in this issue - Rudolf Steiner School
Transcription
in this issue - Rudolf Steiner School
Founded in 1928, New York’s Rudolf Steiner School is North America’s first Waldorf School. The Bulletin Fall 2015 IN THIS ISSUE State of the School Address........................... 2-3 Buying Clothes with a Conscience............... 9 Honeybees on the High School.................... 4-5 Maple and Spice Roasted Winter Squash.... 11 You’ll Know a Steiner Student....................... 6, 8, 10 Calendar of Events: Dec - Feb........................12 For a New Audience........................................ 7 Steiner.edu 2 THE BULLETIN The State of the School Address by Dr. Linda Ogden-Wolgemuth, Stacey Kelly, Dr. William Macatee & Mitch Friedman The State of the School Address was delivered on Thursday, October 29, 2015 in the Lower School Assembly Room. We recommend watching the address, which was recorded for video, and is available in its entirety on steiner.edu/videos. Dr. Linda Ogden-Wolgemuth, College Speaker P eople are often puzzled by the term “College of Teachers” and wonder about its membership and its responsibilities. The College is responsible for overseeing the pedagogy of the school, to look at each branch of the growing tree that is the Steiner School and see how best to nourish, grow and prune it, if necessary. They hold a “Big Picture View” of the school and think about future plans. The College works hand in hand with the Board of Trustees to guide the school into the future. The current College is 22 people strong, representing all areas of our school, from faculty to senior administrators and senior staff members. Each of these colleagues takes on a position of pedagogical leadership and spends significant time attending to this essential work. In addition to continuing the last year’s Scope and Sequence work, this year the College is looking at supporting and improving programs, such as our Drama, Physical Education and World Languages. We are continuing to oversee evaluations across all branches of the schools, so that faculty and staff are evaluated regularly. This gives each of us a chance to look even more closely at our work and to continue to improve it in service of the children. Another topic of discussion is how best to allocate and increase funds for class trips, so all students explore the world outside of the classroom—to help them realize that learning never stops, and goes on beyond the classroom walls. We are considering new capital improvement projects, such as the science labs in the Upper School and finding more space in the Lower School. We want to not just “dream big” for the school, we want to work collaboratively with the Board of Trustees, our fiduciary partners, to make programmatic and physical plant changes. Fall 2015 O Stacey Kelly, Board Chair n Monday, October 5, the Board held it’s first meeting of 2015-2016. We welcomed new trustees, approved the audit reports for 20142015 and set goals for the year ahead. We have a lot of work to do as we build on the initiatives we have been working on for the last few years. The Board devoted significant resources last year to finishing our work on the five leading commitments from our 2012 Strategic Plan and addressing findings from the 2013 Art and Science review. As we finish that work, we begin the year with the following goals: • Build collegial relations with the College of Teachers • Increase enrollment to 335 for the 2016-2017 school year • Support the Development Office in fundraising • Evaluate current committees of the Board • Create a Strategic Planning process for use in 2016-2017 We look forward to bringing you further in-depth updates this year. Steiner.edu 3 THE BULLETIN The State of the School Address Dr. William Macatee, School Administrator T he College, Board, and Administration focus their attentions and actions on their specific responsibilities in support of the students, parents, and faculty, and in so far as these responsibilities are successfully carried out, each of these three realms of the school governance contribute to a sound curricular program, financial foundation, and future for the school. The Administration of the school in its many operational departments is committed to listening and responding with speed and transparency to questions and concerns from students, parents and faculty. This attention to detail more firmly positions the school for success as professional service is a hallmark of a successful school. Through honest analysis of the inner workings of the school, we are better able to refine the policies and practices of each department, which