate member of the Association of Waldorf Schools of North America 5555 Little Flower Ave. Cincinnati, OH 45239 voice (513) 541-0220 fax (513) 541-3586 www.cincinnatiwaldorfschool.org 8