a W ^^"^* '> ^r'. ^^ ? oV ^t '^0' "oK '^0' V'^ "^^0^ 4 o •^ .V- C .^ o " o iq °--<^ ^o '^.P. .S^ * v-s^ 0' c ^O"^ ^0°" °-^ <3^ -^'^ HOME STUDY COURSE OF MOTHER'S KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL By IRENE MYERS %^^# x^^^ x&^^ (9) # # IN SEVENTEEN LESSONS ^Vj^ X^^f %^^» # # # 4 9 > .1 ffl Copyright 1914 By MOTHER'S KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL Kansas City, Mo. iS-4- ■, \V^ ^ A^ 1^. , ^ .O- - y r^ ■©CI:A3 74 9 4f) JUL 27 1914 .■'::y^ PART I LESSONS I AND II of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School CopjTight 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI LESSON I. FROEBEUS GIFTS. Dear Friend: I received your message, and you may judge by my quick reply how interested I am in the subject about which you asked so many questions, namely, the Kindergarten gifts and their value. It is very unfortunate that you have never seen them; have never felt the wonderful possibilities they contained when you opened them, not only the first time, but every time ; nor felt a deep-rooted passion to make something and to continue making something until your energies were exhausted. But you will wonder what these remark- able little things are, to be able to create such feelings, and I will endeavor to tell you, at the same time answering, to the best of my ability, your several questions. There are thirteen gifts in all, but I am only going to tell you about the first six, because five of them are building gifts, and that is what your child wants most of all. FIRST GIFT. It consists of six balls, each a little over 2 inches in diameter. Each ball is covered with yarn, each a different color, and only one color for a ball; the 8-inch strand extending from the top being the same color. As they are rubber, filled with air, and covered with yarn, they are soft and fit nicely in the hand. The colors of the spectrum only are used, and you may imagine the efi^ect on a 3- months-old baby when one of these bright colored balls is swung around or dangled in mid-air within his range of vision. Can you not just h'jar his little cackle and see the pleasure expressed by the kicking of his short legs, the energetic reaching with his tiny arms, and the excited, delighted look on his face? Can you imagine anything but this first gift which can so- effectively arouse in the child's mind the feeling of consciousness of a world of individual things and of its own dawning individuality? When you first look at this gift I doubt if you will be able to resist the temptation to dangle eath :ball in mid-air, or to grasp it in your hand, and I am sure you*. will not be able to look at the second gift without stopping to contemplate the world of knowledge this first one contains. By it he learns up and down, backward and forward, around and around. By playing with it several movements of control are brought into action, namely, grasping, bouncing, rolling, tossing and squeezing. Color also plays a prominent part, for it has the power to arouse interest in the child, and so its educational value is very great. SECOND GIFT. I shall never forget the many things which flashed into my mind the first time I pulled the lid off of the box containing the second gift. I saw oranges, apples, peaches, croquet balls and marbles in the sphere; I saw loaves of bread, blocks of ice, cakes and numerous other things in the cube; I saw bottles of milk, churns, and jars of fruit in the cylinder, and when I discovered the holes in them and found sticks in the box which would fit, my joy knew no limit. I thought that surely the resources could never become exhausted. This sphere, cube and cylinder are made of wood, and conse- quently are solid and hard. The sphere is a round, smooth ball about 2 inches in diameter. The cylinder is about 2 inches long and 11/^ inches thick, with a plain surface at each end. There is a small opening in the center of one end extending to the center of the opposite end, through which a stick about the size of a match or toothpick might be run. The cube is 2 inches thick, 2 inches long and 2 inches high. It also has a small hole on two opposite sides (in the center of each), so that a stick may be placed through the cube. These three, namely, the sphere, cube and cylinder, come in an oblong box about 8 inches by 3, with a lid which slides off. At each end of this box, on the inside, is a piece of wood about % of an inch thick, and not quite as high or wide as the box to which it is glued. On the top side of each of these pieces of wood, and in the center, a round hole about % of an inch in diameter is bored, into which may be placed sticks about 8 inches long, found also in the box. Besides the ball, sphere, cube and two round sticks, this box contains another stick (more like a slat). It is % inch wide, 14 inch thick and 8 inches long, with a, hole on one of the broad sides, at each end, into which the two round sticks may be placed and these placed in the box. Really, Bernice, I feel as though your education had been neglected, and you have such a dear little girl with whom you could make it so practicable — but I must tell you more of this second gift. It seems to be a step forw^ard from the colored balls, for it teaches the child more shapes, and shape, someone has said, "is the formal key to the study and control of an external world." Also with these, hardness and softness are contrasted, and the first step in construction is taken, for it does not take the child long to place one on top of the other. The second step with this gift is placing the stick through the holes in the center and discovering that the ball will roll ; that is, if the stick is placed from one end through the center to the other end, and that the cylinder will roll also. A child who has passed the difficulty of making his hands do as he wishes enjoys making machine toys immensely, because it calls forth his skill, and this gift is especially adapted to that pur- pose. It will make steam shovels and derricks^ and several other things, with the help of a little string and perhaps a wire hairpin or two. I am sure, though, that Helen has not reached the age for this. THIRD GIFT. The third gift did not possess such charms for me as the other two. I remember a puzzled feeling when I saw that so many small cubes would make a big one. I could not understand why, but after playing with it and putting it in the box a number of times, I began to realize it was a fact, to me an unexplainable one, so I ceased to wonder. However, I think it was a great step to learn that all these many little cubes could only be placed one way to make a big one. Pardon me, Bernice, I forgot that you do not know what the third gift is, and I am afraid that what I have just said about it is rather incomprehensible to you. It is a cube divided into eight smaller cubes of equal size, each an inch by an inch by an inch. These smaller cubes are just like the cube in the second gift, only smaller, and the holes and wire eyes are missing. They are placed in a square box, to impress upon the child's mind the similarity. This gift is of great value to the teacher, for it enables her to give the first step in division, to give lessons in similarity and comparison, and to give an advance lesson in construction, for the child quickly learns to stack the blocks in various ways. The mental value of this gift, I think, is perhaps the greatest point in its favor, although the physical value is also of much im- portance. The first habits of accuracy are formed with this gift, for the child would be apt to put the blocks in the box any way they would go, but he is taught that he must put them in only one way, for that is the only way they will fit. The third gift means organic construction, and if you will first let your baby have free play with it, and then organize it, I believe you will be most pleased with the result. Aim at expanding when you organize by building on her ideas. FOURTH GIFT. The fourth gift is another division of the cube, this time into eight oblongs, each 2 inches long, 1 inch wide and a half inch thick. When stacked together it suggests the cube, and the appearance of the last gift when it was stacked together. What nice sidewalks these oblongs will make! What lovely sleds to slide down a tobog- gan! What a smooth street for autos to glide over! Such a cute little fence to enclose a garden! And, Oh, what a barnyard they would make! My! I could not wait to get my hand on them whem my mother showed them to me the first time, and I have that same irresistible impulse now when I see them. Let me suggest, Bernice, that here with this gift is a very good opportunity for a numiber lesson, and you know ''number and size have a special interest, inasmuch as they constitute the chief bridges in transition of the mind from outer space to inner time." But you must be careful how you would give your lesson; the child should be unconscious of your object. Take for example two piles of oblongs, four in a pile, stacking them broad side against broad side. Now put these two piles close together and they make a cube. Take off two top front ones and you have a seat: place them on, to front of bottom of cube and you have a bed, and so forth. This does not sound very interesting, does it? But to the child it is great fun for awhile, and he is unconsciously learning. Just give this lesson to your little Helen when you think the opportune time has arrived, and you will see how quick she learns. The mental value of this gift consists in the material which it affords for another step in construction, comparison and division. The physical value is greater than in any of the other gifts which have been mentioned, for when the teacher gives dictation, as in the example above, the child must concentrate all the physical and mental power he has, in attention and in making his little hands do what his mind tells them to do, in a precise and quick way. These last two gifts depend a very great deal on the tempera- ment of the child, and so I could not tell you at just the age they are best suited. The fifth and sixth gifts are usually taken together, but as you have never seen them, I will first describe the fifth, which is con- tained in a square box, the same size as the third and fourth gift. FIFTH GIFT. i Upon opening the fifth gift you will find nine cubes, each an inch by an inch by an inch; three more of the same size cubes divided into six isosceles triangular prisms, and three more divided into twelve smaller isosceles triangular prisms. You have no idea what lovely slanting roofs these triangular prisms will make, and the greenhouses, school-houses, farm houses railway stations, business blocks, stores, barns and churches are unlimited in style and variety. It sounds very interesting, does it not? And it surely is. You can readily see the mental development which this gift offers, for the child will have to observe very closely before he can represent just what he wishes to with the blocks. Considerable physical control comes in when you give the sequence play, for the child must give attention, must move quickly and correctly, and must think, hence concentration, comparative reflection, expansion and outgoing are the chief values to be derived from this gift. I think children find this gift more interesting than the other four because it enables them to make more real looking houses and barns, and things which they see every day, as their homes and school. The sequence play in material and thought can be carried out better with this gift than with the other, for there are so many similar shapes, as houses, barns, and so forth. If you would like me to send you a good sequence play with this gift, I would be very glad to do it, or if there are any games I could send, or any suggestions I might make which would help you, I would be very pleased to make them, but this gift "speaks for itself." You have but to open it, and the^ strong motive for play which you are inclined to think has long been dormant will give you the irresistible tendency to make a house. It is at the age of 4 or 5 years that this gift is of the most interest and value. For at this age the child has a strong tendency to compare and combine various sorts of images and has a strong demand for filling out each image, hence you may expect his con- struction to be more advanced. This is the gift to give children at the destructive age, when they want to tear or pull things apart. SIXTH GIFT. The last gift I will tell you about today is the sixth. It is interesting from the outside as well as from the inside, for it is contained in an oblong box about 6V2 inches wide, the top of which is covered wih a lid which slides back and forth. Upon emptying the contents upon the table you will find eighteen oblong tablets 2 inches long, 1 inch wide and 1/2 inch thick; twelve square tiles 1 inch wide, 1 inch long and 1/2 ii^ch thick; and six rectangular columns 2 inches long, V2 i^ch wide and V2 inch thick. When I saw them lying before me, the first thing that entered my mind was, ''What nice steps they will make." Next came the idea of making a park or playground, for the columns would make such splendid swings and seats. When a child is ready for this gift his image is usually more topical in character, and he is more able to adopt suggestions without friction with his own ideas. He shows a greater interest in making things for a result, and in his own little mind there is nothing too great for him to do, and which he is not just going to do. ^ The fifth and sixth gifts work very nicely together, but limit the kind, size and number you give your child, otherwise she may become confused and excited. A limit will develop her, but . too much will hamper her development. To conclude, I would say of all the gifts take the natural, instinctive, impulsive things children do, and make a lesson out of them. Follow the line of least resistance, providing the child knows what to do, and avoid telling him what to do as much as possible, for insofar as you tell a child to do things, you limit his power of developing and hinder him in his own expression. The business of life is adaptation to surroundings, to nature, to the universe. This implies knowledge and control of self and surroundings. The business of education is to lead the child on the surest and shortest road to this adaptation, and therefore it should see that the senses be properly interpreted and appreciated by the mind, and that the tongue and hands represent properly the mind. The mind should learn to rely implicitly upon its powers to see, say and do. This is possible only if head and hand are • trained simultaneously and in unison with each other, and for this purpose there is nothing better than the Kindergarten gifts. They not only train the child's head and hand together, but they give him a new cosmos; they invite arranging, controlling, transform- ing and creating activities; they lead toward instruction, discov- ery and invention, and last but not least, they give insight. Hoping that this letter has answered satisfactorily all of your questions, and wishing you every success with these gifts, I remain, Yours sincerely. Hazel Irene Myers. THIRD GIFT, GROUP PLAYS. — 1— Have one of the children at the end of the table make a church out of the big cubes. Then have every other child make a horse and carriage out of his cube. Use the little 2d gift beads for people sitting in the carriage and let them push them along to church. A church at one end and another one at the other end would be better, for then they could pass each other keeping on the right side of the street. Have a circus parade and let each child make the kind of wagon he wishes, putting in as many animals (beads) as he v/ishes and naming them. Make a sort of tent out of the blocks (large ones) and after the parade has gone the length of the table and back, each child pushing his own, have it go to the tent. SEQUENCE PLAYS, —1— V Make a hospital out of the big blocks; each child make an ambulance out of his cubes; put a man (small bead) in ambulance and take him to hospital. In hospital have little- beds made from four of the smaller beads. Take man out of ambulance and lie him on the bed. Now the ambulance is an automobile and some one is hurrying after doctor; doctor gets in and goes back to hospital; sits beside sick man awhile then leaves; sick man gets well and is taken home in carriage by his wife and children. — 2— Play kindergarten. Make long tables out of the cubes and sit little chairs (cubes) up to them. Use small beads for children; have them all march in and sit around table ; each child has his own table and has about 5 children (beads to handle). Child then makes different things out of cubes ; the tables were made while his kinder- garten children sit in a small circle and watch him. ; When he can think of nothing more to show them how to make they all go home in a big wagon which comes for them, drawn by one of the children, and he puts the blocks back in the box like the teacher does. 8 FOURTH GIFT, GROUP PLAY. Use these oblong blocks for sleds. Make a big toboggan and let each child take a turn in sliding his sled down the toboggan. Make a long walk or street out of this gift, then make an automobile out of 3d gift and let each child push his ''auto" along on the street. SEQUENCE PLAY. Make street car out of cubes and go down town, having little beads for passengers. Make front of shoe store out of cubes, make counter and two seats opposite each other; have oblong blocks for shoe boxes ; clerk shows customer several, of which he buys two, and takes train (made out of cubes) home. FOR LEARNING NUMBER. Take two top front ones off and you have a seat; place them onto, bottom of cube, in front, and again you have a bed; take off two front top ones again and one back top one; place three in a row in lap of the one that was left in the cube and you have a stove with a stove pipe; place all back again into a cube, take off top half of cube, place half of it beside the bottom half, making six 2 by 2 in an oblong, then place either two on top of center of this oblong and you have a basket. FORM PLAY. — 1— Use oblong block as a fence to enclose a garden; have beds marked off and using the little beads for vegetables, have onions, cabbages, potatoes, beets, and corn in the garden. Use same fence and have cows (of small beads) inside on the pasture; make their barn out of the cubes, and on one side have trough for them to drink out of. FIFTH GIFT, GROUP PLAY. The fifth gift consists of 27 small cubes an inch by an inch, which when placed in their cube like boxes make a large cube. Three of these cubes are divided into two large triangles and three other cubes are divided into 4 small triangles. Many interesting games may be played with this gift which just suits the constructive age in a child. It would be of interest to the children to build the school building of education in which their kindergarten is located. Then they could make the train which takes them to school and take them home again. Next, each one could build his own home and barn if he had one. After a trip to the park it would be fun to make a park, con- structing the different buildings they saw in the park. The swings, sea-saw, enclosed little lakes, and anything else they have remem- bered. They could make the furniture they have in certain rooms at home, the dining room for instance. Make the table and sit the chairs up to it. Some other good games to play would be to make barns, stables, little villages, post offices and conservatories. SEQUENCE PLAY. I have made a sequence play in both material and thought, having a series involving into another without changing the position of any one block. This play is on the farm : 1. House. 2. Barn. , 3. Windmill. 4. Granary. 5. Corncrib. 6. Green House. 7. Chicken Coup. 8. Milk House. Make house, using all blocks except one triangle. Have house old fashioned with chimney in center of block. Now take away the front two-thirds of the cube, leaving the back with the chimney which makes the windmill. Now take away one side of the windmill and add it to the two-thirds you first took away, and you have a barn and what is left of the windmill makes a granary. Take the last thing you added to make the bam and the other side of the granary, put them together and you have a chicken coop. Now separate the bam in halves (the long way) and you have a corn crib. Take one-half of this corn crib and add it to the chicken coop and you have a milk house. LESSON II FROEBEL'S LIFE. Years ago — away back in 1718 — in a little German village named Oberweissbach, there lived, among many other children, one called Frederick Froebel. He is said not to have been a remarkably bright or winning child; in fact, no one ever thought much about him as a childish individual, but very kindly, as he says, "let him alone." But he had some remarkable traits, which followed him through life and shaped and planned his future destiny and purpose. His home nestled right in the shadow of a great church, and the child, as other children would have done, played and grew, as it were, beneath its very dome. But a life shadow deeper than that which the old church cast crossed his pathway. His mother died when he was quite young, and the little life was left, as many have been, to be tossed about with no gentle guiding hand to lead. But time flew, and a new mother was brought to take the place of the true mother and to watch the charges left. She was a good mother as far as care goes, but oh! such a difference! The life of the little child was impetuous, earnest and warm, but the new mother did not understand, and she chided him and could not enter into the thoughts and games that seemed so real to him. So, as Mother Nature sympathized with him, he went to her for information. He might have brooded over his neglect and lived unhappy, but instead he grew in with the joys of nature. He learned of the birds and flowers, the trees and streams, the moss and stones — for even stones can talk, and who better than a little child can understand some things they say? And the sky talked to him, and the clouds, as they hung dark and low, or skudded like white sails across a sea of blue. After a time, his home ties not being such as they should have been, he was taken to more congenial surroundings. He went to live with an uncle who was very fond of him, and while staying at his home he went to school. Mother Nature's teachings only made him more eager for the study of the more common branches. Perhaps he pitied those who had never learned under his chief instructor, and he worked and thought with a zeal that would have done credit to an older brain. Years passed, and all these years he had been thinking and planning, and trying to put into practice what Nature had taught him. The remembrance of his own childhood caused him to think of its likeness to others, and he realized the importance of answer- ing the great question ''why?" His first work consisted in writing 1] books and articles which were the outcome of his meditations and experience. They were generally frowned upon and severely criticized. In 1840 his thoughts found expression in the opening of a Kindergarten at Blankenburg. Here he devoted his entire time and solicitude to the welfare of those under his care and instruc- tion. Here he met with many discouragements, and very few of his friends approved of his struggling cause. In this institution he endeavored to train teachers for the furtherance and wide- spreading of his work. And none can better realize the goodness and nobleness of his character and purpose than those who worked under his guidance and direction. His tender love for and his sympathy with the children lent the charm to his gentle life. And there in his Kindergarten, the full realization of all his hopes, Froebel worked out the wonderful secret by which we have profited so much. PART II LESSONS HI, IV, V AND VI of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School Copyright 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY. MISSOURI 14 LESSON III DEVELOPMENT THROUGH SELF-ACTIVITY. When we stop to think that all a baby has in the beginning are a few movements (reflexive, impulsive and instinctive) ; that these are beyond his control ; that his whole development depends on his physical movements; that he has no mental development, it is almost inconceivable that experience alone can accomplish so much in so brief a time. Miss Shinn says that the infant ''is an automaton in the sense that he has practically neither thought, wish nor will." Thorndike says that *'to the little child everything at first is a haze." O'Shea says: ''He is a ship adrift the winds and the waves send him hither and thither as they will. He is absolutely dependent, and is far more helpless than a calf, colt, kitten or puppy"; while James says: "Everything is a blooming confusion or chaos." Froebel says : "The world at first comes to the child out of its notice in chaotic confusion. Out of this chaotic mass of indefinite things the little one must develop himself, and it hardly seems fair to give such a preposterous task to such an irresponsi- ble person." However, he does not hesitate nor procrastinate, as is proven by every normal baby, who moves slightly, but almost constantly, the very^^first days, their legs drawing up, their arms stirring, ("heir eyes and head rolling a little. Kirkpatrick says that "from the first the infant makes numerous spontaneous and random move- ments of almost every part of the body, independently of external stimuli, and that during the first few weeks the movements of an infant seem to have little relation to each other." Others also state that the baby is constantly in motion during his waking moments. This activity may also be noticed in a sleeping child, for there are many movements of various sorts. Why all this muscular activity? Is it caused from stimuli within or without, or both? O'Shea says: "The brain is so organ- ized at the outset that all paths lead quite directly to the motor regions." Stimulate a baby in almost any way and you will be likely to get an immediate response. "Whatever energy is set free by sensory activity is probably expended in motor reaction." Preyer's explanation is that the movements are simply due to the rapid growth of nerve centers, which cause an overflow of nervous force to the muscles and makes them contract at haphazard." And so we get two views. Some of the baby's movements are co-ordinated, though, and the explanations given above could hardly be applicable to this class of movements, though they are few. For example, the suck- ing movement, in which the co-ordination of tongue, lips and jaw are almost perfect and quite complex. Again the baby has at birth the power to grasp an object placed in his hands; can extend and 15 contract his arms, and has enough control over his vocal chords to make a noise. He has only a few other very simple co-ordinated movements, and these, combined with his impulsive and other movements, are his apparatus for beginning life — the only possible means he has of becoming adjusted to his environment. Never again in life will movements count for so much in developing and unfolding the soul within this little body. The infant must act to gain a knowledge of the things about him. He must learn the world by dealing with it in a motor way. ''Muscular experience," says O'Shea, ''are essential to the gaining of clear, definite, effective ideas of the world." Judd says that "action is a condition of mental growth." It is the basis of all true learning. To an infant, sense impressions are vague and hazy until they have been defined by actual contact which the objects yield. It would be an abnormal child who was not incessantly active in a muscular way. At first these movements would naturally be impulsive and unrestrained, for the baby has not yet learned co-ordination. Most of his reactions are practically all characterized by lack of defi- niteness. They are riotous, chaotic, not purposeful or adoptive, except in the most general sense, in the words of O'Shea. For a number of weeks the child has these manners of move- ments, but by the time he is 4 months old correlation sets in, and this generally happens in an accidental way. It is about this time also, or a little earlier, that the cerebral cortex (seat of intelli- gence or consciousness) is developed. The first correlation is cer- tainly an interesting one, I should judge. The little one would possibly grasp for a ball or something that interested him and miss it far, then he doesn't know how to correct his mistake, but will try again, and come a little nearer, perhaps. There appears to be no way to secure advancement except through experimenta- tion, or play, or curiosity. It is an interesting fact that the child uses his larger muscles first. For example, the arms and legs are used almost exclusively at first. "The little thumb is doubled up within the fist and the fingers remain tightly clenched, oftentimes during sleep. The arms are never thrown out from the body, but in direct line with it. There seems but little variety and but slight complexity in these first movements." The wave of development moves con- stantly outward toward the extremities. Soon the child learns to use his hands, fingers, and lastly thumb. Then the arm better, as a whole. In all his activities the things which impresses one most is the amount of force he expends upon them. For instance, if he attempts to love you his caresses will fairly take your breath. O'Shea says that the reason for this is that his force is not rightly distributed and cor- related throughout the parts of the whole apparatus employed, and one of the main objects of his life at this early stage is to learn to direct his force. His advancement along every line is tov\^ard greater and greater co-ordination. Another example of the lack of this co-ordina- tion is when a child is learning to walk. At first he doesn't use his knees at all; they might as well not be there, for his legs seem abso- 16 lutely jointless or even wooden. ''Rigidity" seems to be the word that describes all unco-ordinated muscles. As the months pass we notice that co-ordination increases and muscularity decreases. This muscular action might be compared to a channeled watercourse, for as a current of water will deepen a gully till it drain into itself all the water that had spread about in shallower ditches, so the wave of molecular change running along a nerve some- how prepares that nerve so that by and by instead of spreading about through any fibers that come handy the whole energy will draw itself into the accustomed ones. Then, of course, the muscles to which these run will perform more and more easily the accustomed acts. As less and less energy is required to make certain movements, co-ordination becomes easier and more evident. This