results in a nimbler and more transparent administrative practice. Whether dealing with the Business Office or with the Chairs of the academic divisions, the administrative staff of the school is committed to the success of our programs and more importantly to the success of your children. Fall 2015 I Mitch Friedman, Board Treasurer am pleased to report that our school is fiscally sound, albeit with operations that are leaner than we prefer. Despite enrollment that is shy of full capacity, we are completely debt free and have reserves just over $4 million. We ended both this year and last year with planned operating deficits as we realize the strategic investments we have made for our future take time to yield gains and we chose to spend some of the surpluses we generated in recent years. A focus on finding new revenue streams and reducing expenses has led us to a budget for this year that is much closer to being balanced, which is our norm. Going forward, efforts will be focused on reaching full enrollment, the key to our fiscal sustainability. This will be achieved through greater retention of existing students and by attracting new students who, ideally, will remain with us through the completion of high school. Steiner.edu 4 THE BULLETIN Honeybees Happily Inhabiting the HS Roof by Sasha Pinto / 12th Grade Student “Every human being should show the greatest interest in (honeybees), because much more than you can imagine, our lives depend upon beekeeping.” - Rudolf Steiner T he busy buzz of seventy thousand Italian honeybees can now be happily heard on the roof of the Rudolf Steiner High School. Last May, the College of Teachers approved keeping bees on the high school roof, an initiative that had been a longstanding aspiration of many faculty members—and at least one high school student! The decision came at a fortuitous moment since I had just completed my two-week Junior Year Internship as an apprentice beekeeper to Manhattan’s most wellrespected authority on urban beekeeping and founder of the New York Beekeeper’s Association, Andrew Cote. As a freshly-minted high school beekeeper, I was thrilled at the prospect of installing bees on the school roof and establishing a Steiner Bee Club. park to forage for nectar. There are many reasons to keep bees, but beekeeping is more than just a hobby for most apiarists: it is a passion that connects people and bees on a deep and almost spiritual level. The beehive has a wisdom of its own, linking humanity to the bees’ collective group intelligence, organization, culture, and the cosmos. There are also ecological reasons to keep bees. In recent years, honey bees around the world have been in serious peril due to a mysterious disease called Colony Collapse Disorder when worker bees in a colony simply disappear, leaving behind the queen, food and a few nurse bees. In the U.S. alone, over 40% of all honey bees disappeared in 2014 alone, and 33% in prior years. Given that honey It all began three years ago as a freshman during a Green bees pollinate one of every three mouthfuls of food in our Club field trip. Our advisor, high school math teacher diet, it is an alarming situation with no solution in sight. and bee-advocate, Dan Marsch, brought the Green Club to tour the apiaries atop the Brooklyn Waldorf School, Rudolf Steiner, founder of our system of learning, was and a whole new world dawned for me. One peek inside prescient not only in areas of education, but in nature a hive with its busy worker bees and their complex as well. Steiner actually predicted the plight of today’s roles, the buzzing brood chamber with its thousands honeybees and colony collapse in a 1923 lecture on bees, of baby bees, and the honey super with its sweet golden nectar and honeycomb, and I was spellbound! The College decision three years later to approve bees was a wonderful development, and finding a way to make it happen was the next step. The answer came in the form of a creative barter when I introduced my beekeeper to the school, and he offered his bees, expertise and hive maintenance to Steiner in an auspicious arrangement for all. The Rudolf Steiner bee colony was installed on a lovely summer day in early July, and the high school roof is now home to the industrious hmmmmmmm of working honeybees. Steiner bees, just like Steiner students, use Central Park as their playground, making frequent forays into the Fall 2015 Steiner.edu 5 THE BULLETIN Honeybees Happily Inhabiting the HS Roof [Continued from previous page] Modern Art as supplemental hives for the Pierre Huyghe’s Untilled exhibition of a live beehive head on the body of a reclining