2020: End of the Year Newsletter

Dear WSPB,

As our community and our country continue to face COVID-19, we are truly blessed to be part of a supporting, comforting, and loving school.  The Board of Trustees is working to ensure that the School has the tools it needs to safely open our campus in the Fall for the 2020-2021 school year.  While this past year has brought us many changes and challenges, it has also brought us opportunity and growth.  From our structure and governance work with Lisa Mahar, the organizational consultant, to our growing and ongoing team-building work with our Faculty and Staff, and looking forward to our new Administrator, Wendy Gittleman, joining us from the Sacramento Waldorf School, the Waldorf School of Palm Beach is ever so bright.  

We look forward to the upcoming 2020-2021 school year with warmth, optimism, and much gratitude to our community.


2020-2021 RE-OPENING PLAN

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As is traditional in Waldorf education, our teachers are working diligently to define a Waldorf education based on the current data for next year and keeping the development of the students at the forefront of our thinking.

See our 2020-2021 Re-Opening Plan here.

We expect to release additional details and information for the 2020-2021 school year after Palm Beach County announces their plan next week. We will be sharing our plans with the community the week of July 20th.


FROM OUR Faculty

Rosebuds and Apple Blossoms:
Ms. Charissa & Ms. Andrea

 
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The Rosebud & Apple Blossoms have had a very full year!  While the two classes began the year as separate classes, after our Holiday Break we came together to form one larger group.  This was an unexpected change but it brought with it many wonderful gifts---new friendships, new experiences, new teachers—and the children thrived.  We spent our days busy with our good work, and whether it be baking, sewing, painting or dishwashing, the children eagerly and joyfully participated.  We heard nature stories and fairy tales, and sang many, many songs to help carry us through our transitions of the day, and through the changing of the seasons.  We jumped, skipped, crawled, twirled, and danced in our circles, and had a wonderful time with our fingerplays and handclapping games.  Outside we were proud of our work in the garden and enjoyed the times we were able to pick herbs or lettuces to nibble on.  Many forts were built, many cakes and ice cream cones were made and sold in the sandbox bakery, many fairy houses were created, and many flowers were picked and gifted to each other.  We had a wonderful year, and are so very much looking forward to our return to school, and being together in person again in the fall!  ~ Ms. Charissa & Ms. Andrea


Buttercup Kindergarten:
Ms. Mindy

 
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We had an amazing year. Many new children joined our Buttercup Kindergarten this year,their families coming from many different countries joining together to create our beautiful school community. We learned new words and customs and songs from our diverse group that we incorporated into our class. The children created wonderful crafts that reflected our seasonal celebrations, beginning with Michaelmas. We learned songs and dances and ate food that reflected and captured the holiday spirit as we moved through the year. The children made many new friendships that will continue to grow and flourish as they move together into first grade. They grew tall like sunflowers, they shined like the stars, and their eyes twinkled with the magic of the fairy tales and their hearts were full love and joy ready for a new day. 


1st Grade: Ms. Wilner

 
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As the young child enters the First Grade, the big transition is coming from play-based learning to becoming part of a class community through form and imitation.  The children learn that we do all that we do together as a class and through imitation everyday the learning is natural.  Form drawing is how we start the year, straight line and curved line, which then leads into learning the letters.  Form drawing also is pre-geometry.


2nd Grade: Ms. Hawk

 
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The exuberant second grader is living in the world of imagination while learning more about the world around us. The Waldorf curriculum met this moment in the second grader's life with stories of fables, saints, and legends of great people. These stories helped the child to ponder the follies of the fable characters and reflect on the consequences, while the stories of saints illuminated the human potential of goodness, strength and the ability to overcome challenges. This year, second graders stepped though an important doorway in their academic learning with the deepening of literacy skills through daily writing and reading, both in groups and individually, and expanded foundational concepts in arithmetic with the learning of the times tables to twelve and place value. Music, form drawing, handwork, gardening, and games were practiced throughout the week in second grade, supporting their growth in many capacities.      