is the explanation given by Miss Shinn, and it makes it quite clear. And so the baby progresses from one thing to another. We find him in the first hour of his life with only a few movements with which to develop himself and to become acquainted with this great big world of ours, and at the end of his first year we find him on the physical side, occupying his energies in acquiring control of his senses and of his muscles; on the intellectual side, in the development of sensa- tion and perception and the rudiments of memory, imagination and thought. At birth he could not make voluntary movements of any sort ; now he has the ability to make a number ; he has gained a bodily consciousness of himself in a world of objects, of distance and direc- tions; he has increased power of communication; he has learned to grasp things in mind by association. In fact, as Mis Shinn says, 'The breathing automaton has become an eager and joyous little being, seeing and hearing and feeling much as we do, knowing his own body somewhat, and controlling it throughout to a certain extent, laughing and frolicing, enjoying the vision of the world with a delicious zest, beginning to show a glimmer of intelligence, and to cross over with sign and sound the abyss between spirit and spirit." LESSON IV LATER ACTIVITIES. In the later activities of the child we find instincts playing a prom- inent part. The impulsive, objectless movements seem to decrease. The child has better and more complex co-ordinations, much more in- telligence and begins to do as he sees others around him do. We find first one instinct and then another calling forth his activities. The first instinct that is evident is generally fear, and as a rule it is quite marked in the child. One of the first causes of fear is a loud sound, and we would naturally expect such sounds to produce a disturbing effect on the weak and unstable nervous organization of a child of four or six months. Sully says that "children seem to have a special dislike to black apparel, and George Sand describes her fear at having to put on black stockings when her father died. Yet any change of color in dress will disturb a child." The close connections between aesthetic dislike and fear is seen in the well-marked recoilings of children from uncanny-looking dolls. In the care of a timid child 17 almost anything unfamiliar and out of the way, whether in the color, the form or the movement of an object may cause fear. To children any seemingly uncaused movement is apt to excite a feeling of alarm. Fear of the dark is no doubt very common among children, and it seems to arise when intelligence has reached a certain stage of devel- opment. They will fill the dark with imaginative forms of alarming animals, so terrifying that George Sand hardly exaggerates when she says, ''This fear is, I believe, the greatest moral suffering of children." Children are often frightened at the sight of an animal, too. Sully says that "a black animal, as a sheep or a cow, seems more particularly to come in for these childish aversions." He says further that " it is sometimes said that children inherit from their ancestors the fear of certain animals, but so far as I can ascertain facts are strongly op- posed to the theory of an inherited fear of animals." The fact that what frightens one child may delight another at about the same age, seems to me to be a strong argument in defense of Sully's statement. Oftentimes the way an animal is introduced to the child will be the cause of his feelings toward it. It is needless to say that the fear of punishment should retain some place in the child's life, but it limits, and one should be careful how to use it. Curiosity is a very strong instinct of childhood (and often con- tinues through life) . If it wasn't for this instinct I hardly know what might be the detriment to the child. This eternal ''why" is one of the greatest means of learning. James says that "young children are possessed by curiosity about every new impression that assails them and that material things,- things that move, living things, human actions and accounts of human actions will win the attention better than anything that is more abstract." No doubt the strongest instinct in the child is that of imitation. "Every child has it, and to a certain extent it is the basis of his educa- tion. Through imitation he becomes conscious of his own powers and of his place in the world. It is partly an effort to understand, and we find the baby attempting it at about six months old, and all through the remainder of his life he will be what he is, to a very large extent, through this imitation." It is the foundation and stimulus to almost every play, and very often to work. James says that "Invention and imitation are the two legs, so to call them, on which the human race has walked." Emulation is imitating so as not to appear inferior, and is "the very nerve of human society." Many modern reformers discourage the spirit of rivalry, but it is certainly a good thing, providing enmity and unfair means are not encouraged. James says that "this feeling of rivalry lies at the very basis of our being, all social improvement being largely due to it." Ambition is the next instinct, and emulation often slides into it. James classifies imitation, emulation, ambition, pugnacity and pride together under the head of the "Ambitious Impulses." It seems to me that it is a splendid thing for ambition to exist in a school room or home, just as long as it remains ambition. Much might be said of the pugnacity instinct. Some of us would nor could not progress very far without it. The child who is imposed 18 upon should be made to feel that he is being imposed upon and should be encouraged to fight — to assert himself and to hit back. Such chil- dren, however, are rare. If this lack of pugnacity is due to physical inability very little can be done. Oftentimes if a child's pugnacity or pride is aroused he will conquer difficulties that you couldn't induce him to attempt otherwise. Another class of instincts, according to James, are love of appro- bation or vanity, shyness, and secretiveness, but he does not consider these very deeply. A child is naturally affectionate if he is treated all right, and if he respects you he will generally want your approba- tion of whatever he does. If you can once arouse love in the child for you, you can easily lead him through this love of approbation. A secretive child is very hard to deal with, but you should always be open and frank with him and lead him to think you expect the same of him. ^ The instinct of ownerhip in a child is one of the ''endowments of the race." The sense of ownership begins in the second year of life, and James says that ''it seems essential to mental health that the indi- vidual should have something besides the bare clothes on his back to which he can assert exclusive possession, and which he may defend adversely against the world." Through this instinct we can teach the child order and neatness in home as well as school. This instinct, I think, helps to develop the child's individuality to a very large extent, too. James makes a special point of constructiveness as an instinct, and up to the eighth or ninth year a child hardly does anything else but handle objects, putting them together and pulling them apart, and the more different kinds of things he can thus handle the more confi- dent grows his sense of kinship with the world in which he lives. The social instinct is not mentioned by James, but most students of child psychology think it is one of the fundamental things in the child's life, and it is indeed a prominent factor in the Kindergarten. Miss Tanner says that the criminal is anti-social, and further, that nothing will help such a person as the knowledge that he is needed and is of use to the community. This is one of the tasks of the Kinder- garten — to make each child feel that he is wanted, that he is needed, and that we are all working together for the good of each other. Much more might be said about later activities, but I believe if we could find a child without fear, curiosity, imitation, emulation, ambi- tion, pugnacity, pride, constructiveness, ownership, sociability, love of approbation, shyness and secretiveness we would indeed have an al- most "passive" child. LESSON V MOTHER'S RESPONSE HERE AND LATER. The mother's response to the early as well as the later activities is very important. It depends upon her to develop the child to a large extent by responding to his physical (and, later, mental) activities. The child's faith is based on experience with his mother, and it is from ei 19 her that he gets his moral standards. At the very beginning the faith in the mother is first physical, and if she be a true mother — that is, if her soul has not been warped — she will respond with joy to this first bond of sympathy. "Akin to the child's susceptibility is his excitability. The strings of his soul vibrate responsive to the lightest touch." Often a mother's response is entirely instinctive ; as Froebel says, "It is written in her own heart and utters itself artlessly and unconsciously in all her simple motherly ways and words, and through them she speaks to herself and tells herself what to do." The child has only to throw out the hint and the response of the mother is almost immediate. Take, for example, the play with the limbs. In this little play the child throws out his limbs in the mere joy of living. Instinct tells the mother that he wants an object to measure his strength against and so enjoy it the more, consequently she places her hands so he may kick and press against them, thus feeling resistance and his own strength. This is only one example, but all of the mother plays interpret in one way or another, to the mother, her own instinctive words and deeds and help her to a clear consciousness both of what she is trying to do for her child and of the inner impulse whence her effort proceeds. Nothing will so strengthen the child, so develop him threefoldly, so tighten the bond of love and dependency between himself and mother, so prepare him for future life, so bridge the gulf between the unconscious and conscious periods of life, so make the plays of infancy a "round on that ladder of experience over which the soul climbs towards self-realization and self-knowledge" as the response of the mother at the right moment. IMPORTANCE OF MEETING EACH STAGE WELL. We only live one stage of our life at a time, yet each stage is a round in the ladder of life, and when viewed as a whole and in unity each must be as perfect as possible in order to m^ake the whole as it should be. As the child develops from, one stage to another we must meet the requirements of each one and round it out as full and as perfect as we have the power to do. For instance, the growing child has great activity, which must not be suppressed but must be directed in the right channels. When he reaches the age of five or six. Kindergarten meets the demands of that stage, but up to that time it remains for the mother to feed the little mind and guide the little hands. When the stage of boyhood is reached the child life seemfe to expand and more is taken in — very little is forgotten. I like to think of a child as he meets each succeeding stage as expanding, growing mentally and physically, having broader interests and more varied, continually unfolding. I like to think of all the preceding stages blending into the new one, and all the things con- nected with the past stage as not forgotten nor outgrown, but still cherished in memory with the same fondness — only viewed in a different light. The importance of meeting each stage well can never be doubted when we look around us at the wrecks of men, who, if one but asks them for their life history, will tell of a starved childhood or a neg- 20 lected boyhood. The law of nature requires that each stage be full to overflowing and well rounded out, as the man will be sure to suffer for it later in life. There is but one time and one place for every- thing, says nature, and if we heed her not we must suffer the consequences. Forebel says: ''If at any time in his life man has neglected to respect in the use of his powers their divine nature, and to develop them for work he will necessarily and unavoidably be overtaken by want in proportion to his neglect. At least he will not at some time reap what he c'ould have reaped." IMPORTANCE OF DEVELOPMENT OF INDIVIDUALITY. Teachers used to often make the mistake of considering the children under their care as a group rather than individually. Certain laws were laid down and there was no swerving to the right nor to the left in order to apply to the individual. However, our modem education is correcting that. Children in one room or one grade are not considered as so many children all to be dealt with in the same manner, but each child is studied and the environment adapted to him. People are beginning to realize that a child has characteristics and individuality as much as a grown person, and the best developed child is the one who has found himself, has learned of the power that lies within him, and that he is not one of many but one all by himself — of use to mother, family, school and community. "For in every human being, as a member of humanity and as a child of God, there lies and lives humanity as a whole ; but in each one it is realized and expressed in a wholly particular, peculiar, personal, unique manner; and it should be exhibited in each individual human being in this wholly peculiar, unique manner." Unless the child's individuality is developed he will never assert himself, he will be like a piece of machinery continually doing the will of another. His spirit will be crushed and he will feel of no particular value to any one. I can imagine nothing worse than a child with no individuality — just a dead copy of something else — could anything be more pitiful? VALUE OF LIMITS. "Sharp limits and definite subdivisions within the continuous series of the years of development are highly pernicious and even destructive in their influence." "It is possible only to indicate but not to point out in their full extent the unspeakable mischief, dis- turbance, and hindrance in the development and advancement of the human race arising from these subdivisions and limitations. Suffice it to say that only rare inner force can break through the limits set up around the human being by those who influence him." Forebel continues that the stages of human development as infant, child, boy, youth, man, are continuous and not really distinct, and should by no mieans be limited. What I have quoted from Froebel so far has been against limits, but there are limits which have a value. For example, letting the child feel that there is a limit to his freedom, and that there are 21 things he cannot and must not do. As he grows older, Barnes says, that if the mother and father will only be a punching bag for a few years, if they will only stick to the limit that they set in spite of the child's raving and storming, that the value to the child later in life will be inestimable. KINDERGARTEN APPLICATION. In the kindergarten the child is certainly made to feel "limit" in almost everything he does. There is a limit to his play, a limit to his work, limit to his songs, games, and playthings as well as working material. The kindergarten stands for law of right and small as the child is he knows he must conform to this law of right. Even the social side of it has a limit. As a consequence the kin- dergarten trained child is a better child generally than he who has missed the training. The value of these limits seems quite dis- cernible, and is often carried through life. LESSON VI LANGUAGE. Language is sound molded into definite forms and so made vehicular of ideas. Language is that which most obviously marks off human from animal intelligence. The babbling of an infant contains most if not all the sounds which are afterwards used in speaking. It is thus a wonderful con- trivance of nature by which the child is made to rehearse months beforehand for the difficult performances of articulate speech. The only signification which this primitive articulation can have is emotional. It grows out of expressive cries. The true explanation seems to be that the appearance of this mfantile babbling, just like that of the movements of the limbs which accompany it, is the result of changes in the nervous system. As the centers of vocalization get developed, motor impulses begin to play on the muscles of throat, larynx, and later on, lips, tongue, etc., and in this way a larger and larger variety of sound and sound combination is produced. It is instinctive and due to congenital nervous connections ; and at best it can only be said to express in its totality a mood or relatively permanent state of feeling. The child hears the sounds he produces and falls in love with them. From this moment he begins to go babbling for the pleasure it brings. In this infantile la-la-ing we have more a rudiment of song and music than of articulate speech. The rude vocal music of savages consists of a similar rhythmic threading of meaningless sounds in which, as in this infantile song, changes of feeling reflect themselves. Gesture — signs play a large part in the case of children who 22 are backward in talking, and so are nearer the condition of the deaf-mute. In the second half-year, when the preliminary practice has been gone through, certain sounds take on a distinctly expressive func- tion. Thus one little boy when 8 months old habitually used the sound *'ma-ma" when miserable, and "da-da" when pleased. In most vocabularies of children of 2 or 3 no term for food is found, though names for particular kinds of food, e. g., milk, bread, are in use. In what are called anomatopoetic sounds the child seeks to mimic some natural sound (**bow-wow," ''moo-moo"). These sounds come to be distinctive recognition — signs of particular classes of animals. Toward the end of the first six months and during the second half-year a child is apt to imitate eagerly any sound you choose to produce before him. Sometimes the subject is placed after the predicate, as ''Run away, man" (the man has runaway), "Out — pull — baby — 'pec" (baby pulls out the spectacles). A child will often oppose an affirmative to a negative state- ment as a means of bringing out the full meaning of the former. For example, "This is a nice bow-wow, not nasty bow-wow." The mastery of "I" and "you," "me," "mine," etc., forms an epoch in the development of the linguistic faculty and of the power of thought. The first use of "I" and "you" between 2 and 3 years is apt to be erroneous. Most children begin to say "me" and "my" before they say "you." The great transition from "baby" to "I" is wont to take place in favorable cases early in the first half of the third year. "Sugar" becomes "sugie," "piqture," "pickie." The names first learned are either those of individuals, what we call proper names, as "mamma," "nurse," or those which, like "both," "bow-wow," are at first applied to one particular object. Children frequently express the contrast big, little, by "mamma" and "baby." At first there is no sentence structure. The child begins to talk by using single words. Sentence structure begins somewhere about the twenty-first month. We commonly have at first quite short sentences, formed by two words in opposition. These may consist of what we should call an adjective added to and qualifying a substantive, as in the simple utterance of the child, "Big bir" (bird) or "Papa no" (papa's nose). The love of commanding, so strong in the child, makes the use of the imperative shortened to "pinkie." The accentuated syllable by exciting most attention is common- ly the one produced. It is among the consonants that most trouble arises. In many cases the difficult sounds are merely dropped. Thus poor may become "poo," "look," "okk," etc. This dropping is apt to be confined to the difficult sound. 23 More particularly ''s" and "sh" are apt to be omitted before other consonants. Thus stair becomes *'tair." When a man is very tired he is liable to produce inversions of order. The explanation seems to be that the right group of sounds may present itself to the speaker's consciousness without any clear apprehension of their temporal order. ' We see a disposition to use habitually certain favorite syllables as terminations, more particularly the pet ending ''ie" as child language, expression of states of feelings, desire, etc., and imita- tion, we have the two commonly assigned origins of human language. The learning of the mother tongue is one of the most instruc- tive and entertaining chapters in the history of the child's educa- tion. Towards end of the year, in favorable cases true linguistic imita- tion commences. That is to say word-sounds gathered from others are used. The most obvious thing about these first infantile renderings of adult language is that they are a simplification. Monosyllables, if involving a complex mass of sound, are usually reduced as when dance is shortened to ''da." Polysyllables, though occasionally cut down to monosyllables, as when hippopotamus became "pots," are more frequently reduced to dissyllables, as when ''periwinkle" was. This year also witnesses the important addition of the pronouns and prepositions. A child is a great stickler for accuracy in the repetition of all familiar word sounds. The zeal of a child in correcting other's language, and the comical errors he makes himself by falling into exercising his pedagogic function, are well known to parents. Some- times he shows himself the most absurd of pedants: "Shall I read to you about this book, baby?" asked a mother of her boy, about two and a half years old. "No," replied the infant, "not out of dat book, but somepy inside of it." LANGUAGE AND PLAY. A miraculous change takes place in the child's sense — percep- tion in learning to talk. Before he learns the use of language, each thing or event is looked up as all in all by itself. Hence, he does not see its relations and cannot "apperceive" it. But just as soon as he learns language he sees every object, every single event or thing, as an individual of a class, as one specimen of an indefinite number of possible specimens. In other words, the use of language implies that the child has begun to use universal terms, words for classes, and to think of all objects as specimens of classes. It is a note- worthy thing, therefore, in the second year of a child to hear him call the name of an animal or thing upon seeing it. He has as- cended above his previous stage of development. To him the particu- lar object seen and named is one individual seen on a background of infinite possibilities of the production of such individuals. The child therefore begins to ask the names for all things and events, and the reason for this is found in what we have just now considered — ^the child's sense-perception has arisen above the plane of animal sense-perception, and he now and forever sees each thing 24 and will see it as a specimen of a class. Classification is effected bi' naming. It is the primarj^ condition for putting the mind in an attitude of re-enforcing his present observation by all its own ex- perience and all the experience of his fellows. He therefore wants a name for the class, so that he may forthwith begin to store up llie different possibilities of form, shape, size, color, and other varie- ties of type that he may find in future experience. in the acquisition of language the child has come into posses- sion of the most powerful instrument of self -education that exists, and he has acquired a new faculty of mind — the faculty of seeing each object before the senses in the light of its universal — that is to say, he sees the real with a margin of ideal possibilities around it. Here, therefore, begins the child's perception of ideals; right here, when he begins to use language. Seeing possibilities or ideals, the child now begins to have will-power. When the child possesses language and begins to inquire for names, begins to see ideals and to act to realize them, he can be helped greatly by the kindergarten. It should be used first in the house by the mother and the nurse, and afterward in the school. By language the child rises from an animal individuality to a human individuality. i PART III LESSONS Vil AND VIII of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School Copyright 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI 26 LESSON VII PLAY. What flight and air are to the bird, play is to the child; it is both his distinctive activity and the element in which his life moves. In play he suffers neither the constraint of alien will nor of self- imposed purpose, but exercises an activity with its own end and its own reward. To study him in his play is therefore to study him when he is most himself. Many plays originate in the desire to exert force, or to measure it against the force of others. The delight he feels is in the con- sciousness of force; the stimulus to exertion, the resistance to be overcome. The instinctive exertion of indwelling force and the instinctive imitation of external activities blend in the effort to create an ideal world, and the child throws into an active poem the total life within and around him. The personages of his drama are flowers and birds, animals and insects; his relatives, friends and neighbors; kind fairies, cruel ogres and malicious dwarfs. The one sole actor is the child himself, who feels softly stirring within him the pulses of the universal heart. Reproducing his experience as a whole, he interprets it to himself, and, thus transfigured, it constitutes the environment in which he lives and moves and has his being. Only as play becomes social is it revealed in its double nature^ — as, on the one hand, the expression of indwelling force, and on the other, the mirror held up to life. In the play world, as in the actual w^orld, there are parents and children, nurses and babies. There is social life with its interchange of visits, its entertainments and its gossips. There are weddings, baptisms and funerals. To objectify himself, to take the world into himself, and to dis- cover and represent the ideal implicit in each — such are the deep impulses which stir the child to play, as later they impel the man to literature and art. With a presentiment of the truth that to find himself he must feel himself the soul of the child, knocks at the gate of universal life. The ideal which he liolds up to himself in play reacts upon his character, and what he represents himself as being he actually strives to become. Need we wonder, then, that Schiller can so emphatically assert that man is only man when he plays? And thoughtful Jean Paul affirms that as meat and drink are man's first prose, and as the necessity of obtaining these creates trades and handicrafts, so is play his first poetry and the instrument through which all his higher possibilities are developed. In general, children seem to have a special relish for portray- ing cruel parents, tyrannical teachers, and refractory pupils, and they also delight in mimicking the snobbishness and insincerity of our social intercourse, and the affectations which characterize many of our fashions. 