nude in the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Sculpture Garden. Apprenticing with Andrew Cote as beekeeper to MoMA, I painted two special beehive houses to resemble classic Manhattan buildings in honor of the exhibition; when it closed in August, the brownstone mansion beehive was moved to the Steiner roof where these celebrated honeybees now happily reside. stating that in fifty to eighty years, the world would see the consequences of industrialized forces on the beehive. How appropriate then that an urban Waldorf school is leading the way by maintaining a colony of bees for education, inspiration and the environment. Mr. Marsch notes that “Honeybees and human culture have cooperated for millennia and so it is nothing if not natural to support honeybee culture in urban life.” The Steiner High School Bee Club was launched this fall and I’m pleased to report that we have ten enthusiastic student members eager to learn about beekeeping. Keep an eye out for Bee Club initiatives in the near future, and we hope to have our first honey harvest after the hives are fully established next year. High school science teacher, Richard Turner is another faculty member delighted with the development. Coincidentally, five years ago he had actually invited Andrew Cote to the school to discuss the possibility of keeping bees, but the project failed to gain approval at the time. According to Mr. Turner, “Hosting bees on our roof is one way that the Steiner school helps to bring a consciousness of sustainability into the city. I’m grateful to those who initiated it, and those who researched, and eventually approved the project.” In August, an additional colony of honeybees with a particularly distinguished provenance also moved to the high school roof. Prior to their arrival on 78th Street, these very lucky bees summered at the Museum of Fall 2015 Steiner.edu 6 THE BULLETIN THERE IS A PLACE where nature PLAYFUL cultivates imagination. Where structured play leads to playful thinkers. And where our fully-integrated Waldorf curriculum inspires discovery. THINKERS THE RESULT? Observers. Writers. Creators. Thinkers. Inspired children who love to learn. GET TO KNOW RUDOLF STEINER SCHOOL steiner.edu | 15 E 79th St | 212.535.2130 /SteinerSchoolNY THE FIRST WALDORF SCHOOL IN NORTH AMERICA Fall 2015 Steiner.edu 7 THE BULLETIN For a New Audience D by Timothy Hoffmann / 2nd Grade Class Teacher espite on again, off again coverage in the media, Waldorf education is largely ignored by the mainstream. It is therefore with enthusiasm that we accept most invitations to speak to a new audience on our methods. Two such opportunities presented themselves recently. In June, Pioneer Works, a cultural center devoted to art, science and education, hosted a Summit on Pedagogy to consider the values and beliefs that underlie the way we teach with hands-on workshops on a range of disciplines and approaches. It was attended by more than two hundred people from all walks of life. Irene Mantel and I were asked by the Summit’s organizer Catherine Despont to lead a workshop on the role of the arts in education. The twenty participants in our group were given a box of crayons and plenty of paper. In the two hours we spent together, the “students” were asked to see the world through the eyes of children at various stages of their development. To begin with, they drew pictures as they imagined a six year old might draw. Then we moved into the grade school, and we considered how the imagery and technique would evolve. The changes in consciousness with which Waldorf parents and teachers are familiar were described, and we asked the participants to create drawings as do our elementary school students. Particular emphasis was given to the nodal points at ages 9 and 12. In rapid succession, the participants tried free-hand geometry, animal drawings, and illustrations from science lessons. and Coordinator of the well regarded Museum Education Internship Program (MEIP) of the Brooklyn Museum. In this role, Adjoa is responsible for training the interns who lead groups of students through the Brooklyn Museum. It was her idea to introduce the interns to Waldorf principles with the hope that their tours could reach students of all ages on a deeper level. In a two hour workshop, we discussed Rudolf Steiner’s ideas on developmental psychology. Two central themes emerged: the changes in the quality of imagination from age six to fourteen and the threefold nature of soul life in thinking, feeling, and willing. In both workshops, Irene and I faced the usual challenge of whittling down the truly grand scope of the Waldorf