3rd Grade: Ms. Wilner

 
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As young children enter the Third Grade they awaken to the world around them in a new way, and they want to learn how to be in it.  In a Waldorf School the curriculum meets them and teaches them how to cook, garden, weave, measure, and about shelters to name a few of these ways.   During the block about shelters we look at the first shelters human beings lived in, caves, trees, and work our way to modern civilizations.  The class builds a shelter as a class, a lean-to, work in pairs and build a stilt house, and finish the block with an individual project where they choose a shelter from around the world and build a model of it with a written report about it, too.


4th Grade: Ms. Cleveland

 
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In Fourth Grade, students find their feet planted on the earth and from there are able to stand upright and observe the world around them. They find new meaning and understanding of both themselves and their environment. Study of Human and Animal brings deeper insights into the gifts of being human, with focus on the head, heart, and hands. Students discover infinite intelligence found in nature while determining the similarities and differences between humans and animals. Local Native History, Geography and Map Making provide a hands-on learning experience about the land we walk upon, a taste of ancient culture, understanding of the development of mankind, and a clear sense of placement in the world. In Language Arts, study of the Norse Myths present a safe opportunity for students to explore morals. Learning about the Norse Gods, who are not always so “God-like,” allows children to decide for themselves about right and wrong and to become aware of and process mischief, a behavior often displayed by fourth graders. The children are ready to experience more complexity in our world and are happy to learn about fractions, long division, and grammar. Fourth grade is a delightful year in which children encounter deeper levels of thought and learning while simultaneously unfolding greater wisdom in their hearts.


5th Grade: Ms. Hourican

 
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Equipped with the more enhanced 11th-year consciousness, the fifth grade year is known to be one of balance and harmony.  The children were led further into the world through the study of geography and physics, yet brought in towards themselves through the study of the ancient civilizations of the Mayans, Egyptians and Greeks. The children studied botany, language arts, decimal fractions, the metric system, graphing, pentathlon events, German, music, painting, woodworking and clay modeling.


6th Grade: Ms. Bowes

 
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Sixth grade is a year of transition from childhood to adolescence. Rapid physical growth is accompanied by corresponding brain development, which quickens the unfolding abstract thinking. With this came an increasingly complex study of history and geography and the development of Western cultures from the founding of Rome through the growth of chivalry and monastic life during the Middle Ages. Together, we stood with Romulus and Remus, traveled with merchants along the Silk Road, discussed the fears of the citizens of Pompeii during the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius and, taking our lessons  from Geology considered the thrill of the archaeologists who discovered this important site hundreds of years later. Science and Mathematics become more specific in Sixth grade as well, with the study of Geometry, Geology and Mineralogy, Astronomy, Business Math, and Physics. With Distance Learning, our students were devoted to Physics, both with the recitation of our play, “Archimedes’ Greatest Challenge,” and through our introduction of Physics (with Ms. Hourican’s rising sixth grade class) where we were able to perform several experiments dealing with sound, electricity, and heat. The sixth grade year has been a beautiful combination of academic and artistic growth. 


7th Grade: Ms. Abbade

 
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Seventh Grade is a year of struggle and transformation.  Just like the caterpillar is constrained in the chrysalis and pushes against the boundaries of that cast that no longer serves it, so does the seventh grader, pushing against the boundaries of all authorities and forms that no longer inspire them.   The Waldorf curriculum meets that moment with lessons that explore the dramatic shift in human consciousness through biographies of people who struggled with existing authorities and social institutions to bring about the changes that led to the birth of modern art and science in the Renaissance. They sail with explorers out of known lands into the unknown and protest with the Reformers against an authority they did not believe in.  In Math there are introduced to Algebra while in Language Arts they explore their fervent emotions through Creative Writing.  Chemistry, Physics and Physiology compose the science curriculum.


8th Grade: Ms. Domokos

 
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Eighth grade is the year of the Waldorf grade school when the many seeds planted in the previous years come to fruition. All subjects connect to create a wholesome view of the world. History is intertwined with geography. In organic chemistry they learn how plants produce the nutrient our bodies use and what chemical reactions happen in our digestive system. This year the 8th graders learned to separate gluten from flour, test materials for starches and sugars, make plastic from milk and so many other wonderful "food things". They read biographies of Fredrick Douglass and Mahatma Gandhi, got a taste of dystopian literature and closed the year exploring The Book Thief by Mark Zusak. They visited the Ah-Tah-Thi-Ki Seminole Museum in the Everglades, The Holocaust Memorial in Miami Beach, FAU's Music Department. They saw Les Miserables at the Broward Center, and played basketball with the Waldorf students from Miami. In history they traveled from the American Revolution to the current day. They tested the boundaries of watercolor painting by making their own paints and using old ones in new ways.