27 The games of American children are generally of purer moral tone than those of French children; still their darling theme is courtship and marriage, and their favorite climax a kiss. Illustra- tions are superfluous, for we have all seen some eager child turn from ''east to west to choose the one she loved the best." Science has shown that the embryonic period of physical de- velopment is a masquerade of long-vanished forms of life. In like manner the children of each new generation seek instinctively to survive the life that is behind them, and their favorite occupations and amusements re-enact the prehistoric experiences of mankind. All children crave living pets, build sand houses, and make caves in the earth; are fond of intertwining bits of straw, paper or other pliable material ; delight in shaping bowls and cups and saucers out of mud; and are inveterate diggers in the ground, even when, as in. City streets and alleys, such digging is wholly without result. Can we fail to recognize in these universal cravings the soul echoes of that forgotten past when man began the subjugation of Nature by taming the wild beasts, the erection of rude shelters, the weaving of garments, and the manufacture of pottery? Even more interesting than the reproduction of primitive in- dustries is the struggle of the child's soul to express its own nature in the varied forms of art. To sing, to hear and to repeat simple rhymes are the chief delights of all young children ; and alliteration has for them a tireless charm. Nor are they less eager to build, draw, paint and model. The kindergarten gifts are Froebel's practical response to the cravings of childhood. The six soft balls of the first gift, and the sphere, cube, and cylinder of the second gift, satisfy on the one hand the primitive desire to exert force and cause change, and on the other, afford typical experiences of movement, form, color, direction and position. The care of animals, the cultivation of plants, the building exer- cises with the third or fourth gifts, the occupations, etc., accentuate the educative elements implicit in the industries of aboriginal men; and finally, through the architectural exercises of the fifth and sixth gifts, through the work with tablets, sticks and ring; through drawing and painting exercises, and through clay and card-board modeling, the artistic powers of the child are called into happy play and he becomes, so far as in him lies, an architect, painter, designer and sculptor. Add to these varied forms of artistic expression the kinder- garten games with their dramatic representations, rhythmic move- ments, poetry and song and we must admit ''the .all-sided develop- ment" of innate powers. I. Through the productive exercises suggested by Froebel, the child achieves a fivefold development. II. Advancing from the external arrangement of fixed material to technical and artistic processes (he gains manual dexterity and skill). III. Rising from mere imitation and production by rule to free creation (he develops originality of thought and power of expres- sion) . IV. Receiving from productive activity the incitement to obser- 28 vation (he studies the salient qualities of physical objects and masters thus the alphabet of externality). V. Energizing to realize in external things his vision of their ideal possibilities, (his will power is strengthened, and he becomes a practical force). VI. Last, but not least, through the exertion of causal energy (he forms the habit of looking from sensible facts to their produc- ing causes, and of explaining all objects and events through their process of evolution). Froebel's gifts are instrumentalities for self-development through self-expression. With Pestalozzi the great word is sense-impression; with Froe- bel the great word is self-expression. ''Mind grows through self -revelation." The kindergarten is the apotheosis of play. Through the exercises with the kindergarten gifts and occupa- tions, the child becomes increasingly conscious of his own power to master the external world. Through the ideals revealed in the songs and games he is incited to self-mastery, and begins to feel "the thing he ought to be, beating beneath the thing he is." In a number of kindergarten games the child pictures his ideal relationship to the animal world. By connecting the actual care of pet animals with plays pictur- ing the child's duty toward them we achieve a twofold result: we stir the young heart with premonitions of the privilege of care-tak- ing and with glimmerings of the gratitude he owes to those who have cared for him. It is often said that children are impervious to the feeling of gratitude. The reason is obvious : they cannot ap- preciate the care given to them until they have given care. In car- ing for animals the child learns to subordinate his pleasure to their good, purifies his selfish love for them into a thoughtful and pro- tecting affection, and fosters in his own heart that spirit of good will and helpfulness which, transferred from feeble and defenseless animals to feeble and defenseless human beings, blossoms into the disinterested service of mankind. The sense of duty roused by responsibility for pet animals may be strengthened by care for plants. Childhood, like every age of life, needs its duties, and these must be simple, definite, and above all, inexorable. Moreover, the child must feel that his duties are genuine, and not mere burdens imposed upon him by the arbitrary will of parents or teachers. All duties are born of relationships. The first reverence is cultivated in children through their rela- tionship to parents and teachers; the second through their relation- ship to each other; the third may be most effectively developed through the relationship to animals and plants. Flowers that are not watered will die ; the bird or kitten not fed will die. If through sloth or thoughtlessness the child fails to give the needed care, he brings upon himself the loss. The care of animals and plants is important for its influence upon the intellect as well as for its influence upon the character. It is needless to do more than to allude to the fact that what the child cares for he will observe and study, and that hence gardens \ 29 and living pets forni the best possible introduction to botany and natural history. The dominant impulses of the child are to reproduce the life that is around him; to revive the life that is behind him; to foster the life that is beneath him. In work the mind concentrates itself; in play it surrenders itself to the allurement of its object. Work demands the subordination of personal inclination; play occupies itself according to its own ca- price ; work seeks an end different from its activity ; in play the end sought is the activity itself. Work prepares the individual for combination with his fellows; play develops originality and enriches the individual with something distinctive which he may contribute to his fellows ; work without play degrades man into a machine ; play without work makes him a toy of circumstance and impulse. LESSON VIII PLAY. ' The interest of child's play lies in the fact that it is the work- ing out into visible shape of an inner fancy. The source of play is to realize a bright idea : whence, its close relationship to art. The child adventures as he personates Robinson Crusoe or other heroes steps out of his every-day self and so out of his every- day world. In realizing his part he virtually transforms his sur- roundings, since they take on the look and meaning which the part assigns to them. . There is no need to suppose that in this sim.ple kind of imita- tive play,' children knowingly act a part. It is surely to misunder- stand the essence of play to speak of it as a fully conscious process of imitative acting. The child is possessed by an idea and is work- ing it out and he does not need your flattering observation. Indeed your intrusion may destroy or diminish his enthusiasm and illusive realization. Perhaps indeed one may say that the play-instinct is most dominant when a child is alone or at least self-absorbed, absorbed. The essence of children's play is the acting of a part and the realizing of a new situation. Sometimes there is scarcely any adjustment of scene; the child plays out his action with purely imaginary surroundings. Some simple play-actions as going to market to buy imaginary apples occur very early. The impulse to invent imaginary surroundings is very common among lonely and imaginative children. The invention of fictitious persons fills a large space in child- life. Children love to react their little play-scenes in some remote spot, withdrawn from notice. How many a thrilling, exciting play has been carried out in a comer, especially if it be dark, or better still, screened oif. The fascination of curtained spaces, as those 30 behind the window curtains, or under the table-cloth hanging low, will be fresh in the memory of all who can recall their childhood. A step towards a more realistic kind of play-action is taken when a scene is constructed, the chairs and sofa turned into ships. In all his play the child desires somebody if only as listener to his talk in his new character ; and when he does not rise to an in- visible auditor, he will talk to such unpromising things as a sponge, a fire shovel, etc. In more active play, where something has to be done he generally desires a full companion and assistant, human or otherwise (animal). And here we meet with what is perhaps the most interesting feature of childish play — the transmutation of the most meagre and least promising of things into complete living forms. The introduction of these living things seems to illustrate the large compass of the child's realizing power. The doll takes a supreme place in the fancy realm of play. It is human and satisfies higher instincts and emotions. Endless is the role assigned to the doll. The doll is the all- important comrade in that solitude of which the child, like the adult, is so fond. Very humanely, on the whole is the doll-lover wont to use her pet, even though there are moments of rage and battering. The doll illustrates the childish attitude towards all toys, the impulse to take them into the innermost and warmest circle of per- sonal intimacy, to make them a living part of himself. The child's language points to an early identification of self with belongings. The *'me" and the "my" are the same, or nearly the same, to a mite of three. This impulse to attach the doll to self or to embrace it within the self-consciousness or self-feeling shows itself in odd ways. This feeling of oneness is strengthened by that of exclusive possession, the sense that the child himself is the only one who really knows dolly, can hear her cry when she cries, etc. Children will often expect the mother or nurse to kiss and say good night to their pet or pets — for their hearts are capricious — when she says goodnight to themselves. The doll illusion is one of the first to pass. The intensity of the realizing power of imagination in play is seen, too, in the stickling for fidelity to the original in all playful reproduction, whether of scenes observed in every-day life or of what has been narrated. The tenacious faith in play shows itself when the child under- stands skeptical questions of others, and sees that they are poking fun at his play and his day-dreamings. Such cruel quizzings of his make-believe are apt to cut him to the quick. Play may produce not only this vivid imaginative realization at the time, but a sort of mild permanent illusion. Clusters of happy associations gather about it, investing it with a lasting vitality and character. One little boy when speaking of his favorite wooden horse (Dobbin) said, "No tarpenter (carpenter) made Dobbin, he is not woodin, but kin (skin) and bones and Dod (God) made him." If anyone said "it" in speaking of the horse his wrath was instantly aroused, and he would shout indignantly: "It! you mut'ent tay 'it,' 31 you must tay 'he.' " He imagined the horse was possessed of every virtue and it was strange to see what an influence this creature of his own imagination exercised over him. If there was anything he particularly wished not to do his mother had only to say "Dobbin would like you to do this," and it was done without a murmur. There is another domain of childish activity closely bordering on that of play where a like suffusion of the world of sense by im- agination meets us. I refer to pictures and artistic representations generally. If in the case of adults there is a half illusion, a kind of oneirotic or trance condition induced by a picture or dramatic spectacle, in the case of the less-instructed child the illusion is apt to become more complete. A picture seems very much of a toy to a child. A baby of eight or nine months will talk to a picture as to a living thing ; and something of this tendency to make a fetish of a drawing survives much later. The imaginative transformation of things, more particularly the endowing of lifeless things with life, enters into all children's pass- times. Play proper as distinguished from mere day-dreaming is activity and imitative activity, and children show marked differences in the energy of this activity, and in the quickness and closeness of their responses to the model actions of the real nurse, real coachmen, etc. Children show a curious selectiveness in their imitative games, germs of differential interest, sexual and individual, revealing them- selves quite early. It may be added that a child with few oppor- tunities of observation - may get quite enough play-material from storyland. But play is never merely imitation, save indeed in the case of unintelligent and ''stoggy" children. It is a bright invention into which all the gifts of childish intelligence may pour themselves. PLAY. Play is child's most characteristic manifestation. 1. Exertion of force — "Play with limbs." (a) Satisfaction of craving for recognition — Running, leaping, and so forth. 2. Imitation and dramatic — Alien activities. (a) Hunger to comprehend — Representation of our relationships and important events — "Life must be reviewed and understood." 3. Highest form synthesis of tw^o above. 4. Social play — higest and truest form. (a) Play world. 5. Relation of play to art and literature. (a) Experimental and constructive play — Illustra- tions. "First mere exertion of force rises into productive and transforming energy." (b) Parallel here between child and race. (Pets, sand-houses, clay digging, weaving, cut- ting paper, etc.) 32 (c) Other primitive expressions of art impulse. (Singing, dancing, drawing, painting.) At a year or even two years old child plays alone and prefers to. Social play under two takes form of fighting generally. Desire for social play increases from two on and at nine or ten, child doesn't care for any other. Carl Grose is the standard work on play and it is called "The play of man." THE USE OF PLAY AS A FACTOR IN EDUCATION. "Interest in the life behind us is born of interest in the life around us." « The chief duty of early education is to fasten those sympathies with nature and man out of which springs the desire to study the processes of the one and appreciate the experience of the other. The care of plants an animals is good for two reasons — it develops responsibility and care and thought for others, and it has its intellectual value also in the sense of duty. QUOTATIONS. "Froebel claims only to do with clear consciousness and persist- ent purpose what maternal instinct has always blindly and intermit- tently attempted. He gladly accepts traditional material but vitalizes it by giving it a mathematical basis and by formulating the prin- ciples which should govern its use. Through exercises suggested by the child he achieves a fivefold development." We can't see play in its highest form with a solitary child — he needs social contact. Two thoughts the kindergartner must keep ever before her — as follows : (1) "Every exercise she gives should incite and develop self activity. (2) In every exercise she should strive to multiply the power and knowledge of each member of her class by the knowledge of all its other members." Children gain a great deal by being with cultured people and children and in a good kindergarten. It is a good thing occasionly to make child feel that he does not come up to the standard. Public opinion against him from other children is a good thing. Don't "harp and nag" a child nor don't criticise him in the presence of others. PART IV LESSONS IX AND X of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School Copyright 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI LESSON IX MOTHER PLAY I. STIMULATION fror posi the obti bro fiiK sibl or bef be^ en( al PLAY WITH THE LIMBS. ''When first the child delights to try What strength within his limbs may lie, The mother's nursery play begins. I It is a hint from heaven Unto the mother given. Through outward, inward life to waken; Through play and thoughtful sport to quicken The sense that feeling, foresight brings." Song. "How the little limbs fly out. Tossing, rollicking all about; Thus will they gain life and strength- Stamp the flax-seed out at length. To make the oil so clear and bright. That feeds the pretty lamp all night, Where mother's love burns still and clear While watching o'er her child so dear." The automatic movements of independent respiration, circula- tion, and digestion begin as soon as the child is born. At or soon after birth, reflex movements may be called forth by stimulating any of the senses, and most of these reflexes, such as closing the eye when the lid is touched, and withdrawing the hand or foot that is painfully stimulated, are, from the first, useful;; while others, such as clasping with toes and fingers an object touch- ing them, were probably at one time in race history useful in help- ing the mother to carry the child. The instinctive movements are very few for human parents ! are prepared to do almost everything except breathe and digest for the child. The expressive mechanism for crying is well developed fromi the first, because this is needed to call p.arents to relieve unfavor- able conditions; while smiling and laughing do not appear until much later, because such movements are of little biological value. Starting at sudden sounds, especially when they are accom- panied by a jar (as the sound of slamming a door) is very marked. This is perhaps the first evidence of a general instinctive fear of strange and strong stimuli. The tendency to bring the hands to the mouth, so prominent lip ra of dr ill rii 35 from the first, may be the result either of the habitual inter-uterine j position or of an instinct which was useful in the early history of ! the race. The tendency is certainly very helpful to the child in obtaining touch sensations, since objects are by this movement brought to the mouth for closer examination by tongue and lips. Since ability to use the sense organs is useful to the child, we find a partially developed reflex tendency to turn the eyes and pos- sibly the ears to the most favorable position for use. Some weeks or months of time and possibly some experience are necessary before any but the first of these refiexes are perfect. Before the beginning of the second quarter, however, the eyes close at a threat- ened blow, move together, fixate, and follow moving objects, while a little later there is an accurate turning of the head toward the source of sound, and also a marked tendency to use the skin of the lips, fingers and toes in getting sensations of touch. From the first the infant makes numerous spontaneous and random movements of almost every part of the body, independently of external stimuli. These movements resulting from organic con- ditions, growth changes and the consequent outflow of energy are important means of developing the muscles and preparing by expe- rience for voluntary contraction of the muscles thus exercised. During first few weeks movements of an infant seem to have little relation to each other. In second quarter many combinations of movement take place. The eyes turn toward and follow a moving object, turn toward a sound or a portion of the body that is touched, thus bringing more than one sense into action. Head and body usually move with the hand in reaching for an object, and thus equilibrium is maintained. The movements of different parts of the body are therefore no longer independent of each other, but very closely connected. In this and the new quarter a new kind of movement becomes very prominent. Random and meaningless movements of parts change to those repeated rhythmic and partially coordinated move- ments of various muscle groups which we designate as play. Cer- tain movements of limbs or vocal organs are produced over and over for several days, then a new one is practiced for awhile. Various combinations of movements are made and the muscles and senses are thus exercised and associated in countless ways as the child amuses himself. In the latter part of the first year not only are movements previously made repeated in play, but movements seen and sounds heard are often playfully imitated and repeated over and over. Looked at in a purely objective way, the most marked change in the movements of a child during the first year is therefore, not in number, but in complexity, coordination and definiteness. From the use of one sense and one or two groups of muscles at a time the child has progressed to the combined use of muscles of legs, body, arms, fingers, head and eyes in getting objects and obtaining visual, tactual, and auditory sensations from them. The early move- ments were unconnected, and uncoordinated, and ended in nothing but movement, while at the close of the first year they are com- bined and correlated to each other, and in the changing of the posi- tion of the child or of some object. 36 When the psychologist finds that the greater part of the cortex of the brain (which there is good reason to believe is the seat of consciousness) is not active during the first three months of life, and when he observes that nearly everything the child does is some- times done equally well, or even better, when asleep than when awake, and that in children born without a brain, the movements are nearly the same as in normal children, and when he remembers that the child cannot have any knowledge gained from experience that the adult has, he is warranted in saying that there is nothing in the young infant's mind sufficiently like what is in the adult's mind to warrant the use of the same term. If he will say that there is any consciousness at first it is most like the vague feelings, almost without ideas that are sometimes experienced by adults when in a drowsy state. The child sleeps most of the time at first and is probably con- scious of only the more intense stimuli. The child is at first simply a wonderful mechanism whose parts are not all finished or connected, beginning to feel and become con- scious of what it does. It is distinctly conscious of only the more intense or newer things that it does, and learns how things are done only after it has done them a number of times. Conscious- ness probably has no influence whatever upon what is done for several months, but is merely an imperfect report of what is being done and has been done — ''a log book of the first voyage of the vessel of life, in which appear only the regular food watches and the unusual events of the voyage." Every sensation soon has a background of general bodily sen- sations and a fringe of past sensations. The processes of perfecting mechanisms, developing them for new purposes, and combining them in various ways, are the chief exciters of conscious activity, and the means by which the mental self grows. Every new experience illuminates and enlarges the field of consciousness, and extends the control of the growing self. In the acquisition of voluntary control there are most interest- ing combinations of motor and mental processes. To be voluntary there must be some idea of the end previous to the act by which it is gained. It is evident, therefore, the voluntary efforts can be made only after considerable experience in non-voluntary movements, which gives a basis for forecasting the possible and probable results of movements in response to familiar stimuli. The muscular and nervous mechanism is, in part, the same, whether a motion is vol- untary or involuntary; but in one case the results are anticipated and perhaps chosen from among several possibilities, while in the other they are not, whether will is an actual force in consciousness, and an utterly impossible one to a young child whose motions con- sist only of separate random and reflex movements. The hands, however, can move in so many ways, each differin^r in character and difficulty and for so many different ends, that consciousness of hand movements readily becomes intense, antici- patory, directive, effortful, selective, and hence voluntary. The acquiring of voluntary control of the hand is therefore a good type of all volitional progress. ' , 37 The arms are controlled, but the hands show little more than original reflex. The child uses both hands when object is directly in front, and the nearest hand when it is on one side. ''One child, in his one hundred and eighty-second day, can grasp and hold in one hand a ball an inch or more in diameter." "In his two hundred and seventeenth day, looked intently- at a ball as he struck it repeatedly, evidently associating sight, sound, and motion." The act then has the essential characteristics of a voluntary movement. This usually occurs between four and five months. The muscles first brought under control are the larger ones of the whole arm, while the space in which control is first exercised is directly in front and near the level of the mouth. Other movements than those of the hand come under voluntary control in a similar way; first the eyes and head turning toward the sounds and sights, the body in sitting, then the hands in grasp- ing, then the final close of the first year, the legs in creeping, stand- ing, and walking, and the vocal organs in repeating sounds. The tendency to locomotion, though primarily developed in the race as a means of nutrition and escape, is fostered in the indi- vidual child more by the instinct of curiosity or the desire for the sensations to be obtained by coming in contact with various objects than by the desire for food and escape. Walking becom.es possible when its reflex elements can be prop- erly combined. Such an instance as the following shows that the whole mechanism for walking may be developed and its parts con- nected without experience, and that consciousness hinders rather than helps, all of which indicates that walking is more instinctive than is usually supposed. There are three ways to learn things: (1) ''Trial and success method." (2) Imitation. (3) Understanding or reasoning. Animals and young babies learn almost wholly by the ''trial and success method," and by unconscious imitation; young children by more or less conscious imitation, and adults by understanding. The chief differences in a human being at different stages of development are due not merely to experience, but to different in- stincts which are present or prominent at different periods of life. Our whole mental life — intellectual, emotional and volitional — is developed from our instincts. NATURE MOTOR ACTIVITIES AND GENERAL ORDER OF DEVELOPMENT. The simple or reflex movements are, as a rule, the response of a single part of the organism to a simple stimulus to that part. Examples are : the winking of the eye when the lid is touched, or jerking the hand away when pricked. Dependent upon internal conditions to some extent. Instinctive movements differ from reflective or reflex also in the fact that they are for the good of the whole body instead of 38 for some one part as reflex are. (All parts of the body are pro- tected by reflex movements.) Winking the eye and jerking the hand protect the eye and the hand, -while taking food (instinctive movement) benefits not the mouth but the whole body. Instincts of any animal correspond to its structure. Cats do not fly or dive when chased by a dog, nor ducks climb trees. ' Automatic movements are carried on without consciousness; so are reflex. Instinctive movements are also dependent upon mechanism rather than consciousness, but this is not so readily admitted. Fixed instincts, like habits in man, work almost mechanically. Not only does consciousness not direct the activity, but so long as everything goes smoothly there is little or no consciousness. The acquisition of new possibilities of movement makes con- scious intelligence possible and useful, especially in animals and children. Animals with fixed instincts, but with ability to act in a variety of ways and to learn by experience, is evidence of intelli- gence. Man has more instincts than any other animal, but the variety of action thus made possible, and the modifications produced by experience, makes it seem as if he had none. Instincts in gen- eral are useful. What is for the good of a young animal depends upon: (1) Structure of animal. (2) Its surroundings. (3) Its temporary bodily conditions. (4) Its age. (5) Instincts of its parents. The human infant needs and has at birth few instincts, be- cause the human parent has the instinctive tendency to care for it strongly developed. FIXED INSTINCTS. Even quite fixed instincts need to be plastic so that there may be ready adoption to change and environment. (Ex.) In past ages it was universally advantageous for fish to take all worms and grasshoppers dropping into the stream, but when man came on the scene with hooks the instinct often had bad results. Fixed instincts are the most prominent in lower animals and the indefinite in the higher. CONTINUOUS INSTINCTS. Feeding and fear instincts are examples of continuous instincts ; they are present at birth and last all through life, though usually they are more prominent at times than at other. ^ TRANSIENT INSTINCT. Instincts like play are not present at birth but after they ap- pear continue to be manifested all or nearly all through life, though perhaps to a diminishing degree, for example the sucking instinct in animals shortly fades away. In children we can observe a ripening of impulses and interests 39 in a certain order. For instance creeping, walking, climbing, imi- tating vocal sounds, constructing, drawing, calculating, possess the child in succession. Later, the interest in any one of these things may wholly fade; of course, the proper pedagogic moment to work in skill and to clench the useful habit, is when the native impulse is most actually present. The hour may not last long, and we should take advantage of it. PERIODIC INSTINCTS. Other instincts appear only at certain times as at the migrating season or when caring for the young, and are therefore in a certain degree periodic or rhythmic. Most common theoretical statement of the order in which instincts develop is that they appear in the order in which they have been acquired in the history of the race from the lowest forms up. , « DEVELOPMENT OF THE INDIVIDUALISTIC INSTINCT." Parents should continue to do things for a child only so long as he is unable to do them for himself. Even before that social training should begin by requiring him to indicate his wants quietly. The charming appearance of unselfishness in desiring others to eat, see, hear and so forth, disappears in the fourth and fifth years, and he as a matter of course will try to get all good things for himself. Reflex sympathy and desire for approval influence his motives and actions; but usually the tendency to choose con- sciously that which will bring pleasure to himself, regardless of how it affects others. In general, the question which the child mentally asks of every object, and every person, is, "What are they good for?" meaning by "good," "What can I get out of them?" He is the center of the universe, and everything and everybody is for his pleasure. Per- sons, as well as things, are valued in proportion to the amount of pleasure he can get from them. The first few years of school life are pre-eminently periods of selfishness or individualism. The chief motive of life is to get everything possible for himself — objects, sensations, knowledge, privileges and honors. To be thoughtful of the interests of others, or to be interested in anything not concerned with the advancement of this kingdom of his, would be to be something other than a healthy, normal child. The extreme egoism or selfishness of a child from six to ten is nqt to be deprecated (though it may need some mitigation), for it is an important and valuable phase of development. The more pride and ambition a child has, so long as it is connected with active effort rather than passive enjoyment, the better for his future development. If praise and reward prompt to fresh effort (within the limits of his strength) a child can scarcely have too much recognition of his achievements. What would be unsufferable egotism in an adult is perfectly proper in the child. 40 The worst possible training is the fond and foolish kind which appeals to unselfish motives (without success of course), inflicts no punishment, and guards from the natural consequences of acts. A parent who guards a child from the natural results of his wrong acts, does wrong. The sense of taste proper plays a small part in the mental life of the child during the fi.rst two years. Its curiosity, playful- ness and interest are much more readily excited by tactile, visual and auditory stimuli than by taste proper. There is probably no time in life when gustatory pleasures and pains are more intense than at five or six years of age. To be able to gratify the desire for agreeable food and avoid disagreeable tastes, is at this time one of the chief motives in life. Next to feeding, the most fundamental instinct is that of fear. Sounds are more frequent causes of fear than sights, because such stimulation may be strong or sudden. Unless children have been accustomed to a light, they never become frightened at the dark until imagination develops. The period of greatest fear is usually at about three or Tour years of age. No matter how careful parents may be, they are usually little "fraid cats." Biologically this is the time they begin to act for themselves. Psychologically it is a time when the imagination is very active. WHAT TO DO IN CASE OF FEAR. (1) Should be avoided as far as possible, and when it is excited reassurance given as quickly as possible. If a child can be induced to be brave and face it himself, much is gained, or some- times bringing a light will have good effect. (2) Unreasonable fears (most common) cannot be dissipated by reasoning. One can only trust to quieting assurances, time and experience, and the growth of courage and self-control to effect a cure. The fighting instinct and its accompanying emotion, anger, are easily aroused by interfering with the child's activities or wishes. It is first manifested by crying, turning away the head, pushing away an offending object and later in kicking and striking. In dealing with this emotion care should be taken to avoid occasions of anger, especially when the child is hungry or other- wise in an irritable mood, and equal care that he gain nothing by his outburst, but rather lose something. Under no circumstance should the parent or teacher meet anger with anger. Indifference, isolation or a calm resistance that makes the child realize the utter uselessness of his passion are more effective. The reaction follow- ing a futile outburst of anger is likely to arouse reflections that lead to future efforts at self-control. Let boys fight. Nothing can be more unwise than to tell a child that he must not fight. 