Great Barrington Waldorf High School
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Great Barrington

THE COOLEST SMALL TOWNS IN THE U.S.A. - Great Barrington, Massachusetts

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Small World, Big World
by Stephen Keith Sagarin, Faculty Chair - 16 May 2008

Students at the Great Barrington Waldorf High School just returned from three weeks in Peru or Germany. Travelers to Peru visited Machu Picchu; a women’s shelter in Cuzco, where they made adobe bricks for new construction; and the Waldorf school in Lima. Students got lost and were confronted by armed guards; they got sick and rode in taxis through foreign cities to seek treatment; they helped those who live happy lives that are far different from our lives in the wealthiest nation the world has seen; they formed friendships with those they hope to see again on exchange next year or the year after. Travelers to Germany saw the Bavarian alps, Munich, Salzburg, and Berlin, three centers of world culture that make the oldest buildings in North America look new. They played in the English Garden, saw remnants of the Berlin Wall, and lived and traveled with Germans whom they hope to see again, here or there, in the next few years.

A smaller world threatens to be a more provincial world. For all that the Internet and the century of technology behind it have shrunk the world, if my “experience” of those around the globe comes through a glowing screen—images and sounds, but no real contact—and I never leave the comfort of my study, I may never really be touched or reached by those far away. Lowell Monke (author of Breaking Down the Digital Walls: Learning to Teach in a Post-Modem World), then teaching in an urban high school in Iowa, describes his AP students leaving a computer lab—this was the 1990s, before laptops and wireless Internet—after “conversing” with students around the world. The door across the hall opened, and international students poured out of an English as a second language class. Monke watched in disbelief as his engaged, intelligent, sensitive, worldly students ignored every one of the living, breathing foreign students who were now walking down the hall with them, side by side. Monke, a believer in the educational power of technology, became older and wiser in that instant. If the real world is a butcher, the Internet gives us plastic-wrapped, bloodless, odorless fillets with all the fat trimmed off.

Our students returned full of stories and enthusiasm—all have stories to last a long time. You can imagine it took a couple of days for everyone to settle down to the routine of school. For some, this travel and a view of the world and people outside the United States will change the course of their lives. They will choose different majors in college than they might have done, they will volunteer to help those less privileged, they will travel with confidence, or they will simply conduct themselves with greater empathy and humility. The Internet is a great tool and resource, but there’s no substitute for actual experience.

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Links

Great Barrington Rudolf Steiner School.

Why Waldorf Works

Rudolf Steiner e.Links

The Education Revolution

Simon's Rock College

Empire State Youth Orchestra

Qumoz.net - A business directory

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News

Postgraduate Year

Graduation 2009

Waldorf High School Carves Marble

Graduating Class of 2009 Commencement June 7, 2009

Successful Tailgate Tag Sale!

Senior Profiles: The Great Class of 2009

Tailgate Tag Sale! May 2, 2009 Pete's Motors (next to Price Chopper)

Waldorf High School Senior Plans

Open House - Thursday, March 19, at 7:30 p.m

Waldorf High School - Images from The Tempest



Hello and Aufwiedersehen

Inky Fingers and Greeting Cards

Styling the B-Ball

Ye Olde Language Classe

Clang! Clang! Clang!

What Would We Do Without Sheep?

  
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