All year long they worked on a project that was special to them. The projects were meant to be presented live before the entire school community. We hope that you got to watch them on YouTube.

On Saturday, the faculty and staff of the school said their emotional good byes to this class in a drive-by graduation. (We'll be sharing pictures soon.)

They are now ready to embark on a new adventure. We wish them good luck as they enter high school. They will be scattered around in Boca High, Spanish River, Broward Prep, Grandview, FAU High and Stoneman Douglass.


2020-2021 School Calendar

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We are pleased to share with you our school calendar for the 2020-2021 school year. We have scheduled our festivals assuming that things will be back to normal and that it is safe to have gatherings for our community. Please take a look and mark the dates on your family calendar.

Some key dates in the 2020-2021 school year:

  • First Day of school for Grades Campus: Monday, August 24th. 

  • First Day of school for EC Campus: Tuesday, August 25th.

  • Last day of school: June 3rd, 2021

  • In case we have to close the school due to a hurricane, we allocated hurricane make-up days on the calendar. These are June 4th, 7th and 8th.

You can download a printable copy of the calendar here:
www.waldorfschoolpalmbeach.org/calendar


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2020 Distance Learning - 7th Grade

SEVENTH GRADE
This was a transition week in which we were able to establish a structure for the students and create a unified platform for them to manage their work. 

This week, they were happy with their morning lessons with Ms. Bowes and really dedicated to the other assignments that they had in math and language arts. They also produced an artistic piece inspired by the stories covered in the History class on the Travels of Columbus. Their work came out beautiful. We will continue to assign at least one artistic work each week and are looking into bringing even other important aspects of Waldorf education.

I am excited to be receiving their reports for the Renaissance project we have been working on and look forward to seeing the finalized masterpieces on Monday, Mar 30th.

Over the break, they will begin the reading of the book Secrets of the Andes by Ann Nolan Clark, which they will work on with Ms. Bowes as part of their main lesson. I would also like you to take some time to make sure they have an organized working space set up with minimal distractions and properly supplied with materials they may need.

In Math, we are taking this opportunity to reboot their math skills and work with their needs more individually. We have begun our Math Reset with the aid of Khan Academy, starting back from kindergarten and doing an express review and assessment of where the gaps may be and working through them, in an attempt to strengthen their foundation and understanding. At the same time, we will slowly proceed with our practice with percentages and the 7th grade curriculum.

In Language Arts, Ms. Domokos has given them a few assignments in continuation to the work they were doing in the classroom last week.

We are working hard to make this time as enriching and productive to our students, thus, as we come back from spring break their workload will increase. 

I do a daily check-in with them prior to their morning lesson and I’m am available for any question the parents and students may have. 2 x each week I’m available for 1 hour for math support and 2 other days Ms Domokos is available for LA support.
~ Ms. Abbade


2020 Distance Learning - 6th Grade

SIXTH GRADE
On the day before our closure began, the sixth grade came to class in a "monastery" replete with candles, incense, and chanting monks. Here, the students received their first lesson in calligraphy while also learning about the everyday lives of monks during the medieval period. During their weekend they completed Latin and English translations of The Lord's Prayer in Carolingian calligraphy. 

Our first distance learning lesson occurred during our pre-scheduled geography presentation. The previous block discussed the geography of the Silk Road connecting the continents of Africa, Asia, and Europe. The children each chose their own country along the route to research and present upon. The sixth grade this performed their own on-screen presentations on Cambodia, Thailand, Turkey, Japan, and Tibet.

We are continuing with the middle ages in the coming weeks where we will discuss the Crusades, the Black Death, and important figures like Joan of Arc and Eleanor of Aquitaine. The children are reading biographies and works of historical fiction on which they will write and present a book report. 

~Ms. Bowes

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