philosophy into a manageable format. Although difficult, this is actually a wonderful challenge as it obliges the presenter to think anew many all too familiar concepts. We hope other such opportunities will present themselves. The idea that art is a form of creative self-expression is not new, of course. What surprised the participants in this workshop was the notion that art can be used to foster the students’ ability to observe. This is the central role art plays in Waldorf education. For Irene and me, it was a treat to share it with this “new” audience. For a personal impression of this workshop, readers may wish to speak with our Lower School librarian and language arts teacher Rosemarie Hester who participated. One of the other participants in this Pioneer Works Summit is Adjoa Jones de Almeida, the Senior Museum Educator Fall 2015 Steiner.edu 8 THE BULLETIN There is a place where science, music and math are intertwined. Where NIMBLE nimble fingers lead to nimble minds. And where our Waldorf curriculum integrates the arts and academics for deeper understanding of both. MindS The resulT? Students that are critical thinkers. And a curriculum that evolves along with them. Get to know Rudolf SteineR School steiner.edu | 15 E 79th St | 212.535.2130 /SteinerSchoolNY The firsT Waldorf school in norTh america Fall 2015 Steiner.edu 9 THE BULLETIN Buying Clothes With a Conscience by Julia Byrne & Sunny Melet / 7th Grade Students H ave you ever wondered where your clothes come from? If you look down at your clothes right now, can you imagine that someone might have risked his or her life to make them? And then you must ask yourself: is it worth it? Many international companies break the law when it comes to the rights of the people who work for them. They operate sweatshops, where people come to work every day knowing that they are risking their lives. Their bosses put them in unsafe and unfair working conditions, such as unstable structures, and pay them low wages. change their harmful practices. We hope that these companies will begin to feel the pressure of their concerned consumers and change how our clothing is made—and more importantly, improve how people are treated. We encourage students to write similar letters to companies, and also contact members of Congress and ask your congressperson to introduce legislation, which will put pressure on these companies. How will you make a difference? By reading an article in Scholastic Scope magazine, we learned about sweatshops and the terrible toll they take on human beings in other countries. We read, for example, that in 2013 the Rana Plaza Factory in Bangladesh collapsed. Over 1130 people were killed and many of the workers who survived were badly injured. The owners of the company knew that the building was unsafe, but ignored that and ordered their employees to continue working because they only wanted money. And it’s not only adults who work in such factories, we found out, but children as young as seven. For instance, the article we read shared a story about a young girl who worked 16 hours per day, and was paid a mere 30 cents per day. We personally love fashion and never realized there were poor innocent kids making them. While we knew sweatshops existed, until now we never realized how horribly people in them were treated. It is frustrating to us that companies like American Apparel, which proudly makes clothing in the United States, is now going bankrupt because it chooses not to support sweatshop labor. We seventh graders feel so strongly about opposing sweatshops that our entire class sent out letters to their favorite companies to tell them to take better care of their workers, even if clothing prices had to increase. With the help of our class teacher, Dr. Ogden, we sent letters to companies like Forever 21, NorthFace, and Adidas regarding our concerns and asking them to Fall 2015 Steiner.edu 10 THE BULLETIN THERE IS A PLACE where artistic exploration awakens scientific inquiry. THOUGHT Where physical education informs critical thinking. And where our fullyintegrated Waldorf curriculum is the key to higher levels of achievement. PROCESS THE RESULT? Creators, researchers, executives and entrepreneurs. Young men and women well prepared to utilize their intellectual, physical, artistic and civic-minded abilities to succeed at all they do, by any measure. GET TO KNOW RUDOLF STEINER SCHOOL steiner.edu | 15 E 79th St | 212.535.2130 /SteinerSchoolNY THE FIRST WALDORF SCHOOL IN NORTH AMERICA Fall 2015 Steiner.edu 11 THE BULLETIN Maple and Spice Roasted Winter Squash Shopping List tsp = teaspoon / Tbl = tablespoon For the Squash: 1 tsp ground ginger 3/4 tsp ground cinnamon 1/4 tsp ground cloves 1/4 tsp finely freshly grated nutmeg Approx. 