41 Quotations. ''Every man is worth just so much as the things about which he busies himself." — Marcus Aurelius. ''The energies of life may be prevented from being scattered by having purpose. Cultivation of purpose is the aim of education. Totality of power and personality is shown in purpose. Purpose is the soul stated in terms of motion. Man can purpose no greater than he is. The purpose that man has in him is his guardian angel." REFERENCE BOOKS. 1. "Biography of a Baby," by Miss Shinn. 2. "Dynamic Factors in Education," by O'Shea. , i 3. "The Child," by Miss Tanner. 4. "Fundamentals of Child Study," by Kirkpatrick. 5. "Talks to Teachers," by James. 6. "Child Study," by Sully. 7. "Child Psychology," by Irving King. 8. Dopp — Index. 9. Psychology — Angells. 10. Psychology — Thorndike. 11. "Education of Man"— Froebel. 12. "Mottoes and Commentaries of FroebeFs Mother .Plays," by Susan Blow. LESSON X I, MOTHER PLAY 11. FAITH. STALLING, FALLING.'' "A deeper feeling underlies Each little play the mother tries. Thus in the falling, falling game The mind concerns a higher aim! Thy child shall gain the strength and skill To conquer many a coming ill — Shall many a threat'ning fall avoid, • When tripping by his- mother's side.'' i SONG. "Down he goes now, falling, falling ! Up he springs at mother's calling ! Laughs he now in frolic glee — Laughs so softly there to be. Sure he knows no harm befalls him While his loving mother calls him. Down he goes now, falling, falling! Up he springs at mother's calling; Soul and body thus unfolding. Mother's love is ever moulding." In this mother play the baby is lying on a soft cushion on his back. The mother takes hold of his hands and raises him to a sitting position, then lets go of his hands and lets him slip back on to the pillow. Another way to play it is to have the baby lying or half-sitting on a soft cushion on the table or in his crib. The mother picks him up, holds him a little above the cushion, then withdraws her hands and lets him fall upon the pillow, not hard, but with just enough force to give him a slight shock. This play differs from all the other mother plays because the mother ejects herself into it. In all the others she acts upon a suggestion from the child, but in this one she gives the suggestion. She plays it with her baby in order to increase his strength and his consciousness of strength. The bond of love is strengthened by the short separation and the return, and the child finds much joy in the latter — it amuses him. The play also gives baby con- fidence in his mother and strengthens the bond of sympathy and faith between mother and child. It is a slight shock to the nervous system and both mother and child love to play it. ak or to k as a( of sell in leai fin( pla; line stas beg nee and liim the and first her. alon cons inli lead ^' 43 Some other plays with a similar purpose are *Teek-a-boo," "Hide-and-seek" and "Cuckoo.'^ Its physical value as has been said above is to strengthen the child and give him a consciousness of his own strength. It helps him to feel that his being is something apart from the people and the things that surround him. "The feeling of unity between the mother and child may become inordinate and injurious," Froebel says, and it is best that the child feel himself to be a being separate from his mother and all others, to a certain extent. Later, when he is large enough to play "Hide-and-seek" and "Cuckoo," "he seeks through physical separation to heighten his sense of spiritual union." The child's training in general is from dependency physically, mentally and morally to independency physically, mentally and morally. The kindergarten application of this is quite evident as well as important. It begins just as the mother — to give the child physical independence first. He must go to kindergarten and come home alone after the first few times, and this marks quite an epoch in his little life. Then he must take off his wraps and put them on; must take care of his work, and so on, and so forth. Soon he must think for himself — think what game he would like to play or what story he would like to hear or what work he would like to do, and so gradually at first and then very rapidly begins to develop mentally. But the moral side of his nature is developed as rapidly as the other two. He learns the right and wrong of many things — the harm of telling stories, the great law of right, and the social side of life. And so the whole physical training of a child's life, which has to include mind and morals, is the basis, practically, of the kindergarten. Miss Shinn gives three stages of self-development. The first is that of bodily self -feeling. The baby at first seems to know of or perceive the existence of others before he does that of him- self. Froebel says that the first smile marks a very definite epoch in the child's life and development, for it is the expression, at least, of the first physical finding of self. It isn't long before he finds that he has arms and can move them, then legs, etc. In the play of "Falling, Falling," the mother is trying to help the child find himself, to give him that bodily self -feeling. The second stage comes later and is that of "Intelligent self-perception." He begins to see a world outside of his own, and in his way to con- nect the two. The last stage is that of rational self-knowledge, and in this stage the child begins to learn of the powers within him and that he has control over his surroundings. The moral value of this play is very beautiful. It is one of the beginnings of relationship of confidence between the mother and the child. The very beginning of faith in the mother is at first physical. The child's faith is based on his experiences with her. He has no reasoning now and she can depend on this faith alone. He gets his moral Standards from her and she must be consistent. He must have faith in her and she must have faith in him. The mother should develop this faith in the child so as to lead him in later life. 44 The mother has to ''lose her hold" because the child must learn to depend upon himself for his own good. Sometimes we see a mother trying to hold a child back and to still keep "her arms around him," and it is to the child's detriment. In order to de- velop him to the fullest extent she must make him independent and thus "lose her hold." "Keeping still their circle around him" means that when the child was at the ag^ of dependency the mother had the power to establish such a strong bond of faith, sympathy and love, that when he grew to manhood and could no longer be held within her arms he would still feel "their circle around him," that is the bond of faith, sympathy and love that existed between them. Faith and experience are very closely related. As was stated above, the child's faith at first depends entirely upon his experi- ences with his mother and in later life he will still have the faith, though not nearly so many experiences and perhaps quite different. The faith will be sufficient to guide and lead him and make him obedient. The relation between faith and activity is also very strong. In early life when the child is first learning to walk, is a very good example. If the mother has faith in him and is able to make the child feel this faith, to make him feel that she believes he can do it, the child will try again and again, for his faith in her is unlimited and continues to be in later life if she be the loving mother she should be. There should always be an interchange of confidence between the mother and child and as he grows older this should increase instead of decrease. Mothers often lose the confidence of their children by laughing at somethin.s: they tell them in all seriousness, and once lost it is never regained. If there does exist a beautiful interchange of confidence be- tween the mother and child, he is quite likely to apply it in other ways — to make friends readily, and to enjoy social intercourse, for as he grows older he will naturally want to apply this confidence in a broader sense, and he will love to have confidence in his; fellow men. How the child is developed from dependency morally, men- tally and physically to independency, and "how this play illustrates the principle of separation and return," I believe you will find satisfactorily (at least to the best of my ability) described in other parts of this lesson. The climax of all these plays is the union after the brief separation. (1) This play strengthens baby by resistance. (2) Amuses child. (3) Gives baby qonfidence in his mother. (4) Strengthens bond of sympathy and faith betweeen mother and child. Child may be two or three* weeks old when first played with. Play is slight shock to nervous system. This is the only play in Froebel's book of mother plays into 1, 45 which the mother inaugurates herself; in all the others the baby- gives a suggestion to mother. This play is one of the beginnings of relationship of confidence between mother and child. Mother should develop this faith in child so as to lead him in later life. He has no reasoning now and she can depend on this faith alone. Every mother play is typical of a whole range of experiences. It stands for a principle that holds good while child is developing through self-activity. Child's faith is based on experience with mother. He gets his moral standards from her. She must be consistent (mustn't catch him one time and let him fall another) . Very beginning of faith in mother is first physical. A little baby likes to be held in strong arms. Child must have faith in mother and later she must have faith in him. Kirkpatrick says "that children will do what you expect them to do." That no one without a large amount of faith in humanity should ever enter a school room as a teacher. That every teacher should have faith in her pupils. Close your eyes and let boys walk bridges, climb trees, etc. They need to do it to test their strength and ability. Don't laugh at what child tells you; it will destroy his con- fidence. There is hardly any limit in the faith a child will have toward his parents and early teachers if they are the least worthy. A child who has a conscientious loving, trusting mother, has some- thing to cling to always. A child is neither moral nor immoral — he is unmoral, and his parents are his standards. "THE MOTHER" "You struQ-gle blindly for my soul And wept for me such bitter tears, That through your faith my faith grew whole And fearless of the coming years. For in the path of doubt and dread You would not let me walk alone, But prayed the prayer I left unsaid And sought the God I did disown. You erave to me no word of blame, But wrapped m.e in your love's belief, Dear Love, that burnt my sin like flame And made me worthy 'of your grief." OUTLINE FOR "FALLING, FALUNG." 1. First describe play and tell how it differs from all the others. (a) Why the mother plays it. (b) Mention some other plays with a similar purpose. 2. Enlarge uDon its physical value. (a) Child's physical training in general. (b) Kindergarten application. (c) Gain in self-control and knowledge. 46 3. Three stages of self-development. — Explain. (a) Bodily self-feeling (self-control). (b) Intelligent self -perception "(world outside himself). (c) Rational self-knowledge (control over surroundings). 4. Enlarge upon the moral value of the play. (a) Why does the mother ''lose her hold?" (b) Explain ''Keeping still their circle around him." 5. Relation between faith and experience, as illustrated here and in later life. 6. Relation between faith and activity. (a) What effect the mother's faith has on the child activity. Example of walking. (b) Child's faith in mother. (c) Interchange of confidence. (d) Broader application (friendship — social intercourse — re- ligion). 7. How is the child developed from dependency spiritually, moral- ly, mentally and physically to independency? N. B. — (First to dressing himself, take care of own; toys, etc. In mental way letting him find out things' for himself. In moral way by obedience — conforming to a set standard. Right kind of obedience is best sort of faith in mother — choice in small things*.) (a) Describe means used — grows out of physical dependency first. 8. How does this play illustrate the principle of separation and return. Describe briefly two other plays for older children that illustrate the same point. (Hide and seek and cuckoo.) 9. What is the climax of all these three plays? Give a quotation from "Hide and Seek" and the "Cuckoo" showing this. 1^ 4/ Quotations. "Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." — Bible. "It would seem impossible for me to fail so surrounded by friends who make my course their own." — Robert Browning. Quotation from "Hide and Seek" is "The longing for physical separation, is the mark of a craving for spiritual union" and "The goal of life is unity." , Quotation from the "Cuckoo" is "Union in separation and separation in union." PART V LESSON XI of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School Copyright 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY. MISSOURI LESSON XI MOTHER PLAY No. III. IMITATION. "THE WEATHER VANE." **When first the child beg^ins to imitate, Do not the little effort underrate. Do thou the same, it will the more delight him, And ever to renewed attempts invite him." SONG. "As the vane upon the tower Turns when winds and tempests lower, So my child his hand is turning, Pretty play and lesson learning." Froebel chose this because it was very common in his country and the children all knew it. They were familiar with its move- ment for they could see one almost any direction they looked. The mysterious force back of it appealed to them. I think another reason Froebel chose it was because the movement is so simple that a very small child could imitate it. So for these reasons he made it typical. Children love action and anything that moves will attract their attention. They are interested in the cause of the movement, so this play naturally pleases them. They want to understand things outside of themselves and get control over them as well as over their own bodies. They enjoy the play because they can inaugurate the movement and bring about a result. They like to search for the motive power. The physical value of the play is to exercise the muscles of the wrist. A child about nine months or a year old would play this and as he unconsciously imitates the mother's interpretation, he not only is exercising his wrist, but is getting better control over the hand, by using it by itself, separate from the arm. The joints, in the elbow are also exercised to a certain extent. "In this play the forearm and hand of the child are held as nearly upright as possible; the fingers are spread out to form the tail of the weather-cock; the flat hand m'akes its body, the little thumb its throat and head. The hand is moved to and fro in imi- tation of the movement of the weather-cock." The parts in general played by imitation in child development are as follows: First: Reflex, which is very simple and which is to a large extent imitation of facial movements, such as yawning, crying and laughing. The stimulus to reflex imitation is largely sensory. Second: Spontaneous imitation. This is when the child wants to reproduce and to experience subjectively what has been learned objectively. "Everything from the crowing of chickens to the whistle of a locomotive, front the wriggling of a snake to the preaching of a sermon is imitated. Nothing in his environment. 51 physical or social, escapes the child; he absorbs and makes it all a part of himself by reproducing, and thus getting a subjective knowledge of it. For three or four years this form of the instinct is dominant. The stimulus is usually a perception of some kind." Third: Dramatic imitation. This is closely related to the spon- taneous. In the previous, however, the child generally had a *'copy" before him, while in the latter he finds his own mode of reproducing or representing ideas. For instance, playing store and using spools for cans, plajdng house, etc. Memory enters in and he begins to form combinations. Symbols and images take the place of real personalities and acts. Imagination transforms any- thing and everything and images of previous perceptions are the usual stimuli. Dramatic imitation is more constructive and in- ventive than the spontaneous. Fourth: Voluntary imitation. The difference between dra- matic and voluntary imitation is that in the former there is no purpose outside of the act itself, while in the latter there is a purpose, as when a child imitates a word he has heard in order to get what he v/ants. "This form of imitation is concerned merely with how to imitate or represent. The impulse depends upon the end to be gained and not upon the mere perception of the act. Memory images are the guides in voluntary imitation." Fifth, and last : Idealistic imitation. This is ''an attempt, not to reproduce or represent any one act or object, but to produce an ideal derived from these numerous particulars." We do not know how early a child begins to imitate ideals, but about two and a half or three years old he is capable of it. Of course it is a very unconscious thing on the child's part; he does not realize that he has an ideal nor that he is copying someone. A child often idealizes mother and thinks that everything she does is all right, and later a boy often thinks that of his father. Of course, idealistic imitation is a higher form of imitation and comes later in life, for it is an imitation of ideals rather than action. A child gets more out of his spontaneous and dramatic imitation while a youth gets more out of idealistic. So we find the child at six months old just beginning to show the first faint indications of imitation. At nine months old it shows very clearly and from then until the age of seven years it plays a prominent part. Child imitates to gain control over his muscles and body and as he grows older his imitations become more playful — he wants to understand causes, ''why," "why," "why." Then, too, he gets definite results through imitation. He gains knowledge of self, of world, power over self and power of world. He becomes more sympathetic; the relationship between family, neighborhood, community, town, state and nation is made clear and strong because of the understanding gained through imitation. He learns to understand nature and God better and is unconsciously developed three-foldly. The kindergarten application of imitation is quite marked. It seems to be one of the foundation stones. Voluntary imitation is perhaps the one most appealed to for in this the child gains skill. In the rhythm work imitation is the keynote and with the table work a great deal is done through imitation. 52 Baldwin has made three divisions of development of early child- hood — the projective stage, in which a person stands for "a group of experiences quite unstable in its- prophetic as it is in its his- torical meaning"; the child is very much interested in persons and gains more through contact and relationship with them than any other thing; second, the subjective stage, which is imitation of these people and expanding of self. He is also becoming conscious of self. Third, ejective stage, which is giving out — reading himself into other people, not only imitative but inventive. I think the second stage is the most important because imitation plays such a large part in his life. Quotation from Baldwin. *'Sense of self always involves the sense of others." *'We become different selves thru imitation of others." "We see others differently because different ourselves. We read ourselves into them." 'The child shows in the very first stage of his sense of him- self as a being of rights, duties, etc.; a very imitative nature. He is mainly occupied with the business of learning about himself other people and nature. He imitates everything, being a veritable copying machine. He spends the time not given to imitating others very largely in practicing in his games what he has picked up by his imitations and in the exploiting of these accomplishments. His two dominating characteristics are a certain slavishness on the one hand in following all examples set around him and then on the other hand a certain bold aggressiveness, inventiveness, a showing off of the use he makes of the things he learns." The relationship of invention and imitation is close for the latter often grows into the former and in kindergarten we aim for this. We help through imitation to give the child power to invent. The child's natural attitude toward nature phenomenon is gen- erally like that of the primitive man — fear — ^though Sully says that ''children, by reflecting on what they see or otherwise experience, fashion their own ideas about nature, death, and the rest." A child does not talk about "relation," but pictures out the particular rela- tion it wants to express by a figurative expression, as in apper- ceiving the juxtaposition of moon and star as mamma and baby. So he does not talk of abstract force, but figures some concrete form of agency, as in explaining the wind by the idea of somebody's waving a big fan somewhere." "Beginning with children's ideas of natural objects, we find the influence of certain predominant tendencies. Of these the most important is the impulse to think of what is far off, whether in space or time, and so unobservable as like what is near and observed. Along with this tendency or, rather, as one particular development of it, there goes the disposition to vivify nature, to personify things and to assimilate their behavior to the child's own, and to explain the origin of things by ideas of making and aiming at some pur- pose. With the idea of a supernatural agent there is commonly combined that of a natural process as means employed, as when thunder is supposed to be caused by God's heavily treading on the floor of the sky.' )) 53 With respect to the make or substance of things children are disposed to regard all that they see as having the resistent quality of solid material substance. Thus children will try to touch sun- light, shadows dancing on the wall and picture forms. Wind, it has been well remarked, keeps something of its sub- stantiality for all of us long after shadows have become the type of unreality, proving that the experience of resisting something lies at the root of an idea of material substance. That older children believe in the wind as a living thing seems suggested by the readi- ness with which they get up a kind of play tussle with it. ''Next to movement apparently spontaneous sound appears to be a common reason for attributing life to inanimate objects. Its sound greatly helps the persuasion that the wind is alive. A little boy assured his teacher that the wind was alive, for he heard it whistling in the night. The ascription of life to fire is probably aided by its sputtering crackling noises. The personification of the sea and the echo are excellent examples of the suggestive force of a voice — like sound." Closely connected with this impulse to ascribe life to what older people regard as inanim.ate objects is the tendency to con- ceive them as growing. This is illustrated in the remark of the boy that his stick would in time grow bigger. Anything which seems to have become reduced by losing a portion of itself is said to be ''broken." A little boy of three, on seeing the moon partly covered by a cloud, remarked, "The moon is broken." Some children think that trees make the wind blow and one child accounted for the wind at night by the swaying of tv/o large elms in front of the house and not far from the windows of his bedroom. This reversing of the real order of cause and effect looks silly, until we remember that the child necessarily looks at move- ment in the light of his own actions. He moves things, e. g.\ the water, by moving his limbs; we set the air in motion by moving a fan; it seems, therefore, natural to him that the wind movements should be caused by the pressure of some moving thing; and there is the tree actually seen to be moving. Children are disposed to localize the distant objects they see, as the sun, moon and stars, and the places they hear about on the earth's surface as near as possible. One child thought the sky and moon were just above the church spire, another that the set- ting sun was close behind the ridge of hills, etc. The child appears to think of the world as a circular plain, and of the sky as a sort of inverted bowl. One child on looking at the sky fancied that he was inside a blue balloon. That is to say he took the sky to be what it looks like. Children often speculate about the other side of the globe and are apt to fancy they can know about it by peeping down a V\^ell. The sky is apt to be thought of as thin, this idea probably being formed for the purpose of explaining the shining through of moon and stars. Stars are commonly thought of as holes in the sky, letting through the light beyond. The movements of the sun and other heavenly bodies are 54 similarly apperceived by help of ideas of movements of familiar terrestrial objects. Thunder is thought of as God groaning or as his hammering, etc. In like manner lightning is attributed to God's burning the gas quick, striking many matches at once, or other familiar human devices for getting a brilliant light suddenly. So God turns on rain by a tap, or lets it down from a cistern by a hose, or better, passes through a sieve or a dipper with holes. When frightened by the crash of the thunder a child in- stinctively thinks that it was all done to vex his little soul. We find that the child's and primitive man's idea concerning nature phenomenon are almost identical. This instinct of fear should be met very calmly. The child should not see elders afraid. He should be shown the beauty of a storm, and if possible taught to enjoy it. A mother can very easily make the child feel that the same mysterious force that makes the wind blow and the sun shine also makes the storm and that there is no cause for fear. His attitude depends largely upon her attitude. There is no better teacher of religion than nature, and the child who loves nature, loves God. He wouldn't understand an explanation of these nature phenomenon, but he does understand when mother explains to him that "a single mighty power like the wind can do many things great and small"; that he can see things that the sun and rain and wind do, but he cannot see the force; that he is sure they are there and that they will do these things when best, even though he cannot see the wind, nor touch the sun, nor taste the rain. She can lead him to believe in and cherish the power he cannot see, and this power is God. *'The desire to exert force creates games of strength and skill. In their activities they show what they are, and the reproduction of the activity is the first step toward the understanding of the object." Hardly any other instinct we appeal to as much as imitation in kindergarten. We imitate birds, animals, stories, our parents, etc. Kirkpatrick gives the following divisions of imitation: I. Reflex imitation. Through reflex imitation child gets our manners, language, etc. It is the most primitive and is almost physiological. It is un- conscious. II. Spontaneous imitation. Is dominant from six months to five years. Everything is imitated. Value of spontaneous imitation is the amount of material child collects and earns. Through it he comes into his social herit- age ; gets the power of speech, and habits ; understands social life and nature; learns to walk, learns movements and sounds. Nothing is imitated that does not attract attention. Spontaneous imitation is largely ruled by perception. III. Dramatic imitation. In this the child depends less upon direct perception and more upon imagery. It is a more constructive imitation. Things heard 55 and read are imitated. Symbols and images take the place of per- sons and acts and the imagination plays a very large part. Child adapts things to fit his image and materials to suit his purpose. The kindergarten is much this way. IV. Voluntary imitation. This is imitation for a distinct purpose — ^to gain some end. When child imitates some word he has heard to secure an object he wants, for example the word *'cake," or tries to handle a spoon which involves skill, like some one else, it is voluntary imita- tion. The child is attempting to gain skill. Attention is directed to parts of the process and it is more or less analytical. Memory is connected with this imitation, as child writing. Voluntary imitation appears in the 2d or 3rd year but is not prominent until about five or six years old. V. Idealistic imitation. ' Attempt to act according to a copy or a standard to live up to it — to produce an ideal — result of concepts. Use of idealistic imita- tion in kindergarten is appealed to a good many times in simple v/ays. At Christmas time we give him the Christ as an ideal. Santa Claus as benevolence, knights of chivalry, etc. Ideals are built up and strengthened by stories. -;j( r Miss Blow says imitation is a race instinct. Child who imitates has formed ideal and energizes to realize it. It is a mark of prog- ress in development of infant but mark of degeneracy in man. Child who is very imitative is very subjective to suggestion. Be very careful about giving contrary suggestions. Here is an example. (A negative suggestion is less valuable than a positive one.) If I say ''Johnny, don't put the beans in your nose,'' why is it less valuable than to say ''Johnny, put the beans in your pocket"? Evidently in the first case Johnny's attention is fastened on the beans and nose, and he is at the same tim.e left inactive. The natural thing for him is to act on the idea presented. In the second case, his attention is fastened on a useful idea and he is given something to do. The different methods of treating a child who gets hurt are in the same line. It is better to make light of an injury because this gives the child a good copy to imitate. i :;!