Bringing the Froebel Approach to Your Early Years Practice


Book Description

This work looks at the founder of the kindergarten and his profound influence on provision and practice for young children today. It looks at Froebel's theory of a garden for children and why he believed that play is central to young children's learning.













A Child's Work


Book Description

This book considers Friedrich Froebel's work and ideas in the light of the continuing debate over methods of primary education, raising the old conflict between child-centred and traditional education; concern about the role of teacher in the classroom; and the renewed challenge of 'play' as a tool of education. To Froebel, play provided the means for a child's intellectual, social, emotional and physical development. Froebel believed that the education of a child began at birth, and that parents and teachers played a crucial role in helping children in this activity. 'Play is a mirror of life' - he wrote, leading to self discipline and respect for law and order. The events of Froebel's life are carefully documented in A Child's Work, together with their influence on his ideas and their spread. The author shows how the early death of Froebel's mother and a home lacking in love were to provide the impetus behind one of Froebel's overriding aims: the fostering of family life. The shaping of his educational thought and philosophy through contact with the ideas of other educators, especially his 'spiritual father' Pestalozzi, and philosophers such as Kant, Hegel and Krause, is examined. Froebel's continuous reassessment of the function of play in a child's life came to fruition in the concept of the Kindergarten and the creations with which he peopled it. Illustrations from original sources complement the thorough explanations of these educational innovations in the book. From the soft ball on a spring, the simplest of the Gifts, to the unravelling of more complex ideas in the Mother Songs, Froebel incorporated the various facets that he saw as important in play: the notion of the symbolic and the surmise, the tension between the known and the unknown, the development of physical dexterity and care for the environment. As we continue to shift towards an emphasis on a more formal, more restrictive and less creative mode of education, it is an appropriate time to re-examine Froebel's contribution to educational thinking, which was revolutionised by his ideas. His respect for a child as an independent, searching and creative person learning through his own actions, and for the teacher as facilitator and guide, led tomonumental changes. Froebelis legacy challenges us to examine the assumptions underlying current trends in education, and our attitude towards educating young children.







Froebel's Educational Laws for All Teachers


Book Description

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 edition. Excerpt: ... The law of apperception led him to see the impossibility of giving a religious training at all, unless the germs of religious feeling and thought were implanted in the child's life. He believed the three foundation elements in a religious life to be community, love, and life. The child's earliest feelings of community and love he would have developed in the loving family life, and its_ unconscious basis for the conscious revelation of active, progressive, evolving life he would lead it to gain from sympathetic contemplation of Nature. Speaking of the family, he says: "This feeling of community, first uniting the child with mother, father, brothers, and sisters, and resting on a higher spiritual unity, to which later on is added the unmistakable discovery that father, mother, brothers, sisters, human beings in general, feel and know themselves to be in community and unity with a higher principle--with humanity, with God--this feeling of community is the very first germ of all true religious spirit, of all genuine yearning for unhindered unification with the eternal, with God." "Inasmuch as every separating tendency hinders pure human development, man, even in childhood, refers everything to family life, beholds everything through family life, as is shown so clearly in childhood." "Pure human, parental, and filial relations are the key, the first condition, of that heavenly, Divine, fatherly, and filial relation and life of a genuine Christian life in thought and action." "The comprehension of the purely spiritual human relations, of the true parental and filial relations, furnishes the only key for the recognition and apprehension of the relations of God to man and of man to God." "As long as mothers do not know how to administer the...