8 cups assorted winter squash (I recommend Butternut, Kabocha, Red Kuri and Delicata) 1 1/2 Tbl pure maple syrup Kosher salt to taste (Optional: Garnish with toasted pumpkin seeds) For the Maple Vinaigrette: 3 Tbl pure maple syrup 3 Tbl apple cider vinegar 1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil Salt to taste Serves 4-6 as a side dish, prep & cook time approximately 50 minutes H by Leslie Li / Executive Chef appy Fall Everyone! We are entering into the season of warm coats, felt caps, knit mittens, and mulled hot apple cider. Many of us may be inclined to dust off our family recipes and begin to cook and bake, infusing our homes with tantalizing aromas that bring to the heart warm feelings of family and community. In the spirit of the fall and coming winter, I would like to share a recipe I found this past year that I think is perfect for the season, and one that I hope will become one of your family favorites. Simple and elegant, delicious and aromatic, it is a delightful side dish, perfect for the weeknight family dinner or the Thanksgiving table. Originally crafted by Marco Canora & Tammy Walker, this recipe was adapted by Tasting Table in January 2015, and then further adapted by me in October 2015. Directions Preheat the oven to 325 degrees Prep (peel if desired, remove seeds) and cut up the squash into pieces (larger than “bite size” smaller than a “chunk”). If using Delicata squash, scoop out seeds from one end and cut into rounds. In a small bowl, combine the ground ginger, cinnamon, cloves and nutmeg. Mix the squash with the combined spices, maple syrup and salt. Either spray or foil line a rimmed baking sheet. Put squash mixture in pan and cover with tin foil. Bake until tender, about 30 minutes. Remove the pan from the oven and allow to cool, still covered with the foil. Transfer the squash to a serving bowl and with a rubber spatula, gently toss with the maple vinaigrette. Garnish with toasted pumpkin seeds and serve. About Winter Squash Possibilities: Kabocha, Butternut, Delicata, Red Kuri (Suggest that all squash is organic, especially if eating the skin) Kabocha squash may look tough, but the flesh is remarkably tender and sweet, and best of all, you don’t have to peel it. With its dark green skin and bright orange flesh this squash provides beauty and color to any dish. Delicata squash also does not require peeling and with its stripped skin, provides lovely contrasting color. To prepare, cut off one end, scoop out the seeds with a teaspoon, leaving the squash intact, and slice into rounds. While organic Butternut and Red Kuri squash don’t need to be peeled, in this dish, I prefer them peeled. Remove all seeds. Fall 2015 Steiner.edu VISIT STEINER.EDU/PUBLIC-CALENDAR Rudolf Steiner School Calendar Selection of Events in December 2015 - February 2016 DECEMBER Tuesday, December 1 6:00 - 8:00pm 1st Grade Parent Evening Wednesday, December 2 8:20 - 9:20am Coffee & Conversation with Dr. Macatee (Cafeteria) Saturday, December 5 Wednesday, December 9 8:20 - 9:20am 5:00 - 6:30pm EC Advent Spiral Ceremony (LSAR) M - Th., December 14 - 17 8:00 - 10:00am 8th Grade Nativity Play (LSAR) Monday, December 14 7:00 - 8:30pm 11th Grade Shakespeare Festival (LSAR) Tuesday, December 15 7:00 - 9:00pm Winter Vocal Concert Grades 4 - 12 (Ethical Culture) Wednesday, December 16 8:30 - 9:30am 7:00 - 8:15pm Parent Council Meeting Parent Study with Tim Hoffmann (LSAR) Friday, December 18 12:00pm Winter Break begins for EC - 12 Coffee & Conversation with EC Chair Deb Renna (Cafeteria) Diversity Committee Meeting (US Library) JANUARY Monday, January 4Classes Resume Wednesday, January 6 8:20 - 9:20am Coffee & Conversation with Jeff Spade & Geri Perkal (Cafeteria) Wednesday, January 13 6:00 - 8:00pm Poetry Cafe (parents, students, teachers, alumni in LSAR) Friday, January 15 School Closed: Parent-Teacher Conferences Monday, January 18 School Closed: Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Friday, January 22 3:00 - 4:00pm ReWear Clothing Swap Tuesday, January 26 6:30 - 8:00pm A Look Ahead: Current Family Open House Grades 1 - 12 (US) Wednesday, January 27 8:20 - 9:20am Coffee & Conversation with Julia Hays (Cafeteria) FEBRUARY Wednesday, February 10 6:30 - 8:30pm Evening with Dr. Bill Macatee (LSAR) Friday, February 12 School Closed: Faculty and Staff In Service Day Mon-Tues., February 15 & 16 School Closed: Presidents’ Day Thursday, February 18 Teaching Humanities in the HS with John Anderson (Upper School) 6:00 - 8:00pm Steiner.edu