Waldorf and TelevisionBy Kristie Burns
What
Does Waldorf Education Say About TV and
how does The Waldorf
Channel fit into this?
References
for this article are listed below the article.
As
a naturopath, writer, and teacher this is one of my favorite projects
to take on. I enjoy researching the historical uses of herbs and
healing therapies and then tracing their usage up until the modern
day where we find that they are still being used for the same
ailments – only now their usage is “proved” by modern research.
After writing many of these articles I have come to the conclusion
that there are many visionaries that have existed that were able to
convince hundreds of people of their vision, but sadly, they were not
fully listened to until “modern” methods could be used to prove
what they say is true.
And some visionaries are still
waiting! In the book, The Field, Lynne McTaggart researches some
fringe science such as EMF waves, light therapy and ESP research and
shows how even these fields are finally getting the “proof” they
need to stand up in modern society.
What Did Steiner Say about Television?
When
re-printing this article please include the following
information:
By
Kristie Karima Burns, MH, ND of www.TheWaldorfChannel.com
So
what did Steiner have to say about television? Nothing. There were no
televisions in his time. But, he said enough about early childhood
education that we can surmise what his views on the tube would have
been.
These reasons center on Steiner’s view of the astral
body, imagination and the way a child learns.
A cornerstone in
Steiner’s educational theorems was the fact that children go
through three stages in their lives. First, from age 0-7, the spirit
inhabiting the body of the child is still getting used to its
surroundings. This explains many standards in the Waldorf curriculum
such as the standard of teaching the alphabet at age 7 or
8. During the second stage, from ages 7-14, the child is said to be
driven by imagination and fantasy, and during the third stage,
starting at age 14, the astral body is said to be driven into the
physical body, creating the onset of puberty.
Waldorf
educators saw a direct link to this astral body and the watching of
television. The scenes, the lack of imagination involved, and the
topics covered on most channels would obviously bring on the astral
stage of the body at an early age. This was one reason that
television was banned from Waldorf schools.
Modern
researchers, however, have just recently made this connection when
they recently announced, “Watching Television may Quicken the Onset
of Puberty” (Dr. Laura Markham, 2006). In her article, based on 35
different research studies she states that this connection has a lot
to do with the hormone melatonin. Melatonin is a hormone produced by
the pineal gland in the brain, which plays a key role in regulating
the body’s internal clock. Light emitted by television screens
suppresses melatonin levels in the blood, which disrupts sleep
patterns of children and teens as well as the age at which they enter
puberty. It is also interesting to note that the problems of
early-onset puberty have baffled researchers since 1950. This was the
same date in which televisions became widely owned in the United
States.
This is not the main reason given when Waldorf Schools
state on their websites that children should not watch television.
When I reviewed 40 Waldorf school websites I found that 36 of them
stated their main reason for discouraging television was that it
hinders the imagination in the child.
And this is indeed one
of the most important elements in early childhood education that
Steiner, himself, promoted. Rudolf Steiner, in his 1919 Essay, “An
Introduction to Waldorf Education,” states, “Of prime importance
for the cultivation of the child’s feeling-life is that the child
develops a relationship to the world in a way such as that which
develops when we are inclined towards fantasy.” Fantasy, in Waldorf
education, is not the fantasy of Disney movies or only the fantasy of
fairy tales. It is a holistic process of allowing the child to expand
their imagination into expanded realms. Fairy tales are one aspect of
this process.
Recent studies show that television hinders this
process in young children. In a study led by Dr. Aric Sigman, an
associate fellow of the British Psychological Society (and concluded
in 2007). He shows that television affects the brain in many ways
that would weaken the imagination in children. The first effect that
translates into a weaker imagination is the occurrence of “jump
cuts” in television that fracture attention spans. At the same
time, studies show that the brain is then programmed to reward itself
with “dopamine” (the happy drug) for being able to cope with this
fractured attention span. Basically, people become addicted to
functioning with a fractured attention span. Extreme multi-tasking
and children being enrolled in tens of “after-school activities”
are also a result of this addiction. Imagination is naturally lost
when our minds cannot focus. Have you ever tried to write an article
while being interrupted every five minutes?
As far as being
educational, brain scans performed by neuroscientist have shown that
television and many interactive media games do not stimulate
intellectual areas of the brain.
Teachers in Waldorf schools
also discourage the watching of television because of the effects it
has on the child’s behavior at school. But any teacher could tell
you that! Not just a Waldorf teacher. And we have all heard that
enough times to be tired of that reason. But how can we bring
Steiner’s research into this and understand it on a deeper
level?
Steiner said, “From birth to about the sixth or
seventh year, the human being naturally gives himself up to
everything immediately surrounding him in the human environment, and
thus, through the imitative instinct, gives form to his own nascent
powers.” If I didn’t know that Steiner was not alive during the
time of television I would expect his next words to say something
about the effects of television. But his next words are even more
powerful. He says, “From this period on, the child’s soul becomes
open to take in consciously what the educator and teacher give, which
affects the child as a result of the teacher’s natural
authority.”