•'- There are children who have a craze to do things, for instance washing their hands — will run and wash them every fev*^ minutes. Just let them alone and they'll get over it. Don't try to stop them, for this only emphasizes the thing. Baldwin says child goes through three stages in development: I. Projective stage. Very much interested in persons. Gain more through contact and relationship with other persons than any other thing. Gets first sense of own personality through these. II. Subjective stage. Imitation of these people. (Very early child learns character of different personalities outside of himself — he knows who he can work. ) Self is expanding^"taking in" — and broadening. He is becoming conscious of himself . III. Ejective stage. Gives out — reads himself into other people. Not only imita- tive but inventive also. 56 Weather Vane is first of imitative plays : . 1. Tell why it pleases child. . 2. Why is it typical? 3. Parts played by imitation in child's development and value of each. 4. Why play pleases child. 5. Physical value. 6. Description of play. 7. Application in kindergarten. 8. Which one of Baldwin's division for stage plays the most important part? 9. What is child's natural attitude toward nature phenomena ? 10. Comparison between child's and primitive man's idea. 11. How instinct should be met. 12. Relation to religious training. 13. Suggestion for wind for programme work or anything that has dealt directly with forces of nature. In kindergarten we are liable to make a child a parrot by hav- ing him imitate too much. ■ -. To guard against this give him a start through imitation and then let him go on and finish it. Impulse to pull away is the sign of too much inventive work. There is hardly anything you give a child b^^t what you can give him plenty of leeway. . ■ If child makes good suggestion whereby more m.aterial is required, or a better result obtained, it is a pity not to carry it out. Your attitude toward child, about natural forces, is to let him have all the experiences and let him notice and help him to see the result of all these natural forces. Tell him about pov/er back of all these. Manifestations of nature are more or less manifestations of God. Child can realize an ideal v/hich is not tangible. He relates v/onderful natural forces to God. Take a few days in spring for wind, bring in weather-vane. Tell story of Jan or the ''Wind's Work" in Maud Lindsay's "Mother Stories." The description of the wind in Longfellow's ''Hiawatha" is very good when worked over. Also Ulysses and the wind-bag. Weather-vane merely stands for any wind-blown object. You are not limited in its imitation. Take whatever appeals to the child. "No one of Froebel's plays represents a detached experience but rather the moving principle of many experiences. Each game must be conceived on the one hand as a center from which influence radi- ates in all directions and on the other as the vital germ of a par- ticular thought which is to be developed by other experiences and by recurrence to the play itself at different intervals throughout the v/hole of early childhood. "Don't ask a child 'How does the wind make you feel,' or 'What do j^ou think, about the wind?' — let him wonder without knowing that he is wondering. Let him think without knowing that he is giving a thought. Even in weather-vane when child questions about the wind he is only pointed to another wonder^ — that of moving his own wrist and mother says: -.^ 57 *'As the vane upon the tower Turns when winds and tempests lower, So my child his hand is turning, Pretty play and lesson learning." Baldwin's ^'Mental Development" tells us that the late rise of conscious imitation in the child is in the sixth or seventh month. Imitation considered as a type of reaction is organic and inher- ited. It has its place among race habits. Infants show remarkable differences, for example, in the readiness and facility with which they learn to speak. It is true not only of im^itation but of all motor acquisitions that they may become instinctive in some cases and yet must be acquired in others. : . Imitation is an instinct. Children are more imitative than animals, with one or two strik- ing exceptions — such as monkeys, the mocking bird, etc. The more kinds of co-ordinated movements an animal brings into the world, the fewer is he able to learn afterwards. The tendency to imitate may come into direct conflict with the prudential teachings of pleasure and pain, and yet may be acted upon. A child may do and keep on doing imitations which cause him pain. No new adjustment or adaptation could be effected without risk of pain and damage. The ethical truth that pain is a school- master, that we cannot dispense with its discipline and also grow, holds in this case. Memory and association do exactly the same thing for the organism, later, that preception, sensation, contractibility, do earlier. Association enables us to react to facts which are distant from present facts but allied to them. Memory enables us to react to the facts of the future as if they were present, thus conserving the lessons of the past. Perception enables us to set present facts in their proper set- ting, and thus to react upon them with full reference to their sig^ nificance. Sensation enables us to react upon facts according to their immediate worth to the organism. Contractibility, exhilarating itself in "organic imitation," is the original form of the adaptive reaction whch works through the whole process of development. Assimilation is always present. It is the necessary basis^ of the earliest association. Association has accordingly a motor founda- tion from the first. The elements hold together in memory because they are used together in action. All perception is a case of assimilation. Every two elements whatever, connected in consciousness, are so only because they have motor effects in common. At the early age of six months special memories are becoming sufficiently permanent to fix general attitudes and habits of action in the child. Speaking of conception, the child begins with what seems to be a "general." All men are "papa," all colors are "wed," all food mik." What this really means is, that the child's motor outlets are <<, 58 fewer than his receptive experiences. Each man is a repetition of the papa copy, and carries the child out in action, just as his own early response to the presence of the real papa carried him out. Sympathy may be called the imitative emotion for excellence. One child cried out in her fifth month when she saw a bottle cork pinched, and wept in her twenty-second week at sight of a man sit^ ting weeping, with bowed head in his hands, and his feet held fast in stocks. The sight of the expression of emotion in another stimulates similar attitudes directly in us, and this in turn is felt as the state which usually accompanies such a reaction. I have described in an earlier place the kind of responses which infants make in the presence of persons and the main facts may be here recalled. We have seen that one of the most striking tenden- cies of the very young child in its responses to its environment is the tendency to recognize differences of personality. It responds to what I have called ''suggestions of personality." As early as the second month, it distinguishes its mother's or nurse's touch in the dark. It learns characteristic methods of holding, taking up, pat- ting, kissing, etc., and adapts itself by a marvelous accuracy of pro- testation or acquiescence to these personal variations. Its associa- tions of personality come to be of such importance that for a long time its^ happiness or misery depends upon the presence of certain kinds of ''personality — suggestions." It is quite a different thing from the child's behaviour towards things which are not persons. Things get to be, .with some few exceptions which are involved in the direct gratification of appetite, more and more unimportant. Things get subordinated to regular treatment or reaction. But per- sons become constantly more important, as uncertain and dominat- ing agents of pleasure and pain. The fact of movement by persons and its effect on the infant seem to be the most important factor in this peculiar influence. Later the voice gets to stand for a per- son's presence, and at last the face and its expressions equal the person, in all his attributes. This distinction between persons and things, between agencies and objects, is the child's very first step toward a sense of the qual- ities which distinguish persons. Persistent imitation with effort is the typical case of explicit volition, and the first germinating nucleus of self-hood over against cbject-hood. , ■ For a long time the child's sense of self includes too much. The circumference of this sense of self is too wide. It includes the infant's mother, and little brother, and nurse, in a literal sense, for they are what he thinks of and aims to act like, by imitation, when he thinks of himself. We never outgrow imitation or our social obligation to it. The child, it is true, very soon comes across that most impres- sive thing in its moral environment which we call authority; and acquires that most responsive thing in our moral equipment which we call obedience. He acquires obedience in one or more ways — by suggestion or by reward and punishment. The way of suggestion is the higher; because it proceeds by gradual lessons in accommoda- tion, until the habit of regularity in conduct is acquired, in opposi- 59 tion to the capriciousness of his own reactions. It is also the better way because it sets before the child an object lesson, an example of that stability and lawfulness which it is the end of obedience to foster. Yet the way of punishment is good and necessary. Punish- ment is nature's way; she inflicts the punishment first and after- wards nurses the insight by which the punishment comes to be understood. It is only necessary to watch a two-year-old closely to see what members of the family are his personal "copy" — to find out whether he sees his mother often and his father seldom; whether he plays much with other children and what their dispositions are, to a degree; whether he is growing to be a person of subjugation, equal- ity or tyranny; whether he is assimilating the elements of some low unorganized social content. It is a very great mistake to isolate children. One alone is per- haps the worse, but two alone are subject to the other elem.ent of social danger. Don't let young girl in her teens room with another at boarding school. She meets, eats, walks, talks and lies down at night, and rises in the morning, with one other person, a "copy" set before her, as immature in all likelihood as herself, or, if not so, yet a single personality; put there to wrap around her growing self the confining cords of unassimilated and foreign habit. Above all things, fathers, mothers, teachers, elders, give the children room ! They need all they can get and their personalities will grow to fill it. Give them plenty of companions, fill their lives with variety — variety is the soul of originality, and its only source of supply. The ethical life itself, the boy's, the girl's conscience, is bom in the stress of conflicts of suggestions, born right out of his imita- tive hesitations, and just this is the analogy which he must assim- ilate and depend upon in his own conflicts for self-control and social continence. Children should never be allowed after infancy to room regu- larly together; special friendships of a close, exclusive kind should be discouraged or broken up, except when under the immediate eye of the wise parent or guardian. All those who have given even casual observation to the doings of the nursery have been impressed with the extraordinary fertility of the child mind, from the second year onward, in imagining and plotting social and dramatic situations. In his games v/e see the actual use which our children make of the personal "copy" material which they have got from you and me. If a man study these games patiently in his own children, and analyze them, he gradually sees emerge from the child's inner consciousness its picture of the boy's own father, whom he aspires to be like, and whose actions he seeks to generalize and apply anew. The picture is poor, for the child takes only what he is sensible to. A man labors for his children ten hours a day, gets his life insured for their support after his death, and yet he lets their mental growth, the formation of their characters, the evolution of their personality, go on by absorption — if no worse — from common, vulgar, imported and changing, often immoral, attendants ! Plato said the state should train the children; and the wisest r O o ^ J! o .<' trf "" >i*Red aijdv white,^ like rose and cream*-^ rf \f\\' f\ This play is a very simple one and the movement is familiar to all. The hands, held in a horizontal position, are given a slight waving movement, which tells in gesture that something is ''all gone," "or that of some coveted object nothing is left." One of the very first things a child says is "all gone," or some attempt at these words to express the same meaning. The child is; so universally interested in all gone because of the mystery. He' sees a thing and then he doesn't see it and it puzzles him. He wants to understand it — it is beyond him. He will often use the expres- sion "gone" in many, many ways, of some of which Miss Shinn speaks. She says: "The baby murmured 'Nggng' pensively when some one left the room; when she dropped something; when she looked for something she could not find; when she had swallowed ai mouthful of food; when she heard a door close. She wounded her father's feelings by commenting 'm-ga!' as her little hands wan- dered about the top of his unoccupied head. She remark 'Gong!' when she slipped back in trying to climb a step; when she failed to loosen a cord she wished to play with; when she saw a portiere, such as she was used to hide behind ; when ^ne was refused a bottle she had begged for. It meant disappearance, absence, failure, denial and any object associated with these." ' - Preyer says in speaking of his child that "the little fellow would murmur 'Atta!' when someone left the room or when the light went out." ire \ % the woi 63 The idea of disappearance — of the thing now seen, now gone — seems to take strong hold on babies very early. Knowing the child's interest in causes, forces and movements, and his very great interest in this mystery of ''here one minute and gone the next," can we fail to see Froebel's wise choice of this par- ticular subject. A child also has very great interest in his food and so Frcebel takes the disappearance of it as typical. The mother will often explain to the little one that his supper has ''gone" to make his body big, and his little legs and arms strong. The underlying principle of the play is the same one we try to emphasize in our nature work— that of continuity. What seems to be entirely gone, is only a change of form. There is no entire dis- appearance ever. This reminds me of a law we had in physics that "you could not destroy any material thing." You might burn a stick of wood, but still you would have the ashes and smoke left — merely changed forms — and if man only had the wisdom he could combine the smoke and ashes and have wood again, for nothing had been destroyed. I heard Rev. Vincent, of the University of Chicago, say once that "Nothing in nature ever dies; no human ever dies; you can't kill the soul — it is transition that takes place." A child has not been the only one to puzzle over this mystery and when Froebel made it the underlying principle of this simple little play, we cannot help but see the deep philosophical side of his nature. The physical value of this play is to exercise the wrist joints for one thing, but it seems to me we find a greater physical value when we read these little veises: "All's gone, the supper's gone, White bread and milk so sweet For baby dear to eat. All's gone, the supper's gone. Where did baby's supper go? Come, you had a share, I know. i Little mouth, wide open lips. Through your rosy gate it slips; Little throat you know full well Where it went if you would tell. Little hands grow strong. Little legs grow long. Little cheeks grow red; You have all been fed." These verses show clearly that the physical value of the play is to make the child grow. Here we find what I spoke of above — the mother explaining to the child that food has gone to make his cheeks rosy, hands strong, and legs long. The mother can make a strong point here between child's food and his development by making him feel that his health and strength depend upon the right kind of food, and that he must eat only the right kind. This is not only an opportunity for the mother but for the kindergarten. Often chil- dren are given pennies and even nickels by their parents and will buy on the way to kindergarten this cheap, highly colored candy. They naturally want the kind they can get most of for a penny and the kind that has the brightest colors, and of course this is the worst kind. If the kindergartner take it from them and explain 64 why she does, at the same time lead them to see the connection between their food and their bodies, she will soon be able to see the result of her efforts. I should thinfe in a kindergarten in the slums or among the poor this relation of food and bodies could hardly be overestimated. On the mental side the principle of continuity stands for mem- ory, association of ideas and apperception. This little play of *'all gone" one would think quite simple, and the play itself is, but when we consider that a child has to reach a certain stage of mental development before he can thoroughly understand the mystery and appreciate the play to its fullest extent, we realize that the play symbolizes a decided mental development. Dr. Harris says in his pyschology of an infant that "The first step above brute instinct begins when man looks beyond things as he sees them existing before him, and commences to consider their possibilities; he begins to add to his external seeing an internal see- ing; the world begins to assume a new aspect; each object appears to be of larger scope than its present existence, for there is a sphere of possibility environing it — a sphere which the sharpest animal eyes cannot see, but which man, endowed with this new faculty of inward sight, perceives at once. To this insight into possibilities there loom up uses and adaptations, transformations and combina- tions in a long series, stretching into the infinite behind each finite real thing." Up to this period things have come and gone and food has dis- appeared but the child has taken no notice. Now he has, according to Dr. Harris, taken the first step above brute instinct. ''He's proved his title to a soul!" ''The creatures of the wood Know not of now or then, but live Cramped in the instant's mood." He has passed that stage. He can see beyond and he can remember the past. It must be quite a puzzle to the little mind, the first time something in the past is pointed to, in contrast with some- thing that is. This seems to be just the point of all our learning, however. We retain things learned in the past in order to associate them with the new, thus fixing the new more firmly in our mind and at the same time developing memory — for "memory is itself explained as a result of the association of ideas." The new precepts are all based on the old, and this is the law of association. James gives two fundamental laws of association — the first is the law of Conti-- guity and the second that of Similarity. He says "The entire rou- tine of our memorized acquisitions is a consequence of nothing but the law of Contiguity." "These laws run the mind," and he goes so far as to say " 'Types of character' in short are largely types of association." Knowing what this great law is to the mind, we cannot but see clearly that it should be the basis for all teaching. We must find out what the children's experiences have been and give them new ones through the old. Whenever we present a new subject to them, if we would associate it with something in the past or even two or three things in the past, it would be much more firmly fixed in the 65 mind of even the dullest pupil. James says "We hate anything absolutely new, anything without any name ,and for which a new one must be forged. So we take the nearest name, even though it be inappropriate. A child will call snow when he sees it for the first time sugar or white butterflies. Names — and each name stands for a conception of an idea — are our instruments for handling our problems and solving our dilemmas." James says that the act of taking a thing into the mind is appreciation. Angell says it may be described as the process of combining the new and the old, and this is one of the many processes in the development of a child that is taken up in kindergarten. We apply the two fundamental laws of association (contiguity and similarity) in kindergarten to everything that is done, to every exercise that is given. There is contiguity from hour to hour, from day to day, from week to week, from month to month, from Sep- tember until June. All new experiences given the child are based upon the old and all experiences hang together. Take first the child's perceptions, ''which represents the immediate, organized mental reaction of the individual upon his environment" (Angell). *'In it the world is presented as a system of relations" and when the child comes to kindergarten his perceptions are rather limited, but, by adding and connecting new ones to the old, he finds at the end of the first kindergarten year quite a new world in comparison with the one he started with in the fall. Take rhythm for an exam- ple. In this grade development is very essential. We must start out with a simple, familiar step, then go to a less familiar. Our success depends upon this, and if carefully and skillfully done the child who could only march in the fall will find himself in the spring doing complicated folk-dances that require grace and suppleness. It must be the same with Nature-work, occupations, gifts, singing and story-telling. There could not be a kindergarten without con- tiguity written all over its programme — any other kind would be a monstrosity. (For example take a day programme such as follows and you will see what is meant by contiguity.) I WORK IN CLAY MODELING FOR A YEAR. I. September — Learning to handle the clay, la. First week. lb. Let children make anything they want to. 2a. Second week. lb. Free play, with an occasional suggestion. 3a. Third week. lb. Free play with object in view. For example making ~ things that mother used to get breakfast with this morning — bowl, plates, skillet, etc. II. October — Second Gift — Fallwork. lb. Make the sphere; take a walk and then make objects seen on walk that were based on the sphere (for instance nuts). 2b. Make cylinder; take walk and then make objects seen on walk that resembled cylinder (watering can, candy jar, etc.). 3b. Make cube; take walk and model object seen on walk that resembled cube (for example a stove seen in a 66 hardware window, etc.). N. B. — This kind of work with second gift comes only after children have begun to classify them. 4a. Work out three bear story (bowls, spoons, chair, beds). 5a. Work out Ball for Baby same as above. 6a. Try modeling a Cat or animal that is being studied. III. November — Nut work — Getting ready for winter. 1. Acorn on placque — basket to gather nuts. 2. Apple. 3. Pumpkin. 4. Brownie-^Gingerbread man. 5. Model a squirrel. 6. Barrels and sacks a farmer uses for winter storage. 7. Churning day — getting ready for Thanksgiving. IV. December — Xmas work — Introduction of trades. 1. Things seen in a Santa Claus Shop. 2. Xmas presents. 1. Paper-weights (pumpkins, colored, or squirrels or barrels of "Apples"). 2. Match holders. 3. Candle holders. 4. Conventionalized Xmas tree as paper weight. V. January — Interdependence, or Indian work. 1. Carpenter's tools (bench, hammer, etc.). 2. Furniture (based on cube) made by carpenter. 3. Lumberman — logs he sends down the river, or cabin built of clay logs that he lives in. 4. Woodman — Axe — (work out story of ''Sockia"). 5. Indian pottery. 6. Indian canoe and paddle. VI. February — In the Home. 1. Sweeping day (dust-pan, broom). 2. Baking day (stove, pans, etc.). 3. Wash day (tubs, wringer, basket, etc.). 4. Beaver or Bear — whatever animal is being studied. VII. March — Awakening of nature. 1. Birds' nests (Take two distinct types or two that are radically different, as the oriole and the robin). 2. Model the first bird to return that the children see and tell of. Let them color it. 3. Tops and marbles. 4. Sail-boat (?). VIII. April — Awakening of nature. 1. Gardener's tools. 1. Hoe, rake, spade, watering can. 2. Model another bird radically different in size and shape if possible from last month's. IX. May — ^Work depends largely upon outdoor trips. 1. Trip to a park and model things seen there, as see- saw, etc. X. June — Summer work. 1. Fruit. 2. Vegetables. On the moral side this play may be emphasized the same as 67 ''Falling, Falling." Carelessness is the thing to be avoided, fore- thought the thing to be developed and opportunity the thing to be seized. The little boy loses his bread and butter, because he care- lessly laid it down, thinking only of the drink he wanted at the present, utterly lacking in forethought. The cat seized the oppor- tunity and got the bread, just as people always do, when they seize the opportunity. The little boy who caught the bird (to give to his sister) and placed it under his hat while he went to pick berries, lost his opportunity by not seizing it when it presented itself. He was careless in not securing it better and so lost it, and he was lacking in forethought or he would have given it to his sister first and then have gone for the berries. I have only mentioned two of the children in the picture, but the same lessons may be learned from each of the others. "If we want to keep things we must be watchful and careful, and we must not let ourselves be tempted by everything we see. In order to have things when we need them we must plan for them beforehand," and seize always the golden opportunity. Froebel emphasizes quite clearly, in the picture accompanying this play, the reaction of the deed upon the doer. This would lead one to suppose that he was a strong advocater of ''retributive pun- ishment." It surely is the most effective punishment, and could be applied to any child without discrimination. Miss Harrison says in "a study of child nature" that "we rob our children of one of the greatest aids to self-government and self-control when by any means whatsoever we free them from the consequences of their own wrong doing." That the child should learn that the "way of the transgressor is hard" is an important part of his education, and nothing could teach him that better than retributive punish- ment. Another great advantage gained is that this sort of punish- ment is never inflicted in anger, and the child does not lose one atom of self-respect, self-reliance, or self-government. He learns that each violation of law, physical, mental or moral, must be paid for, and surely this is one of the lessons of life. Still another ad- vantage of the retributive method of punishment is that each deed is punished or rewarded upon its own plane. That is, material defeats or conquests bring material loss or gain, and spiritual defeats or conquests bring spiritual suffering or reward. Again, the child expects justice, absolute justice, from his parent, and that parent who can control himself and let the child receive retributive punishment gives his child an exalted view of life. "Until a man has become a law unto himself, he is of no great value to the rest of the world; and punishments, rightly considered, are not merely an atonement for offenses committed, but they show the nature of the offense, and help the individual to build up the law within and thereby to avoid repeating the misdeed." One might judge from my lengthy discussion of retributive punishment that I considered it the most important thing in the lesson. There are too many splendid lessons to give any particu- lar one first place, but that subject certainly ranks with the others, for each child who loses his opportunity, who is careless, or who lacks forethought, receives retributive punishment. The things, or rather the lessons, mentioned in the above para- 68 graph can only be gotten through early moral training, and train- ing can only be gotten through habit. We must realize that today leads up to tomorrow and that each day must be as nearly perfect as possible. We can't afford to let a child do a wrong thing at any time, for he is slowly making character day after day. We are the ones who must realize this, for it is beyond the child — "we can never say with the drunken Rip Van Winkle^ I won't count this time"; it is being counted none the less. Down among the child's nerve-cells and fibers the molecules are counting it, registering and storing it up to be used against him when the next temptation comes. Nothing we ever do is, in strict scientific literalness, ''wiped out." If every teacher, every parent, had those words burned into their soul, the next generation would surely be a better one. We should never let a child do a thing poorly, but have him do it over and over again until the result is satisfactory, for ''that child is spinning his own fate, good or evil, and never to be undone." "Every smallest stroke of virtue or of vice leaves its never-so-little scar." It seems almost impossible to overestimate the value to a child of the good habits you have helped him to form, for "habit is a second nature, or rather, as the Duke of Wellington said, it is 'ten times nature.' " James says that "first of all the teacher's prime concern should be to ingrain into the pupil that assortment of habits that shall be the most useful to him through life," and he adds to this that "continuity of training is the great means of making the nervous system act infallibly right." "We forget that every good that is worth possessing must be paid for in strokes of daily effort." "We postpone and postpone until those smiling pos- sibilities are dead." If we realized to the fullest extent that "ninety-nine-hun- dredths, or possibly nine hundred and nine-nine thousands, of our activity is purely automatic and habitual, from our rising in the morning to our