Mis. 10th Module
Mis. 10th Module
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QUESTION 1
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circumstances of today, we could benefit from a rethink and adaptation into our present time.
Renewing The Craft Curriculum in view of the increasing occurrence of many basic learning and
behavioural problems presented by children throughout the school, are we not challenged to
provide an education more consciously focused on the experiential? An education that is artistic,
practical and intellectually stimulating? Perhaps too much of our education is directed at the
Thinking Man and rarely descends to creatively satisfy the Will Man. The renewed Craft
Curriculum is an attempt to lead the child/pupil on a path of education that ascends from below
upwards. It is essentially a path that offer an education of the Will. It would appear that if we are
to address the lameness of the Will that is so apparent we would need to be more creative in
adopting and applying a practical approach to our teaching in all classes throughout the school.
I have therefore taken the liberty to augment the traditional hand work curriculum with
suggestions for a variety of practical activities that could be seen as part of a New
Developmental Craft Curriculum, see A Descent Into MatterSoft and Hard Handwork. Some
confusion has, unfortunately, arisen regarding the different areas of handwork. Handwork refers
to the soft material work using mainly unprocessed raw materials. Handcraft includes clay,
wood, paper, leather etc. and is mainly taught to children from 12 years onwards.Craft is a
specific type of work and only applies in Waldorf schools where pupils have already achieved a
general knowledge and range of skills in the use of different materials and tools, which they now
apply to a specific craft,such as weaving. HandWork Children are first introduced to handwork
by way of soft natural materials. Here, in response to the subtle direction of the teacher, the child
creates out of his or her feelings, whilst being shown and guided how to care for the materials
and the simple tools used. The sensitive use of colour plays an important part in the child s
enjoyment of the handwork lessons: helping the child form a meaningful, personal relationship to
colour can also serve to bring that childs feeling nature into harmony. This in turn can work
beneficially on the breathing and blood circulation of the child. 3 Hand Craft Later in handcraft,
using harder materials, for instance various types of wood, stronger forces of will are needed.
The limbs and the whole body are engaged in this activity. There is a difference in the experience
of making soft toys, a stuffed animal, for instance, to that of an animal carved out of
wood. In the first instance, soft material, flat pieces of material, receive their nature from inside.
In the case of carving an animal out of wood the hard material receive sits nature from outside.
Again in the first instance, the child makes manifest in the stuffing of the animal, the filling out
processes in his or her own body.In woodwork, however, a person works like the action of water,
sculpting the rock over which it flows. A child is only really ready for this sort of activity from
about the twelfth year on, after the childs formative forces have developed his or her body. Only
then is it possible for the growing human being to harness these inwardly acting forces and work
with them outwardly, fashioning his or her materials. CraftWork Finally, in craftwork, the
adolescent should have a chance to find a growing sense of confidence and ability in the realm of
work. Correspondingly, the desire to find where he or she can contribute something in the world
around can awaken an interest in the practical affairs of life. (See further under the handwork and
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craft curriculum notes.) To sum up, it could be stated that while all handwork engages the whole
human being, it is essentially in the following ways that handwork affects a growing child:
it lifts motor activity to the realm of skill
it transforms will power into beauty of form
it changes what would otherwise be an insignificant activity into a virtue.
Only when the pupil, the crafts person responds sensitively to the nature of his or her materials
and the correct use of his or her tools, is motor activity raised to the realm of skill Only in
working artistically with design, colour and from is will power transformed into beautiful form.
And only when these two aspects are combined in work that also allows the person to have a
sense of fulfillment, a sense of true purpose in his or her work, can what might otherwise be an
insignificant act be raised to the status of a virtue. These then could perhaps be called the Three
Transforming Powers of handwork, powers that are essential for the unfolding of true human
development.
HANDWORKAND CRAFTS CURRICULUM 4 WHY:
True education aims to serve the needs of the whole human being: Head, Heart and Hands are
brought into a particular relationship with each other in the practice of handwork and crafts. In
these lessons, pupils have the opportunity to tangibly grasp the world and give expression to
their latent creativity. Handwork and craft activities not only serve to educate the pupils in the
nature and processes involved with the different materials, the use of tools and equipment, etc.,
but there is also inherent the therapeutic aspect from which the pupils benefit. For it is in the very
nature of handwork/crafts to Bring Order and to Bestow Order. To bring order to the materials
used and to bestow order upon the maker. In the practice of ceramics, for instance, a potter not
only leaves his imprint, his thumb print on the clay, but is also inwardly impressed by the
creative process at work. By impressed, is meant the formative element working to Ground and
give Shape to the newly released Astral Body, particularly so in the young person.
In addition to the educational and formative benefit that crafts can offer there is the definite
element of manual skills training and, for the older students, a useful introduction to an
experience of real work. Apart from these benefits, the involvement in craft work offers the pupil
the challenge to learn to work from the conceptual through to the material. In this process the
pupil will be guided to experience and become conscious of exercising, at the hand of the work
place, very human attributes, both on an emotional and intellectual level.5
QUESTION 2
Creatively make any ten handwork items discussed in the module and send to
your tutor.
1.WOVEN BASKET
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2.SEED COLLAGE
3.CHRISTMAS TREE
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5.SWAN
6.FLOWER CHAIN
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7.