So, what, then, would happen when that “teacher”
is the television? What Steiner is saying in his statement is that
the child is in a stage where he/she is imitating everything around
them. Everything becomes their teacher. Any parent who has been
embarrassed by a child’s actions that reflected their own knows
this to be true. Rahima Baldwin Dancy’s book “You are Your
Child’s First Teacher” explores this issue in much depth. It
becomes only obvious, to a Waldof teacher, then, that if you allow
television to be a teacher you open up the child to many things you
do not want them exposed to.
On the website of one Waldorf
school in Ireland it states, “Television, as well as film, videos,
DVDs, recorded music, computers and electronic games have a very
powerful effect on children. It can take several days for the effects
of a single video to wear off. If children are watching every day,
the effects never wear off at all; many children now speak a lot of
the time in ‘cartoon’ voices, make ‘sound effects’ to
accompany their jerky movements (kicking, punching) and compulsively
repeat lines from videos they have seen over and over again. This is
now seen as normal childish behaviour, but it really comes from these
media, not from the children themselves.”
Another concern
about television watching is that it will hinder the child’s
ability to reflect on and carry through on the lessons they were
taught during the day. Steiner believed that “What is learned more
slowly at any given age is more surely and healthily absorbed by the
organism, that what is crammed into it.” (Spiritual Ground for
Education by Rudolf Steiner). This is one reason that when a child is
given a lesson in a Waldorf manner that they are allowed time to
reflect on it and often given the “same” lesson twice. Lessons
often depend on the child taking in the content of the first lesson,
sleeping and reflecting on it and then coming back the next day to
recall and work through it. During this time of sleep and reflection
the lesson will have been digested, together with mental pictures a
child has made for themselves and it is this that makes the lesson
really “sink in” to a child’s being.
If children are
watching television or using any other electronic devices during this
process, these devices will “over-ride” the lesson. So instead of
reflecting and creating images of the lesson, the child’s head will
be filled with images of the television or media. Once again, his own
imagination is denied him. This view on the damage of television ties
into the modern studies done on television watching and its effects
on concentration that I discussed earlier.
Recent studies are
also showing that TV can be linked to obesity, autism, and even
diabetes. Steiner gave numerous lectures on the topic of
nutrition and education and believed that the health of the body was
greatly affected by how it learned, and how a person learned was also
greatly effected by their health. Knowing, what we know today about
the health effects of television on the body, we can assume that
Steiner would not have approved of this as a healthy medium for
holistic learning.
How does www.thewaldorfchannel.com tie into this?
The
Waldorf Channel is intended for adult viewing only. Programs are
designed to be short in span (3-8 minutes) so the ill effects of
using electronic media for all people is minimized.
I do
realize that some children may choose to watch some of the videos in
an instructional way with their parents. Videos that children may be
watching for instruction are mean to be “instructional lessons”
and not “shows to watch”. So if your child chooses to watch a
show then they should be aware of the presenter as their “teacher”
and they should participate with the presenter and their parent
together as a way of learning new things. This is a way of bringing
Waldorf into your home via the incredible tools of the Internet in
the modern world and is NOT a way to bring TV into your Waldorf
home.
Waldorf Radio is intended to be listened to by parents
alone or parents and children together. After listening to a show
parents should be able to re-create the stories for their children
and children should be able to recreate the stories in their own way
– including creating plays. This is one way to bring the magic of
storytelling and fantasy into your home as a family together.
References
for "Waldorf and TV" Article
“Children’s
TV is Linked to Autism & Cancer”
from The Scotsman, reprinted at:
http://www.informationliberation.com/?id=20384
“Children’s
TV Watching is Linked to Early Puberty”
by Dr. Laura Markham
at:
http://www.wellness.com/blogs/DrLauraMarkham/294/childrens-tv-watching-linked-to-early-puberty/dr-laura-markham
“Why
Do Steiner Schools Discourage TV Watching?”
by the ISKA (Irish Steiner Kindergarten Association) at:
http://www.steinerireland.org/faq/#11
“An
Introduction to Waldorf Education”
by Rudolf Steiner, 1919. Published
at:
http://wn.rsarchive.org/Articles/IntWal_index.html
“Spiritual
Ground for Education”
by Rudolf Steiner. 1922. Published
at:
http://wn.rsarchive.org/Education/SpGrEd_index.html
“Curative
Education”
by Rudolph Steiner. 1924. Published
at:
http://wn.rsarchive.org/Lectures/Dates/19240702p01.html
“Cosmic
Memory”
by Paul Marshall Allen. 1959. Published
at:
http://wn.rsarchive.org/Books/GA011/CM/GA011_intro.html
“Problems
of Nutrition”
by Rudolf Steiner. 1909. Published
at:
http://wn.rsarchive.org/Biodynamics/Nutrit_index.html
“How
TV is Killing Us”
by Dr. Aric Sigman. The Daily Mail, 2005. Reprinted
at:
http://www.whale.to/b/sigman.html
“Why
Do Waldorf Schools Discourage TV?”
St. Michael’s School in London
at:
http://www.stmichaelsteiner.wandsworth.sch.uk/html_site/index.html
“The
Field”
by Lynne McTaggart at: http://tinyurl.com/366x39
(This
is an entire reprint of the book provided by Google Books!)