lying down at night; our dressing and undressing, our eating and drinking, our greetings and partings, even most of the forms of our common speech, are things of a type so fixed by repetition as almost to be classed as reflex actions" — if, I say, we realized this, we would be exceedingly careful of the habits of our child. No careless habits would be allowed to be formed, and no habits of allowing opportunities to slip by would be known to the child. We would train him to be watchful and careful, to seize opportunities as they presented themselves and to have a few thoughts for the future. We try to instill these habits into the child in kindergarten as well as in the home. He must be careful about his work and do it well, even if he has to do it over and over. If he has done his work carelessly and must stay after school to finish it, he misses the opportunity of going home with the others, which generally involves a good time. On the game circle he learns, through a great many games, forethought, and on the rhythm circle he learns to carry himself gracefully and carefully. These habits are instilled in the kindergarten child, continually, in various ways. Perhaps the best example of learning carefulness is in playing with blocks. If the play is a directed one, the teacher is satisfied with nothing 69 but the exact thing, just as she has given it. In learning to bal- ance blocks, also, the child must be exceedingly careful or he is unsuccessful. In weaving and many of the occupations the great- est care is an absolute necessity, and being required of him day after day in nearly everything he does it soon becomes a second nature — ''he makes his nervous system his ally instead of his enemy." The principle of continuity of life is illustrated in nature in many v^ays. The ones most commonly used in kindergarten are the seed (from the time it is a seed until it is a seed again) ; the leaves (from the time they show forth until they fall to the earth to make the soil rich and full of life for the new buds again) ; the butterfly (from the egg to butterfly again). These are all cycles of changes in nature and we try to have the child feel and know that they are such. We want him to feel that life is continuous and ever changing and that which seems dead in the winter is only sleeping; that no force is ever absolutely lost — only changed in form. We get the best idea of continuity of life from plant life, but we see it again very decidedly in insects, and we can supplement and broaden continuity of plant life by insect life, which has the whole cycle of four stages. These changes in nature are symbolic of development, of the growth in human life. We grow from the more physical to the more spiritual and finally to immortality. The butterfly is a beau- tiful example of this. ()ne would never think as he looked at the ugly, creeping worm that growth could make it so beautiful. So it is with our life — if it unfolds as it was intended to, it grows continually more beautiful and more spiritual — life goes right on, no matter what the material change is. The child gets a premoni- tion of immortality through nature just as he gets a spiritual con- ception through the weather vane, and any child who has not had the chance to put a seed in ground and watch it grow has lost a spiritual development. This play is related to the weather vane play because the same law of God is back of it. The child wonders at the changes which take place in nature just as he wonders at the force and the law back of all nature phenomena. Dr. Harris says that "the world seems very wonderful to the child when the principle of causality begins to act in his mind, and he wishes to know the why of things and events, wishes to learn in what sense they are means to some- thing else, in what sense they are results of something else." • The epoch when the human infant ceases to clutch objects only with the four fingers like most of the ape family, and learns to use his thumb over against his finger, is most important. This con- traction of the thumb began, Preyer's record shows, about the twelfth week. The soul is not determined by what lays outside it, but deter- mines itself so as to reproduce the beings and the causes that are outside of it. Each man has this one destiny, to sum up in him- self the life and deeds of the race. The period of infancy is dominated by what may be called the symbolic stage of mind. The symbolic stage is the identification of 70 the natural with the spiritual, and likewise a beginning of a dis- crimination of them. All objects are conceived as containing a spiritual meaning. What we call the directive power on the part of man, his com- bining and organizing power, rests on this power to see beyond the real things before the senses to the ideal possibilities invisible to the brute. In speaking of the symbolic stage of mind Dr. Harris makes the following division: 1. Personification; the placing of a soul in a thing; animism. 2. Metaphor; the elevation of thing to a spiritual meaning (thing to soul, as personification makes soul to thing). 3. Play; one thing substituted for another; ''make believe this stick is a horse"; ''I have built a house with these blocks," etc. 4. The unconscious symbolic in poetry and mythology. It uses typical characters, showing the human in the forms of animals in fairy stories and fables. The child delights in fairy tales because they sport with the fixed conditions of actuality and present to him a picture of free power over nature and circumstances. "To modify, change, or destroy the limits of common actual- ity," as Rosenkranz says, is the perpetual work of the race. It molds the external world to suit its own ideas. Play is the first education that the child gets to prepare him for this human des- tiny. After the symbolic stage of mind comes what is called the con- ventional. In his first stages of using language the child is just in the symbolic stage of culture, and the kindergart The physical value of the game is found to be the exercise of the elbow joints, though the attitude of the whole body and the position of the arms is quite beneficial to the child. The mother gives a great deal of training to the child unconsciously, and it is 93 well that she does. She should guard against being too conscious, and she should be careful to get enough play into her conscious training. We relate "Grass-mowing" and the Pat-a-Cake because the same tracing of food takes place. Both start with the same inter- est of the child in his food, and the interest here is probably even more, because the child likes his cake even better than his bread. Both of these plays take you back to original sources step by step, though this one is a little more intricate than the "Grass-mowing" play. Again, both are expressions of interdependent trades and this feeling is the underlying of each. This play of "Pat-a-Cake" relates itself to "Tick-Tack," through the importance of having the bread there on time, or the baker will be delayed, and everyone will have to wait as a consequence. "When several are engaged in labor, Each should try to please his neighbor. Each, his share, however small, Have ready at a moment's call, Only then the work may tell Of good result and prosper well." This little verse explains quite clearly the necessity of order and doing things at the proper time, and this rule may be applied to bread making as adequately as to any other phase of life. The picture which accompanies this play emphasizes the old German custom of sending bread to the bakers to be baked. No ti BECKONING THE CHICKENS." Nature. "What can lovelier be Than the children's simple play, To beckon with the little hand; To feel that all is rife With the stirring presence of life, And the child is one of a happy band?" Song. "Beckon to the chickens small, 'Come, dear chickens, one and all.' " This play suggests to mother to let children have as much out-of-door life as possible, to let them come in contact with nature as soon and as much as possible. A child sees in animal life the love and protection of the mother. All children are intensely interested in animals because of their activity. Children are often cruel to animals because they like to assert their authority and demonstrate their strength. They are often cruel from a motive of curiosity also. 94 "BECKONING TO THE PIGEONS." Life. 1i ''No fancy coy, no ray of joy, ^ j Escapes the mother's watchful eye; Still quicker is she to discover When a shadow passes over/' Song. "The pigeons are coming, dear love, to meet you; Beckon them ; say, 'Dear pigeons, I greet you.' " This play is played at an earlier stage than the Pigeon House and Chicken Life. "FARMYARD GATE." Wisdom. "The mother in talk and play may teach Much that the child's mind cannot reach. Though all the good fruits we may seek in vain, ^ The child's life's dower this must remain. ^ Then early in life may he seek to treasure, And save from loss what now gives him pleasure." Song. "Oh! what is this? This is a gate Leading to the barnyard straight. There the pony is springing, hop, hop! The doves are there winging, kurr, kurr! The geese are all chattering, The ducks are all quacking. The chickens are peeping. The hen loudly clucks, pip, pip ! hi, hi, hi ! The bees are all humming, sum, sum. The mooly-cow lows, moo, moo! The calf is there playing. The little lamb straying. There bleateth the sheep, There grunteth the swine. The gate close fastened we must keep. Oh, why? Oh, why? That none may fly — Each keep to his own quarter nigh." The principle is to care for and to guard from loss that which j is dear to him. j 95 "LITTLE GARDENER." Nurture. ''Wouldst thou the mind of the child for the cares of life unfold, Let him observe the life-scenes here unrolled; Wouldst thou for cares of inward life prepare him, Make sweet to him the life-cares that are near him." Song. "Now the garden beds are blooming, Water pot in hand we're coming, All the thirsty plants to sprinkle; All the buds begin 'to twinkle, Scatter now their perfumes rare. They open their petals one by one. They roll out their cups to the glowing sun. Rewarding all our tender care." This play is an especially good one because through the joy which comes of cherishing life the child is prepared for the higher and more spiritual forms of nurture. Used, more in Spring as basis for Programme work. "THE TOYMAN AND THE MAIDEN." Joy. 'The child enjoys the toyman's treasure. And thou with the child hast equal pleasure." Song. "Take me, take me, mother, pray. To the toym.an's shope today. Tiny cupboards there we see, Dollies such a company! Tables, chairs, commodes combine To make the dolly's house so fine. The Christmas sale, it is today, And everything looks bright and gay. Oh, let me to the toyman go. And all my pretty things buy new." "Well pleased am I to have you go. And see the toyman's pretty show; Yet, ere we betake us there. Let me whisper in your ear: The daughter that I take with me Ever kind and good must be; 96 Thoughtful and polite to all; Cheerful, too, whate'er befall; For when she cross and fretful grows Quickly the mother's eyes shall close To all the pretty things around; Nothing to buy can then be found; And when the mother sees nothing to buy, Good Santa Glaus from the child shall fly." ''Mother, dear, come, and you shall see How diligent, kind, polite I will be." ''Toyman, tell me what I may choose For the diligent child to use." "Neat little spinning wheels I have For the daughters good and brave; Kitchens and their small knick-knacks. Trenchers, dishes, kitchen racks. All spick and span and polished fine. For the careful daughter of thine." "When Santa Glaus then comes this waj^ Tell him Amelia ,was here today ; He the pretty things may choose For her enjoyment and to use. When a good and willing child she is, Her wants and fancies we're glad to please." In kindergarten, we use the underlying principle of this game in our shop gift plays at Ghristmas time and in our "grocery store." We let children go to a toy store if possible, then play or drama- tize it. All the things the child may see will interest him greatly and he won't want to handle them when there are so many, but where there is just one they will be liable to want to handle it. We should give children the idea of abundance through Thanks- giving work. "THE FLOWER BASKET." Affection. "Gease not to mould in pretty forms The children's little pets. And keep the loving interest warm Before the mind forgets." Song. "Weave the little basket ; take it In the garden; we will make it Gay with flowers freshly blooming. Father's birthday now is coming; Now to dear papa we bring it. With this song, and thus we sing it: ; 97 LjSL, ±jSLy XjSiy GtCj Flowers sweet and fair, ''La, La, La, etc., Greet my dear papa; La, La, La, etc' )> The principle is to give to others, to show love for them. This expression of the impression involves sacrifice. Christmas work is based on this play. Spirit of giving happily with love. Different methods with different classes of children. 98 Questions. * 1. Describe the -play. Tell what the underlying principle is. 2. How is it related to ''All Gone" Mother Play. 3. Give a discussion of the second paragraph of commentary showing difference between Froebel's idea of self-activity or sense training and that of Pestalozzi. 4. Give the steps of this series of events, tracing the food back to final source. 5. Give different ways Froebel indicates through his pictures as to how to bring the subject to the children. His use of pic- tures, imitative play, looking on, and the activity itself. . What does child get through these various points? Give value of each — value of having child in pictures. A. Discuss value of pictures. B. What child gets from observation. C. Value of imitative activity. D. Value of participation. ^ 6. Importance of child's social training. A. Importance of child's early social training. B. Place -in family — how family educates him socially. C. How school educates him socially. 7. Why this special phase of trade life is so interesting to children and why it is so good for child's early training. 8. Suggestions as to what you would do with this in programme work, songs, verses, stories you would use. Tell what you really think children get from farm work in the fall. Questions on Pat-a-Cake. 1. Physical value of the pat-a-cake. 2. Why taken in connection with the grass-mowing, 3. Importance of having bread there on time. How this play relates itself to "Tick-tack." 4. Description of picture as to custom of sending bread to bakers, German housewife baked her own bread and the picture shows her taking it to the baker's herself, and the little child accompanyino* her. In the picture the children are imitating the activities they have seen done, and all children love to make "bread" out of clay. They like the imitating, and the resemblance of clay to dough, and they like to do because they have seen mother do it. \ , i i ' PART IX LESSON XV of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School Copyright 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI LESSON XV MOTHER PLAYS VII AND IX. "THE TASTE AND FLOWER SONGS." TICK-TACK." Order. "Who would find the prosperous way, The laws of order must obey. Who would win a happy fate, Must learn his time to regulate. He whom this practice shall annoy Will be bereft of many a joy. Then teach the child to value order, time; For these are priceless gifts in every clime." Song. . 'To and fro! to and fro! Goes the pendulum, sure and slow. So will I my arm incline, , Just in time and just in line; Beat by beat, with forward, back, Ever tick and ever tack ! ~ ,' \ ■ Tick, tack! tick, tack! Little clock saves me all care. Tells me when the right hours are — For eating, for sleeping, for play and all; • *For rising and bathing it sounds the call; Makes my heart beat pure and true ; Keeps me well and active, too. Beat by beat, with forward, back, • Ever tick and ever tack ! Tick, tack! tick, tack!" Train child to have culture and a sense of beauty. Child who' has love for beauty has a safeguard. Ugly vices will repel him. Child, or person, rather, who has not an appreciation of the beautiful is liable to become a machine, for he "narrows" as he grows older. A child who has this sense is more happy, contented, developed i and broader than one who has not. He will have more discrimina- tion. He will be more capable of adapting himself to his environ- ment, and more color will be added to his life. He will be a better man to himself and to the community if he has trained senses. We should cultivate the imagination of our children. The average American child is too prosaic. 103 College educated men are often condemned because they are not practical money-makers, but there are other things in life be- sides money, and the college educated man is generally broader- minded and better equipped for life as a whole. If child is going to have a sense of beauty he must have some experience — he must create. ''General morality according to Froebel depends in great meas- ure on having this ideal side of the human being awakened and gratified from the very beginning of life in order to afford a con- tra poise to sensual desires and to prevent, as far as possible, the awakening of the lower appetites." The development of the sense of beauty while the reflective powers are still slumbering in the child's soul, offers the best means for this, therefore the eyes of the child are to be opened in his earliest years to forms, colors, etc., and the ear to music, and the weak, childish powers are to be prepared and used in the formation of beautiful objects. Cultivation of creative power will prevent coarseness later. Through a wise culture of the senses we learn to read the language of things. Such a culture is essential alike to the develop- ment of the child and to the well-being of the man. Who is a raan of fine and true taste? It is he who reads aright the language of things. It is he who repels the deleterious and invites the whole- some influence. The taste and smell sensations are like twin sisters in their intimate union. In sensation the physical and psychical, the merely vital, and the intellectual, the instinctive and the moral melt into each other. Hence the importance of sense culture. Child can very easily be given too much stimulation to senses. We must study the child. Children are interested in movement of pendulum, in mechan- ism back of it and in mystery about it. They like to listen to i\ watch for the same reason — it seems to have life. Froebel overestimates the child's opinion of value of time in this play. He reads his own philosophy into mind of child. Principle back of this play is order — value of punctuality — doing things at proper time in proper way; and rhythm. The ideal early training of a baby is order and regularity. This is the point so strongly emphasized by Barnes in his lecture on "Child's Early Morals." Child should be getting training in order and regularity right from the start, and we can't overesti- mate the value of this the first three or four months. This is the beginning of obedience and conformity to law. Miss Shinn attributes the happy temperament of her niece to her bodily comfort, right food, right clothes, order and punctualitv. The irritable child or adult is the physically sick one. But a child can very easily be given a tendency toward either disposition. Child should be given training in kindergarten, of order. His work must be orderly, and his time divided into periods of same length each day. Child likes to have things just the same day after day and he does not want anything left out. They like regularity. You should keep everything in order, for children imitate vou. TT 104 Rhythm will sometimes soothe and quiet children because it is orderly. The distinctive principle of art and consequently of design is order. ''This principle of order is man's free gift, the addition of something in himself to what he receives from nature." Animals run and caper — man adds order and rhythm to run- ning and capering and has dancing. Birds sing — man adds order and has rhythm. We can train a child through rhythm to be a good citizen and to have culture and a sense of beauty. Froebel says, "To me it seems that there is no single thing which, from the day of his birth, is more important for men than the doing of things at the right time." "There is a certain remote kinship between the rhythmic swing of the pendulum and the form of our soul-activity." Tick-Tack Quotation. ''Let this and every dawn of morning be to you as the begin- ning of life, and every setting sun be to you as its close. Let every one of these short lives have its sun record of some kindly thing done for others and some goodly strength or knowledge gained for ourselves and so, from day to day and strength to strength, we shall build iw bv art, by thought, and by just will, an ecclesia of which it shall not be said, 'See what manner of stones are here,' but see what manner of men." — John Ruskin. "THE CHARCOAL BURNER. » Mediatorial. "How from a little much may grow! How difficulties are laid low! In the unassuming, good may live; By this thou canst a lesson give." Song. "The charcoal-burner's hut is small, Will scarcely hold two men in all ; Yet in it dwell, in cheerful mood, The charcoal-burner and son so good. Thev brincr up the wood, and to charcoal they burn it; And into his wagon the smith shall then turn it. How could we our spoons, knives and forks too, have made, And many things else we may daily need. If the burner, with blackened face and hair. Burned not the coal with patient care? Come, child, and give the good coal-burner greeting — Without thv good spoon there's no pleasure in eating. And though in his face he may not be fair. We praise his good heart, for no shadow comes there." 105 The combination of sight and touch is very important for our perceptions. As we go up the bcale of life we find these three senses giving us more and more all the time, and developed to a greater degree. We depend very little upon taste and smell but a very great deal on the sense of sight and touch. Our hearing is decreasing in power and our sense of smell is already very weak. Henry Drummond says, ''Take up the functions of the animal body one by one, and it will be seen how the same arresting finger is laid upon them all. Consider, for example, the power of sight. Is it not the testimony of experience that the power has already begun to wane? Europe even now affords the spectacle of at least one nation so short-sighted that it might almost be called a myopic race. The sense of smell, compared with its development among the lower animals, is in civilized man, already all but gone. Com- pared even with a savage, it is an ascertained fact that the civilized man in this respect is vastly inferior. The ear itself, in contrast with that of the savage, is slow and dull, while compared with the quick sense of the lower animals, the organ is almost deaf. The skin, from the continuous use of clothes, has forfeited its pro- tective power. Owing to the use of the viands cooked, the muscles of the jaw are rapidly losing strength. The teeth, partly for a similar reason, are undergoing marked degeneration. For mere muscle, that on which man's whole life once depended, he has almost now no use. Once all men were athletes; now you have to pay to see them." .We should teach child that his hands are very important and are to be used for good purposes only; to work and play with; to keep them to himself and off himself. Froebel says in his Educa- tion of Man, that ''From a very early period, children should never be left too long to themselves on beds or cradles without some external object to occupj^ them. In order to avoid leaving the child on its bed mentally unoccupied while going to sleep, and still more, just after waking, it is advisable to suspend in a line with the child's natural vision a swinging ball." Any of the Finger plays are good for the same purpose as the child grows older. In explaining the motto, I should say that the trees cut down and burned to charcoal, the iron changed into attractive armor, shows man's strength and makes the child feel it. Child also sees different forces of nature that man has turned to his power. Water, electricity, and even wind. Child has feeling of respect when he sees a man changing lumber into a house. He thinks the black- smith is a wonderful man and he admires him. Men who can run a street car or train appeal very much to children, and a fireman is a hero. They see strength of man in all these things. They love movement and anything pertaining to the spectacular. If he can see the actual thing happening under his eyes he will appreciate it. He gets the feeling of power over himself and his surroundings and the power of materials — and these are the very things we want him to get. When he says that he will take some material home and make such a thing, he is beginning to have this feeling — feeling of ability, confidence, and sense of power to make good. He needs to feel these and there is a difference between this and conceit. 106 ^ A child can be morbidly sensitive of his power and then it is a detriment. ''Under aspect mean great good may hide." All children should be trained to feel that each person has his duty and his work and should be respected. Roosevelt told his son that there were just two classes of boys — good and bad. We should make the child feel the connection and proper regard for the laborer. This play may be exchanged for the miner. When such is the case, start always with the blacksmith first, because there is a relationship between his life and the child's. Horses have very important place in the child's mind. He is interested in the^'r activity and strength. He sees them all the time and is dependent upon them for groceries, ice, coal, packages, etc. So the child's .interest in the blacksmith borrows from his interest in the horse but not much. The fire, and the movements of the blacksmith, hold him a silent worshiper. When presenting the subject start by asking how many have seen a blacksmith shop. Talk about it and show them a picture or have a blackboard drawing of the most important things in a blacksmith shop. Next step is to have children feel that he enjoys his work by his singing. They can get this feeling through playin^- it, by story, or by visit to the shop, which is the kernel of the who^e thing. Seeing means so much to children. After a visit they will do better free cutting than ever before. It is impossible for them to go see a miner and there are so many things about mining they cannot see. We haven't even good pictures, so just tell them principal things. Do not go into detail. ^ Give children idea of mine being a great bior hole in ground, shaft, p lights, pick-ax, and ore shaft. It is very difficult to give images on this subject. We give it because it takes children back to more direct source. It is good that they feel in every case that we are dependent upon God's bounty. Quotations from "Stones -of Venice," by John Ruskin. "In the main, we require from buildings, as from men, two kinds of goodness: first, the doing their practical duty well, then that they be graceful and pleasing in doing it; which last is itself another form of duty." "Then the practical duty divides itself into two branches — acting and talking: acting, as to defend us from weather or vio- lence; talking, as the duty of monuments or tombs, to record facts and express feelings ; or of churches, temples, public edifices, treated as books of history, to tell such history clearly and forcibly. We have thus, all together, three great branches of architectural virtue, and we require of any building: 1. That it act well, and do the things it was intended to do in the best way. 2. That it speak well, and say the things it was intended to say in the best words. 3. That it look well, and please us by its presence, whatever it has to do or to say." "We take pleasure, or should take pleasure, in architectural construction altogether as the manifestation of an admirable human 107 intelligence; it is not the strength, not the size, not the finish of the work which we are to venerate; rocks are always stronger, mountains always larger, all natural objects more finished; but it is the intelligence and resolution of man in overcoming physical difficulty which are to be the source of our pleasure and subject of our pride. And again, in decoration or beauty, it is less the actual loveliness of the thing produced, than the choice and invention concerned in the production, which are to delight us; the love and the thoughts of the workman more than his work: his work must always be imperfect, but his thoughts and affections may be true and deep. In the structure of his work, his affectionate part is to be shown in its decoration; and that decoration may be indeed lovely, two things are needed: first, that the affections be vivid, and honestly shown; secondly, that they be fixed on the right things." **If a man is cold in his likings or dislikings, or if he will not tell you what he likes, you can make nothing of him. Only get him to feel quickly and to speak plainly, and you may set him right." ''The fact is that the great evil of all recent architectural effort has not been that men liked wrong things, but that they either cared nothing about any, or pretended to like what they did not." ''Half the evil in this world comes from people not knowing what they do like, not deliberately setting themselves to find out what they really enjoy. All people enjoy giving away money, for instance: they don't know that — they rather think they like keeping it; and they do keep it under this false impression, often to their great discomfort. Everybody likes to do good; but not one in a hundred finds this out. Multitudes think they like to do evil; yet no man ever really enjoyed doing evil since God made the world." "Remember that the most beautiful things in the world are the most useless; peacocks and lilies, for instance." (< THE CARPENTER." Spiritual. "Wherever the child sees good work done. The mind and heart are easily won. Then through constructive form he passes From the outward To the inward. And feels the inner sense and uses." Song. * "Oh, see the carpenter; all day With curious art he works away: The high is here brought low; The long is shorter now; The crooked soon comes straight; The round he maketh flat; All smooth he makes the rough: Is not that skill enough? 