This is an issue with any school that practices a rigid pedagogy, particularly one designed before kids with special needs were mainstreamed, and before breakthroughs were made in understanding how children learn. The truth is that for some kids, it does all work out in the end. They learn to read in 3rd or 4th grades, they take to it easily, and they can translate that ease into higher level academic achievements. But those were kids who would have been fine in ANY school. Just because they were fine in Waldorf does not actually mean the pedagogy is right for every kid, and in fact we know it's wrong for a lot of them but the devotion to a certain approach means those kids are counseled out. This is not to mention that part where kids are taught that there are inferior and superior races, and that one ascends through the races, gaining enlightenment with each incarnation. This teaching seeps into history, social studies, and literature selections. |