TREE OF LIFE PLAYSCHOOL
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"Wisdom begins in Wonder"
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- Socrates

Tree of Life Method
a philosophy of warmth


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Tree of Life is inspired but the Waldorf education. According to Steiner, educational philosopher and founder of Waldorf education, the future development of each individual child and of humanity as a whole depends on health-giving experiences in the first seven years of life. An atmosphere of loving warmth and guidance that promotes joy, wonder, and reverence supports such healthy development. The most essential aspect of the work with the little child is the inner attitude of the educator, who provides the example for the child’s imitation. Therefore the work of the educator demands an ongoing process of research and self-education including anthroposophical study, meditative practice, artistic and practical activity.

​In nursery-kindergartens, home care programs, childcare centers, parent-child programs and other settings, foundations are laid for later learning and healthy development, including life-long physical, social, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual growth.

Our education, based on an understanding of the development of human individuality, offers protection and respect for the dignity of childhood. It includes an understanding of the unfolding development of the child from pre-birth to seven, including the unique significance of the development of walking, speaking and thinking in the first three years of life.

Activities in our early childhood education program takes into consideration the age-specific developmental needs of young children, from a focus on will-oriented physical activity in the first three years, then on imaginative play in the middle years of early childhood, and later a more cognitive approach to learning after the child enters school.

Our Educational Principles

​​Waldorf based programs may differ according to geography, culture, group size, age-range, and individual teaching approach. Granting these differences, Waldorf programs share certain fundamental characteristics:​
  • Loving interest in and acceptance of each child
  • Opportunities for self-initiated play with simple play materials as the essential
    activity for young children 
  • Play is the young child’s work and makes it possible for them to digest and
    understand their experiences
  • Awareness that young children learn through imitation, through the experience of
    diverse sensory impressions, and through movement. Their natural inclination is
    to actively explore their physical and social environment. The surroundings offer
    limits, structure and protection, as well as the possibility to take risks and meet
    challenges
  • A focus on real rather than virtual experiences to support the child in forming a
    healthy relationship to the world
  • Artistic activities such as storytelling, music, drawing and painting, rhythmic
    games, and modelling that foster the healthy development of imagination and
    creativity
  • Meaningful practical work such as cooking, baking, gardening, handwork and
    domestic activity that provide opportunities to develop unfolding human
    capacities. Here the emphasis is on the processes of life rather than on learning
    outcomes
  • Predictable rhythms through the day, week and year that provide security and a
    sense of the interrelationships and wholeness of life. Seasonal and other festivals
    are celebrated according to the cultural and geographical surroundings.

​We recognize that healthy child development unfolds most fully in the context of community with healthy social relationships among parents, teachers and children. We strive to create such conscious, collaborative communities around the children in their care and see their activity as part of a worldwide cultural impulse.

Waldorf Education Resources


​Essential Characters of Waldorf/Steiner Early Education:
www.iaswece.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Essential-Characteristics-EN-1.pdf

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Associations of Waldorf Schools of North America (AWSNA):
www.waldorfeducation.org/

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UK Steiner-Waldorf Schools Fellowship:
www.steinerwaldorf.org/

Waldorf In the Home:
meaganrosewilson.com/2023/02/what-do-the-nine-essentials-of-waldorf-early-childhood-look-like-in-the-home/
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  • Home
  • Philosophy
    • What we Believe
    • Tree of Life Method
    • Nature Education
  • About
    • Daily Rhythm
    • Connect
    • FAQs
    • Fees
  • Parent Login
    • Calendar
    • Meet the Educators
    • Parent Afternoons
    • Downloadable Documents
    • Newsletters
    • Gallery Sept. 2024 - June 2025
  • Team Login
    • Learning Together
    • Resources
    • Meeting Notes
    • Weekly Hours
  • Resources
    • Play
    • Diverse Pareting
    • Adult Book Recommendations
    • Food
    • Grief