108 Now all must he combine, All parts together join; ; And see what now he shows: From timbers the house now grows — A house for my good child, Where dwell his parents mild, Who night and day attend him And from all harm defend him. The carpenter must love the child, The good protecting house to build.'' In Froebel's Blacksmith picture Froebel uses the blacksmith as a type of man who works in a rough way, handling hard material and using his hands. A child would get from the man working in the picture an idea of the danger of it. James, in his psychology speaks of the heroic things men do every day, especially laborers. In the Car- penter picture the men up on the roof are doing a brave thing and the child feels it. The miner's work is more dangerous than the carpenter's, though he has more diversity. Miner's work is more mechanical while carpenter's requires training and skill. As a child watches a house going up he gets a feeling of individual work and that each person working on the house has his own work to do. All are doing different things and contributing to the whole, while the miner's work is all the same. If taking carpenter for subject, start with building a house. Have a story first and connect it. In planning this house emphasize how strongly it would have to be built; how you'd have to make the house fit the family and the number of rooms required. Emphasize necessities and luxuries, each member of the house should be considered and his tastes grati- fied. The yard and the garden should be considered. Froebel says 'The house should contribute by its plan, structure, and furniture to the ease with which all domestic duties may be fulfilled. What the skin is to the body, the house is to the family, whose life it environs, protects, and within certain limits determines. Can we exaggerate the influence of a wisely planned and well- ordered house, either upon the health, the comfort or the happiness of its inmates?" 'The priceless blessing of a happy home can be won only by struggle, endurance and self-sacrifice." After planning house with the children the next step is to build it. Emphasize especially the principle of interdependence, by the different trades, carpenters, masons, excavators, plumbers, etc. Nothing more interesting. It gives children a chance for playing out so much. Afjter house is built go back to wood-man. This is an easy subject to bring children images of. It is possible to take either the carpenter or the woodman first, though it is better to start with the carpenter, for he is nearer child's own interests. 109 THE WHEELWRIGHT. Philosophy. ''The child with joy and wonder understands For what good work the man may use his hands." Song. *'Let us to the wheelwright go — Watch to see what he will do. See now, see now, see! Oh, what pains takes he That the auger go straight through, That the hole be smooth and true! Now 'tis ready to his mind, To the axle may be joined. Round it goes now, ever round now! Round now, round now, yes. It goeth ever round now. Round now, round now, etc. The wheelwright's work is making wheels. We use this in kindergarten because we make so many things by utilizing wheels and because the wheel is used to make it go. The child is interested in the movement and the activity. The underlying principle of this play is 'Transportation," and it relates to interdependence. It is one of the steps in nearly „ everything we take up. Every time there is a step forward<^ transportation there is one forward in civilization, and it is so with the child as well as the race. "THE JOINER.'' Appreciation. ''That each works on in his own way Cannot escape the child's quick eye. Naught is so easy to attain, But he may therefrom a lesson gain." Song. Zish! Zish! Zish! The joiner planes to his wish, Makes the table smooth and good. Leaves no hole within the wood. Zish! Zish! Zish! The joiner planes to his wish. Long, long, long. Planing the bench so strong! MO Planes until all white it grows; Planes till not a splinter shows, Long, long, long, Planing the bench so strong! A little child has small chance for communication. As he develops his eye and hand can do it better by signs, and when he creeps there is a rapid mental development. Power of moving about and of communication means greater development. Man formerly used to be impeded by slow methods of trans- portation. Great change came about when man learned to use natural forces, animals, tools and fires. Not until then did he have such a wonderful dominion over nature. The fleetest Indian cannot cover space as a steam engine; the eye of the keenest animal cannot see as far as man with his apparatus. Two hundred years ago there wasn't the inter-communication there is now. Something that is so closely connected with all our enterprises cannot be overlooked, though we cannot give the child very much. All through the year we carry this subject of transportation along. In Fall talks about farmer and how he gets his things to barn, etc. ; the grocery boy; how child gets down town; how he gets out on farm; how he gets to park; how packages are delivered at Christ- mas time; how all our relations get to us at Thanksgiving time. So we don't take this subject up as a separate study but bring it in, in many places. Relation between child's development and that of the race shown in Commentary. Read Maud Lindsay's story "The Journey" in connection with this. The emphasizes in the Joiner is on long, straight, short, etc. ! i ' PART X LESSON XVI of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School Copyright 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI LESSON XVI THE KNIGHT MOTHER PLAYS X The Knights and the Good Child. The Knights and the Bad Child. The Knights and the Mother. THE KNIGHTS AND GOOD CHILD. Approval. ''There lurks within the child a hidden feeling That he lives not in this life alone. He fancies forms and voices 'round him stealing That are strange and foreign to his own, A new degree of life he has begun, , The genuine call of life his ear has won. Have care, then, for the little child so bright. Let him not follow a delusive light. And not entirely in the outward live, But let the inner life its impulse give." Song. Five knights I see riding at rapid pace, Within the court their steps I trace. ''What would ye now, fair knights, with me?" "We wish thy precious child to see. They say he is like the doves so good. And like the lamb, of merry mood. \ Then wilt thou kindly let us meet him. That tenderly our hearts may greet him?" "Now the precious child behold — Well he merits love untold." "Child we give thee greetings rare, This will sweeten mother's care. Worth much love the good child is, Peace and joy are ever his. Now will we no longer tarry — Joy unto our homes we'll carry." Child comes to understand that a great power reigns in the uni-i verse, and that this great power gives and creates true freedom, d 115 KNIGHTS AND THE BAD CHILD, Disapproval. That all unto the good are drawn, That the good know when aught is wrong. The child must early learn to know That he may not the joy of life forego. Song. Five knights I see riding at rapid pace, Within the court-yard their steps I trace. ''What would ye now, fair knights, with me?" ''We wish thy precious child to see." "Ah, friendly knights, I grieve to say I cannot bring him to you today; He cries, is so morose and cross. That all too small we find the house." "Oh, such tidings give us pain — No longer we sing a joyful strain; We'll ride away, we'll ride afar, Where all the good little children are." Comes to understand that all are attracted by what is good, and that the good flee from what is evil. THE KNIGHTS AND THE MOTHER. Protection. "The child must soon learn The good to discern ; While the good shalt thou treasure And heighten his pleasure." Song. / Five knights in full trot are coming hither: They want my child, they would take him thithe^. Hide thee, child. Oh hide thee now! Where thou art must they never know. Please, fair knights, I pray you. Trot off and don't delay you. Is it not now very clear That my darling is not here? Hop, hop, hop ! hop, hop, hop ! Away now they go, gallop, hop! Now peep out and say good by! Swiftly trot the fine knights away. This little drama of three acts, "The Knights and the Good 116 Child," "The Knights and the Bad Child" and ''The Knights and the Mother," show us clearly Froebel's profound insight into the depths of human nature. ''He here places before us a simple, practical way of dealing with two universal and tremendously strong in- stincts; namely, desire for the approval of those we love, and the dread of censure from those we most esteem." In the first act the child is sitting upon his mother's lap, with one of her arms around him, while the other arm and hand (beginning with the little finger and going towards the thumb) trot or gallop one after the other first toward the child and then from him. In the second act and the third the movements of the fingers are the same as in the preced- ing one. In the third the child hides himself in various ways and places. - As a group these plays stand for the moral development of the child; they stand for the ideal character. "The mounted knight expresses free self-determination, free mastery of the will. Through] his control of his steed he also presents symbolically the mastery of the rude powers of Nature. Hence, in the prescient phantasy of childhood the knight stands out a clear-cut image of ideal free- dom and beauty." It is very important as the child grows older to give him a con- scious ideal of character and it is very essential to place before him ideals which will appeal to and interest him. He begins to feel unity — ^the connection of his life with those about him very early, almost from the very first. Baldwin says that "He begins to feel persons before anything else." Few people realize the tremendous influence of personality upon the child. We should commence right from the beginning to develop the child morally, and for the first six years of his life this develop- ment must depend entirely upon the mother and the home. The ideal mother begins the very first day to establish certain habits. Barnes said that "at the end of the first four months of a child's life you could tell whether that child would be a criminal or a law- abiding citizen — according to his habits — you could make him one or the other." The child's first experiences should give him habits. The first step in moral training is the establishing of physical hab- its, and we find that he yields very easily and very early. These certain physical habits will, if well persisted in, establish obedience, faith and confidence later on. It is very essential that the child should obey at first because he has no experience, nor self-control, nor reasoning power, and this stage of unquestionable obedience should last until the child is about three years old. From the time he is six months old the very important instinct of imitation comes into play, and as it develops it means a very great deal in the child's moral life. He imitates grown people more than anyone else, and for this reason they should be good copies — the child has not the power of discrimination between good and bad copies, so it behooves us to be only the best of copies. As he imitates he begins to get a certain standard; generally what his mother or father say or do is all right and he is working continually toward ideals. When the child begins to avoid doing things because he does not want to be blamed, or when he begins to want praise, he is com- mencing to have som.e realization of right and wrong, and a con- 117 scious ideal of his mother — that her opinion is the standard to go by and nothing else counts as it does. The mother's attitude at this time is very important. She should be consistent — never varying. This is a golden opportunity for her to win an everlasting place in the heart of her child. She can instill ideas and ideals in a way that they will never be forgotten, and establish standards of right and wrong which will never be erased. As the child grows out of this stage the mother may help him by advising him through the strong bonds of faith which she has established, and she may also give him more freedom of choice. As he grows older his ideal becomes more and more conscious and his mother's control becomes less and less arbitrary. She has to help him get the ideal — to be rather than to seem — that is her work. ''It is only by being ourselves what we would have our children become that we really and truly influence them to strive to become all that we desire of them." The connection between this stage of the child — when he is looking for certain ideals — and the Knight play is that the latter meets this stage and gives these necessary ideals. That is the pri- mary reason why we introduce it into the kindergarten. Most of the above discussion has been upon the moral training of the child in the home and by the mother, and right here one more strong point may be made to aid this moral development in the home. A child is more apt to be good than to be bad and if he has naturally good impulses they will be drawn out by his environ- ment. "'Even as a magnet — goodness draws the good." The child needs good influences about him — he assimiliates these influences through imitative instinct and he is consciously and unconsciously getting these good points. Therefore much depends upon his sur- rondings, and if a p-ood mother is added to the good surroundings the environment is complete. When we take the moral training of the child in the kinder- p*arten and look at it from a perspective point of view down through the year, we find it is one of the foundation stones of the kinder- garten. Scarcely a day passes without this moral training coming in some way to the f^hild, either consciously or unconsciously. One of the first thing's he learns is law, and, though he has already learned law at home, this is another phase of it. He finds that he must conform to this law and that when he does not he is subjected to public disaiDproval. He learns that he must be good in order to be respected and loved. He learns self-control, which is one of the essentials for a good moral man. This lesson comes to him on the song circle, on the game circle and at his table work. Telling the truth is another one of his many lessons in moral training. This is not emphasized to excess in the kindergarten, for it is often difficult to tell whether the child is lyine or whether his imagination "has possession of him," so to speak, but in the morning talks, and in many other ways, the child is made to feel that truth is the coveted thing. Taking things whi^^h belonsr to another; in other words, stealing, is instilled into the child in such a wav that he has absolutely no desire to take another's nossessions. He learns to k^ep his hands to him- self and off himself, and employed in the right way. He learns to ol 118 do his work well, and the habit of doing everything well is surely a great help toward making a good character. Another thing which may be associated with doing a thing well is order. This is empha- sized in every way in the kindergarten, and Froebel says "Each thing prospers only when in all its doings it keeps true time." Unselfishness is one of the child's many lessons which he may get either consciously or unconsciously. He soon perceives that the selfish child meets with disapproval, and that one of the laws is "share and share alike." Making things for others and doing things to help others also aid him in his development of unselfishness. Patience comes to the child in the kindergarten, generally unconsciously. He must wait for his song to be sung on the circle ; he must wait for his turn to talk; he must wait for his turn to skip ; he must wait for his turn to lead the march ; he must wait for his material at the table; he must wait for assistance with his wraps ; he must wait, wait, wait, all morning — not long enough to try his little soul, but just long enough to teach him a very gentle and essential lesson in one of the most necessary virtues — Patience. Another thing — he learns that his will must be subject to the will of others, and this is the first lesson in the learning of that great self -subjecting law given us by Jesus, "Thy w^ill be done." He grasps, often unconsciously, that willfullness and stubbornness is of no avail, and the lessons he learns then if properly nurtured will expand and expand until we find the child a well developed man, in harmony with God, nature and himself. All through the year we strive to develop the love with which the child came to us in the fall. We strive first to strengthen the family bonds of love, then we expand it until it includes nature and finally the whole community. This love embraces kindness, gentle- ness, thoughtfulness, sympathy and forbearance. And there is no line of work we take up in the kindergarten where the shining let- ters of the word "Love" do not stand out as the motto of the lesson we are striving to teach. In moral training one of the greatest aids is the cultivation o"^ the senses, and this is begun the first day in the kindergarten and continued throughout the year. Froebel says "Throuo-h a cultivation of the senses we learn to read the language of things. Who is a man of fine and true taste? It is he who reads aright the language of things. It is he who repels the deleterious and invites the whole- some influence. In training the senses, dear mother, you cultivate the heart and the intellect at the same time- In sensation the physical and psychical, the merely vital and the intellectual, the instinctive and the moral melt into each other. Hence the impor- tance of sense culture." There are many other things in the kindergarten which aid the moral development of the child, but we have only the space and the time to mention the great big things — the things which help to make character. The value of the Knight work as a subject for the kindergarten is very great, and the play of "The Knights and the Mother" gives us the keynote of all our kindergarten work. This play "aims to make the child conscious of the peculiar tie between his own hea'^'t and the heart of his mother." All the Knight games bring out this 1 19 love between the mother and the child, and all the stories we tell in connection emphasize this particular point. The true family feeling is the center of the work. The child is made to realize that he can be a Knight at home — in fact, that he must be a Knight at home first, then when he grows older he can go to the King and be a Knight. In spite of the value some place upon the work, it is a question in the mind of others whether this Knight work should be intro- duced into the kindergarten. Some say that the child is too young to get the lessons in good behavior and morals that the play strives to give, but if these same people could hear the testimonies of mothers who know; mothers who have watched closely the effects of this work given in kindergarten upon their children, and moth- ers who have made their children a study and are able to tell what influences them for the best, they would concede a few points in favor of the Knight work. Of course where children are permitted to attend kindergarten between the ages of three and five they are too young to get very much out of it — ^but the average child of six gets a great deal from this line of work. Again, a great deal depends upon the way the subject is given as to how much benefit he shall derive. If it is related the child's own experiences, and so he may feel the tangibility of it, we will find a somewhat different child in the home. He will be more chivalrous, more obedient, more thoughtful and more manly. Some one may say ''Yes, perhaps while the new is on, while the story is fresh in his mind, but that will soon wear off." If he have a loving, directing mother who is familiar with the Knight work there is no need for the lessons to even slip from his mind. In a thousand motherly w^ays she can instill them again and again until they become a habit, and who can say in later years of a man with such habits just how much he owes to his first Knight work in kindergarten? Who can say that any- thing else would have appealed to the boy's interest any more than the dashing, chivalrous, princely Knights? And was not arousing the interest the first step to all that followed? Surely the child who refrains from teasing, or impatience, or slapping little sister because "it is not Knightly" has learned his first lessons. Others claim that the Knights are too far off, too idealistic, and that the more realistic things should be given the child. For exam- ple, they would prefer the policeman — because he is chivalrous in a way; he helps the weak, looks after the defenseless when there is danger and keeps peace. In a sense he is the law embodied, hence more practical than the Knights. It is here, once again, as it was when studying animals in the fall — the policeman is too close. Often some child in the kindergarten will know Mr. Policeman in his home, where he perhaps is not all that he should be — at least not ideal. When it comes to a matter of character and morals the child should be given the ideal — something that is absolutely without flaws, and therefore never disappointing. Can one say that of a policeman? Most assuredly not, for they are quite human, but it may be said very truthfully of the Knights. Again, there are not as many things about a policeman to excite curiosity and arouse inter- est as there are about a Knight. There are no waving plumes, or glistening helmets, no armor, spear or lance, no dashing, prancing 120 steed with beautiful saddle decorations, no great castles, deep moats, nor wonderful draw bridges. Of course all these things do not belong to the realm of the practical and the real, but surely better lessons are to be learned from the idealistic than the realistic. We go too far in trying to pin a child down to brutal realities. Miss Tanner says ''Now, is it not a pity that children and young people should be on the whole so prosy and confined to real life? We hear a great deal about the abuse of the imagination, the danger of day- dreams and castles in Spain, and the moral obliquity involved in presenting fairy tales and myths to children. There is, of course, a real danger here lest in playing with ideas a child forget realities, but in view of this collection of ideals borrowed so directly from the everyday life of thousands of children, the danger of our becom- ing a nation of dreamers does not seem to be nearly as imminent as that of our becoming a nation of money-lovers and materialists, sat- isfied with present conditions. Will children with such ideas ever become creators? Will they turn out to be artists, poets, inventors, or even signal successes in the conduct of any large enterprise? Hardly." ''Imagination, in short, is the pattern of the web of life. It is the shaping force without which the universe would be a chaos. We should say then that abuse of the imagination is possible only when images do not finally turn back into our life and change it in some way." Knight work need not be any more distant to the child than trade work if properly handled. We strive to turn his images back into his own life and change it in some way. If we emphasize the imagination side too much we are injur- ing the child, and if we emphasize the other side the same is true. We must consider the child. If he is very imaginative we must help him. to become more practical and vice versa. When children come from homes where many fairy stories are told and where they receive much training it would be best not to carrv imasfinative side too far. If they come from homes where the situation is just the opposite, we should make a conscious effort to give more of this sort of work to the child. When using these Knight plays as a basis for kindergarten work, I would be very careful about the sitting which I gave it, I would bring in only those details that were necessary to my point. For instance, the castle, built so strong and generally upon a high point; the towers, where watchmen were always watching to help those who needed help; the draw-bridge and the moat to keep out robbers, etc., etc. I would tell generally of things Knights might do — protect people, obey their king, etc. I would tell why they wore shields and armor; why they carried lances and rode horses. I would emphasize the beauty and decoration and make it a part of the picture. It is interesting to the child and gives him a feeling of fairy tales and the mystic. In this Knight work a very great deal depends upon the setting, and it is quite essential that the child get very clear and keen-cut images. If the child gets this picture and loses sight of the significant thing through too much of the exter- nal, he loses much. The picturesqueness of situation and interest of subject should not outshine the moral lessons to be learned. One objection often made to the use of this Knight work is that too 121 much dramatic play may be indulged in and the spiritual lesson lost. The Knight work must be related, must be brought home to the child and must be used in connection with the other work all through the year. We must strive to give children habits of service and thoughtfulness all through the year. As we deal with imagination in kmdergarten we have the two distinct kinds — the fanciful and the idealistic. The image-making faculty may not always put together memory forms to serve some deep purpose or convey some mystic meaning. When it is exercised in aimless or capricious m.anner to create fantastic or impossible, yet withal gracetul and pleasing forms, it is known as fancy. In the drama, imagination is responsible for the complex scenes and the faithfully delineated characters even for the costumes which reflect character and circumstance ; fancy gives delicate graces, many of the poetical comparisons; much of the imagery spirits, like Ariel, are the work of fancy ; Vv^omen as true and tender as Miranda of the imagination. The world of fancy is an unreal world, but to the child it is a beautiful one. Our minds are full of imaginative ideals. These ideals become standards of desiie, objects of aim, stimuli to action until life re- solves itself into a constant effort to realize them. If they are high and true, we must rise in the course of their pursuit; if low, we can but fall. Thus the imagination appears as a most potent instru- ment either of good or of evil. Like tast^, it may be perverted. The artist or the sculptor has the gift of originating ideal combi- nations and expressing them in material form so that they can be recognized and enjoyed by others. Ideals projected in this way do more than entertain; they act as a means of improvement or injury to the whole human race. "The Greek idea of manliness, as em- bodied in the characterization of Homer, has exerted an incalculable influence in creating admiration for those virtues that unite to make a perfect character. So the majestic beauty of the face of the Greek Venus, shadowing forth a mighty intellectuality — a cold, stern dignity that withers every carnal suggestion and spells the pure in heart with its god-like charm — must stand forever as an inspiration to high resolve and noble endeavor." On the other hand, words are hardly needed to portray the evil wrought by the utterance of low ideals in statue, picture, and novel. We strive in our Knight work to give the children high ideals of character ; to develop the idealistic imagination in order that they may create; to cultivate their taste so that only the high ideals will appeal to them, and to help them to know that their ideals may become realistic. Returning to the Knight plays proper once more, nothing better can be said in closing than what Elizabeth Harrison has already said in regard to another side of these plays — the side where wrong is censured by those we love and approval in all things is sought. ''This union, then estrangement through wrong-doing, and restoration through true repentance, is the keynote to half of Shakespeare's plays. Every poet of Christendom has sung the same theme. Sin separates us from our fellow men as well as from God. Love united us to mankind and the All-Father deep down in each 122 human soul is the longing for approval and love and the dread of censure or the withdrawal of that love. The marvelous way in which Froebel has brought this world-wide, time-tried truth down into the child's play in the nursery is enough to entitle him to the respect and admiration of all parents and educators who realize that the child must be trained in world principles if he is to attain unto world culture." 123 Questions. I. Describe the Plays. Tell what the plays stand for as a group. Give a full dis- cussion of the development of the child in a conscious moral standard — all the influences that enter in — in the home and kindergarten. Take each separately. Give things that are done through the year. II. Discuss the imagination — the two kinds and the uses of each. III. Value of the Knights as a subject for kindergarten work. 1. Arguments against its use. 2. Suggestions for its use as a basis for kindergarten work. BOOKS USED FOR REFERENCE. Jam.es "Talks to Teachers." Tanner, ''The Child.'' Dr. Dewey, ''Mental Development." "Studies of Childhood," by Sully. "Two Children of the Foothills," by Elizabeth Harrison. Froebel's Mother Play. John Ruskin — on the Imagination. . PART XI LESSONS XVII AND XVIII of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School Copyright 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI LESSON XVII. EDUCATION OF MAN. School problem is to teach the child all the relations of life. Teacher has to mediate between the world and the home. She has to prepare him for world. For a little child just emerging from baby-hood the world is a world of things or objects with no connections. Little later in same stage things become things to use — for himself, for play — the world becomes a play world. As he grows older he wants to find out more about the relation of things — wants more definite results and more definite knowledge and information for its own sake. This is the time he is ready and should go to school. As he grows into High School stage he wants more scientific knowledge and the origin of things. He is growing into Philosophy — into reason. He begins to want to broaden out. "Education isn't preparation for life, it is life." — Emerson. Read "Emmy Lou Stories." The time in our lives that we are most productive is from twen- ty-five to forty years previous to this are preparation. After twenty-five a man gets no more new ideas says James. A man's production depends upon his preparation. "Education is adaptation." All development is adaptation. Groundwork of the Whole. L The purpose of Education. A. The existence of law in all things. 1. a. Revealed to humanity either thru faith or insight in nature, spirit, life. B. This law based on Unity, God. Every created thing has a divine essence. C. The destiny of each created thing is the eternal revealing of this divine essence. Man as an intelligent being must also become conscious of his essence and reveal it con- sciously. 1. c. Definition — Education consists in leading man, as a thinking intelligent being, growing into self-con- sciousness, to a pure and unsullied, conscious and free representation of the inner law of Di- vine Unity and in teaching him ways and means thereto. D. Science of life — knowledge of law. 1. d. Science of Education — knowledge of law referred to education. 2. d. Practice of education — practical application of theory in direct education of specific human beings. rl 127 3. d. Theory of education — system of directions derived from law. 4. d. Object of education — realization of a good life. E. Wisdom is highest aim of life. Education of self and others is its two-fold achievement. Therefore education should bring out the essence in each man — raise him to free conscious obedience to the divine principle — to free expression in his life. Definition — Education should lead man to clearness con- cerning himself and in himself, to peace with nature and to unity with God. 11. Resultant character of Education. A. Divine essence revealed thru outer manifestations (but in- ferences concerning inner life must be drawn with great care from these manifestations — often inversely failure to apply this truth responsible for much mis- understanding between educator and children). B. Since all life has within it this divine essence every organ- ism must follow the law of its natural development — even truer of man than plants or animals. Therefore education must be passive following — not pre- scriptive. C. An absolutely unmarred state is rarely found but its exist- ence must be assumed until the opposite has been un- mistakably shown. If proved beyond doubt, the child's best good demands prescriptive but used with the great- est care since much of it imperils the self active — spon- taneous representation of the inner self which is the highest end of education. D. In general then we must carefully study the child's nature and consequent needs and give the environment best adapted to his true development. E. Prescriptive education is justified only on two grounds. 1. Because it teaches an eternal principal of truth. 2. Because it holds up an ideal. In both cases however these ideals are mandatory in spirit not in form. F. In true education then, necessity should call forth freedom, law, self determination. "All prescription should be adapted to the child's nature and needs and secure his cooperation." G. Child should realize that teacher is simply exponent of law and is subject to it equally with him — that he is not obeying her but the law of right, the best. This should appear in every demand. H. He should be taught the principle. "Exhibit only thy spirit- ual essence, thy life, in the external and by means of the external in thy actions, and observe the require- ments of thy inner being and its nature." I. "The educator, the teacher, should make the individual and particular general, the general particular and individual and elucidate both in life; he should make the external 128 internal, and the internal external and indicate the ne- cessity of both ; he should consider the finite in the light of the infinite, and the infinite in the light of the finite, and harmonize both in life; he should see and perceive the divine essence in whatever is human, trace the na- ture of man to God, and seek to exhibit both in one another in life/* III. The child in his relationships. A. Every human being should be treated as an expression of divinity — as related to God — to nature — to humanity — as comprehending within himself unity, diversity, and individuality, past, present and future. B. Therefore humanity is not to be considered stationary but developing. C. Therefore each child as related to humanity repeats the stage of human development in a spontaneous individ- ual way. D. Therefore the educator should study the development of hu- manity to help him in his understanding of individual children. E. Duty of parents. F. Destiny of child. 1. As child. 2. As child of God. 3. As child of nature. 4. As member of family and humanity. G. Therefore each child should be given free all sided use of his powers and be taught to depend upon himself. IV. The child's early manifestations and their value — what they lead to. A. First utterance is that of force. B. Development of sympathy — dawn of self -consciousness. C. Pain and Pleasure. D. Early beginnings of willfulness — Cause. E. Value of leaving fretting child to find himself. F. Very susceptible to surroundings — so these should be care- fully related. G. Feeling of community as developed thru family life — this the beginning of religion — Importance of early devel- opment of religion — feeling largely in hands of mother. V. Continuity of Development. A. Its importance. — ''Sharp limits and definite subdivisions within the continuous series of the years of develop- ment withdrawing from attention the permanent con- tinuity, the living connection, the inner living essence, are therefore highly pernicious, and even destructive in their influence. B. Each stage is dependent upon the preceding. 'The child, the boy, man indeed, should know no other endeavor but to be at every stage of development wholly what this stage calls for." 129 C. Especially needful to consider this in the development of industrial power. 1. c. True work. "God created man in his own image; therefore man should create and bring forth like God." 2. c. Man works that he may express his inner being out- wardly. 3. c. If he fails to work in this, spirit must suffer the in- evitable consequence. 4. c. Therefore child should be early trained to work in this spirit. Activity of senses and limbs first germ in infancy — play the next step in childhood. In boyhood each child should be required to work at least one or two hours a day. D. Religion, industry, and temperance should be developed as early as possible and in relationship. LESSON XVIII EDUCATION OF MAN. Outline. I. The world as it comes to the child at first. "In misty, formless indistinctness, in chaotic confusion." 1. The child finding his individuality. 2. Corresponding words of parent and child reunite them. 3. Relation of child's development and development of all things. 4. Dawn of reason. 1.2. First self assertion is evidence of will. 2.2. Marks the moral and human emancipation. 5. Relation of individual and racial development. 1.2. "Should view own life and that of others at all its stages as a continuous whole, developing in ac- cordance with divine laws." 1.3. Only in this way can man understand history, phenom- ena, events of own development, history of his own heart, own feelings and thoughts; only in this way can he understand others or parents un- derstand their child. II. Man's destiny is expressed in these external forms. 1.2. To make the internal, external. 2.2. To make the external, internal. 3.2. To find the unity for both. 1.1. Development of the senses. 2.1 Law of opposites. "Everything and every being, however comes to be known only as it is connected with the opposite, of its kind, and as its unity, its agreement with this opposite, its equa- tion with reference to this is discovered." 3.1. Three forms of objects of external world as they present themselves to man. 1.2. Solid. 2.2. Liquid. 3.2. Gaseous. 4.2. In a state of rest or motion. 4.1. Sense for gaseous (aeriform) is between eye and ear. 5.1. Sense for Liquid between taste and smell. 6.1. Sense for solid between feeling and touch. 7.1. Sight develops first, hearing, specialized touch. III. Muscular Development. 1.1. Use of Body and limbs develops simultaneously, and symmetrically with the advancing development of the senses. I 131 1.2. External objects invite this development. 1.3. Are either at rest and invite rest. 2,3. Or in motion and invite seizure. 3.3. Or fixed in distant places and invite movement toward. 2.1. Standing — represents the use of the body and limbs in their most complete totality; it is the finding of the gravity of the body. 1.2. Just as significant for this stage as the first smile was for the preceding stage. 3.1. Playing with his limbs. 1.2. Does it merely for sake of use and practice. 2.2. Cares not for the results of this use. 3.3. False habits. 1. Habitual bodily movements without inner meaning. 2.4. Facial movements without inner meaning. 3.4. The above distortions lead to separation be- tween the inner and outer, between body and mind. 4.1. Need of watchfulness. 1.2. Bed should not be too soft. 1.3. Pillow should be of hay, sea-grass, fine straw, chaff, or horse hair, but never feathers. 2.3. Child should be but lightly covered. 3.3. Fresh air. 2.2. Child should not be left on bed, unoccupied (mentally) while going to sleep or after wakening. 1.3. Suspend a ball or bird cage within the child's natural vision. 1.4. This secures occupation for the senses and mind profitable in many directions. IV. Beginning of childhood. ''When the child begins self-actively to represent the internal outwardly, the stage of infancy in human development ceases and the stage of childhood begins." 1.1. Language. 1.2. With it expression and representation of the internal begin. 2.2. With it organization, or a differentiation with reference to ends and means set in. 3.2. At this stage — actual education begins. More attention given to mind than body. 2.2. Family. 1.2. First educators of the child. V. Importance of childhood stage. 1.1. Child at this stage should see all things rightly and ac- curately, and should designate them rightly and ac- curately, definitely and clearly. 2.1. He should give each object its proper name or word and utt'^r ppf'^ word clearly. 1.2. The peculiarities of the child's speech are due wholly to imperfections of hearing or speaking. 2.3. Mothers retard children in unification of language and thought by "baby-talk" as "hannies" for hands. 132 3.1. All things at this stage should be brought before child rightly, clearly, and distinctly so he may see and know them that way. 4.1. Play at this time. Play and speech constitute the element in which the child lives. 1.2. He imparts feeling and speech to each thing. VI. Play — "it is self active representation of the inner from inner necessity and impulse. It is the highest phase of the child development. It is typical of human life as a whole. It holds the sources of all that is good. It gives joy, freedom, contentment, in and outer rest, and peace with the world." 1.1. Kinds of play. 1.2. Spontaneous. 2.2. Dramatic. 3.2. Constructive. 4.2. Group play. 2.1. Play should be protected, fostered and guarded. 1.2. Plays of childhood are germinal leaves of all later life. 2.2. Whole later life of man has its source in the period of child. His tenderest dispositions, and his inner- most tendencies shown in play. 3.1. Child's future relations to father and mother, to the members of the family, to society and mankind, to nature and God, depend chiefly upon his mode of life at this period. 1.2. There should be unity of the child and his surround- ings. 2.2. Consequences of marring child's life at this time. VII. Food of the child. 1.1. Simplicity necessary. 1.2. After the mother's milk, the first food of child should be plain and simple. 2.2. Should not be more artificial and refined than is ab- solutely needful. 3.2. In no way stimulating and exciting through an excess of spices, nor rich. ''Simplicity and frugality in food and in other physical needs during the years of childhood, enhance man's power of attaining happiness and vigor — true creative- ness." 2.1. Consequences of over-stimulating food. 1.2. Makes child sluggish, indolent, dull or inert. 2.2. Comes in over-refinement in preparation of food, by ; which the physical side of the child's life is stimulated without true spiritual cause — con- suming and weakening the body. 3.2. Impressions, inclinations, appetites which the child may have derived from his food, the turn it may have given to his senses and even to his life, as a whole, can only with difficulty be set aside i 133 even when the age of self-dependence has been reached. They are one with his whole physical life and are therefore intimately connected with his spiritual life. 3.1. Always let food be simply for nourishment. Never more, — never less. Never let it be taken for its own sake. VIII. Clothing of the child. 1.1. Clothing should be free from lacing and pressure of all kinds so he can move and play freely. 2.1. Should not bind the body (for it will have on the mind, on the soul of the child the same effect it has on the body) . ''Clothes, in form and color and cut, should never become an object in themselves, else they will soon direct the child's attention to his appearance instead of his real being, make him vain and frivolous — dollish — a puppet instead of a human being. IX. Objects of parental care. 1.1. To awaken and develop. 2.1. To quicken all the powers and natural gifts of the child, 3.1. To enable all the members and organs of man to fulfill the requirements of the child's gifts and powers. 4.1. Mothers' instinct is not enough — must do it consciously. 5.1. Mothers' work. 1.2. Teaches child to feel complexity of his body and the difference between his limbs. ("Give me your arm," ''Where is your hand?") 2.2. Induces reflection in its earliest phases by tending to bring to child's knowledge an object which, altho' it has an individuality of its own, is yet united with the child ("Bite your finger.") 3.2. Leads child in playful manner to a knowledge of the members which he cannot see, the nose, ear, eyes, teeth. ("I have your nose.") 4.2. Leads child to use these things. "Show me your tooth." "Bite your tongue." 5.2. Introduces child to the outside world. 6.2. Directs attention to attributives and qualities of ob- jects as "The candle burns," "The knife pricks." 7.2. Directs child to the permanence of the active quality or to its cause "The soup is hot, it burns you." 8.2. Later from a knowledge of the immanent quality to a knowledge of the immanent effect. 9 2. Leads child first to feel his own action and then to contemplate the action itself. 10.2. Leads the child to contemplate the motion and the mutability of things, also self mobility of things. 11.2. She incites child to bodily activity. 12.2. She seeks to interpret the feeling of community be- tween the child and the father, brother and sis- ter which is so important. 13.2. Leads child to feel his own inner life and brings this 134 life within the child's conscious control. 7.1. Value of rhythmic movement. 1.2. ''Development of it makes it easier for child to com- pass the legitimate, proper measure of his life.'* 2.2, ''Much willfulness, impropriety and coarseness would be taken out of his life, his movements, and actions." 3.2. He would secure more firmness and moderation, more harmony. 4.2. Would give him a higher appreciation of nature and art, of music and poetry. X. Learning to stand and walk. 1.1. He should stand when he is strong enough to keep his balance freely and independently. 2.1. He should walk, when freely moving forward, he can inde- pendently keep his balance. 3.1. Should not stand before he can sit erect and draw himself. up by some tall object near by. 4.1. Should not walk before he can creep, rise freely, and maintain his balance. 5.1. Neither perambulators nor leading strings should be used. XL Collecting instinct. 1.1. He is collecting material for future life building. 2.1. Studying the material. 1.2., Child wants to know its nam.e, uses and qualities and it is the longing for this interpretation that urges him to appeal to us. 2.2. Child loves all things that enter his world but they must not enter it dead (we must give them life) . 3.2. Child seeks inner nature of material. "He would know himself why he loves this thing; he would know all its properties, its innermost na- ture, that he may learn to understand himself in his attachment." 1.3. If this innate instinct were appreciated and guid- ed, it would lead child to seek to find God in all his work. 4.2. Parental indifference crushes development. XH. First attempts at drawing. 1.1. Finds chalk. 2.1. First sketches. 1.2. Lines — all mere outline. 2.2. This directs his attention to linear properties of sur- rounding objects. 3.2. "What man tries to represent or do he begins to under- stand." 3.1. Give child chalk and encourage his drawing. 4.1. Outline drawing. 5.1. Drawing gives child. 1.2. Clear conception of forms. 2.2. The power to represent the forms independently. 3.2. The fixing of the forms as such. ■ li 135 4.2. Strengthening and practicing of the arm and hand in free representation of these. 6.1. Parents need not be artists but they should draw with and for child. 7.1. Need of descriptive words — connect child's actions with suitable language *'now I draw a table" etc. 1.2. Word and drawing — are mutually explanatory and complementary. 1.3. Neither one is by itself sufficient. '"The faculty of drawing is, therefore, as much innate in the child, in man, as is the faculty of speech and demands its development and cultivation as imperatively as the latter." XIII. "The drawing leads to number^the repeated return of one and the same object leads to counting." 1.1. By development of the above is gained. _ 1.2. Extension of child's sphere of knowledge. 2.2. A satisfaction of spirit. 8.2. Adds very much to his life. 2.1. Mother should develop it very early. 3.1. Development of number — notions. 1.2. Let child arrange objects in rows then count with him thus "one apple, another apple, still another apple ; many apples." 4.1. Two rules for this first arithmetic, viz: 1.2. At no time should the numerals be given the child as empty, unmeaning sounds and be thus repeated by him. 2.2. Child should never say numerals, without the aid of objetcs which he actually counts. XIV. Wealth of the child's world. XV. Relation of child to father and mother. 1.1. Should be allowed to "help" parents. 1.2. Makes relationship stronger because he understands better. 2.2. Gains a great deal of knowledge. 3.2. "Do not harshly repel him." 4.2. Show no impatience about his ever-recurring questions. 2.1. Do not tell him in words much more than he could find him- self without your words. "To have found one-fourth of the answer by his own effort is of more value and importance to the child than it is to half hear and half understand it in the words of another ; for this causes mental indolence " 3.1. Joy of child guidance. 4.1. Development of industry. 1.2. Lead children early to think. 2.2. Give them early habits of work and industry. "The child who has been led to think will at the same time, be led to industry, diligence — to all domestic and civic virtues." XVI. Our own dullness. 136 1.1. We are empty for our children. 2.1. Our surroundings are dead and dull. ■ 3.1. Our speech is like the book out of which we learned it. 4.1. Our discourse does not rest on intercourse with life and nature — we do not enjoy life. XVII. We should live with our children. 1.1. We should learn from our children. XVIII. Importance of speech. 1.1. Importance of inner unity. XIX. Misunderstandings from nearness of things. 1.1 External separation often brings about inner unity, inner recognition or appreciation. 2.1. Difficulty of self knowledge. "If man would know himself truly, he must represent him- self externally, must place himself over against him- self as it were." XX. The transition from childhood to boyhood. PART XII LESSON XIX of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School Copyright 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI LESSON XIX EDUCATION OF MAN. The Boyhood of Man. I. Boyhood is the period in which instruction predominates. 1. The period of infancy demands fostering care. 2. The period of childhood demands training. 3. The period of boyhood demands instruction. 4. Definition of school. ^'School means the conscious communication of knowledge for a definite purpose and definite inner connection." 5. Object of the school. *To give firmness to the will, to quicken it, and to make it pure, strong, and enduring, in a life of pure humanity, is the chief concern of the school." II. The will. 1. Definition. — "The will is the mental activity, ever consciously ^"oceeding from a definite point in a definite direction toward a defi- nite object, in harmony with the man's nature as a whole." 2. The starting point. 1. Should be energetic and sound. 3. Requisites. 1. The cultivation of boyhood rests wholly on that of child- hood. 2. The activity and firmness of the will rest upon activity and firmness of the feelings of the heart. III. Importance of the family. 1. What it does for child. "Family-life alone secures the development and cultivation of a good heart and of a thoughtful, gentle disposition in their full intensity and vigor, so incomparably important for every perid of growth, nay for the whole life of man." 2. The child takes the life of his own family as a type of life. IV. Transition from play to work. 1. Now does things for the sake of the result. 2. Child's instinct of activity has in the boy become a for- mative instinct. 3. At this stage he wants to represent what he sees. 4. Desire to help parents is very marked. 5. Danger of repulsion. 1.1 Parents can destroy at one blow, at least for a long time this instinct of formative activity, if they repel child's help as useless, or even a hindrance. 2.1. Child becomes fretful ^^nd dull. 139 3.1. The inner power is weakened. 6. Parents should encourage child's help, even though it should involve some sacrifice. 1. Should strengthen and develop instinct. 7. The boy wants to try his strength in everything, so that it may increase. 8. Child is very inquisitive at this stage. 1. Every satisfactory answer opens a new world to him. 9. Boy's love of difficulties. 1. Seeks obstacles and difficulties in order to overcome them. 2. Loves the work they involve. 1. Exploration of caves and ravines. 2. Climbing of trees and mountains. 3. Searching of heights and depths. 4. Roaming through fields and forests. 3. Parents should give them freedom and not be anxious. **The boy, who from early youth has been led quietly and with reference to the steady development of his powers, never will test or task his strength much more than his previous trials justify. While another boy who knows neither his strength nor the difficulty of his task, attempts to do what his little skill and strength do do not warrant him to undertake and thus incurs dan- ger where even the most timid would deem himself safe. 10. Desire to seek the new and discover the hidden. 1.1. When boy returns with some rich treasure of animals — worms, beetles, or spiders and wishes to know the name, parents should beware of their greeting and not tell child to "throw that down!"; **that is horrid!" 11. Love of water. 12. Love of plastic material. 1. Likes to control and master it. 13. All boys should have gardens. 1. Should cultivate them for the sake of the produce. 2. Here man sees his work, for the first time, bearing fruit in an organic way. 3. This work completes in many ways the boy's life with nature and satisfies his curiosity concerning her work- ings, and a desire that urges him again and again to give thoughtful, continuous attention and observation to plants and flowers." . 4. "If the boy cannot have the care of a little garden of his own, he should at least have a few plants in boxes or pots, ffiled not with rare and delicate or double plants, but with common plants that have an abundance of leaves and blossoms and thrive easily." 14. Games of boyhood. 1. Often are simply to display strength. 2. "The sense of sure and reliable power, the sense of its increase fills the boy with joy during these games." 5.2. "The child or boy who has guarded and cared for 140 another living thing, although it be of a lower order, will be led more easily to guard and foster his own life." 3. It is not only the physical power that feeds and strength- ens in these games. Intellectual and moral power too is definitely and steadily gained and brought under con- trol. 1.3. Justice. 2.3. Moderation. 3.3. Self-control. 4.3. Truthfulness. 5.3. Loyalty. 6.3. Brotherly love. 7.3. Strict impartiality. 8.3. Courage. 9.3. Perseverance. 10.3. Resolution. 11.3. Prudence. 12.3. Elimination of indolent indulgence. 4.2 Boy tries to see himself in his companions, to feel him- self in them, to weigh and measure himself by them, to know and find himself with their help. 5.2. At no time should boys be unoccupied. 15. Love of tales and stories. "There is developed in the boy at this age the desire and craving for tales, for legends, for all kinds of stories, and later on for historical accounts. This craving, especially in its first appearance is very intense. 16. Love of the past. 17. Love of song. 1. Comes from desire to express what fills his innermost heart and mind and urges him to sing. 18. The symbolism of play. V. Actual boy life very different from what it should be. 1.2. We meet stubbomess etc. 1.1. Causes of difference. 1.2. The complete neglect of the development of certain sides of full human life. 2.2. 'The early, faulty and unnatural steps of development and distortion of the originally good human powers and tendencies by arbitrary and willful interference with the original orderly and logical course of human de- velopment." VI. Man is essentially good. 1. Has no bad or evil qualities or tendencies. VII. Falsehood. 1. Nature. "If there is anything absolutely evil, it is this, for it is the origin of all evil." 2. Origin. Man creates falsehood by failing to recognize himself as being created by God by truth. 141 3. All the short-comings and wrong doings have their origin merely in the disturbed relations of these two sides of man, his nature, that which he has grown to be; and his essence, his innermost being. 4. How to overcome evil with good. 1. Find the originally good source that has been repressed or misled and then foster it, build up and properly guide this good side. VIII. Sympathy. 1.1. Lacking at present among children. 1.2. Due clearly to the early annihilation of this feeling between parents and children. IX. Faults of boys. 1. Source lies in precipitation, carelessness, frivolity, and thoughtlessness. 1.1. "The boy and the wig." 2.1. ''The boy and the bowl." 3.1. 'The broken window." 4.1. "The boy and the pigeon." 2. How boys are made bad. It is generally some other human being, often the educator him- self that first makes the child or the boy bad. This is accomplished by attributing evil, — or at least wrong motives to all that the child or boy does from ignorance precipitation or even from a keen and praiseworthy sense of right and wrong. 3. False Conversion. 4. Ravages of harsh words. 'Tunishm.ent, especially punishment by words, very oft'^n teach- es children or at least brings to their attention and notice, faults of which they were wholly free." X. Sins against childhood. XL Seeking unity. "As already indicated a deep and significant feeling of anticipa- tion and longing aspiration occupies the boy's mind in all he does during this period." HELPFUL SUGGESTIONS, Child two years old likes a crayon to play with better than a pencil because it is larger and makes a bigger mark. Let him have it. Let child trace leaf on paper or his hand. A certain amount of outline drawing is a good thing. Draw with child and for him and thus encourage him to draw all that he can. If child collects things and shows them to his mother he wants to share his pleasure with her and she should encourage him to make large collections and to systematize them and take care of them. Thus laying the foundation for natural history and other sciences. Child gets first idea of number work through drawing — putting four legs on a table or a house, etc. In kindergarten he counts other children, his chalk, blocks, games, finger plays, etc. Step before this is arranging things. 142 Children under six can seldom count over 18. Things then be- come a quantity — a blur. A child may be smart in everything else except number work, especially girls. Read 'The Militants" — In the Bishops Silence by Mary Shipman Andrews. Child cannot begin to have an abstract conception until he can speak. Beauty form work should be given very seldom and for only one period — younger children by imitation — older by dictation — they like working in symmetrical forms. A little of it is very valuable and interesting and helpful but it can easily be over done. Play a little puzzle game with it — ''Now watch and see what I'm going to make next" etc. Touch, in race development, is very primitive — very first to de- velop — all other senses probably grow out of it; sight is next, then taste and smell and finally hearing. Infancy ends and childhood begins when child begins self-active- ly to represent the internal outwardly. Do not try to teach child inhibition too early. Wonderful thing the way a child at end of first year can coordi- nate hand and eye muscles and the complexity of his movements. Do not refrain a child's activity for his future life grows out of it. Question is how to utilize activities in best way. Development of growth through activity is according to Froebel the kernel of psychology. By end of first six months child gets certain associations and learns to expect certain results from certain people; has a good deal more control of muscles ; coordination is much better ; has sense per- ception (most rapid of all advancement) ; has beginning of memory. Thorndike says "the infant's feelings of things, qualities, condi- tions, and relationships are nothing more than vague impressions of this person, that thing, that stomach-ache and the like. Only after many experiences does he come to feel the same qualities. We are too apt to judge a child or a person too quickly. We should see them under several conditions and in many lights before we judge them. Give environment that will call out all possible char- acteristics. Never get to a point where you cannot forgive a child. Forgive i him everything. j A child never forgets or forgives an unjust accusation. ' Shouldn't be rude to a child. He has as much individuality and ^ dignity as a grown person. Children often withdraw confidence from parents when laughed at. It hurts their pride. Child has all the suffering of an older person without the philo- sophy. He sees only in the present. Child should not be humiliated or ridiculed only in very rare in- stances. We seldom find a child who needs absolutely no discipline. He often has hereditary tendencies. 143 Very serious thing to mis-judge a little child. Your attitude to- ward him means so much to him. Give an antagonistic child more sympathy than any other for he is unsocial. Let him help you. Encourage him. Read R. Kiplings : ''Ba-Ba Blacksheep" in ''Wee Willie Winkie." To deal with *'sly" children be perfectly open and frank with them and lead child to think that you expect the same from him. A great deal can be done through suggestion. This sort of a child will often put blame on other children, tell falsehoods, try schemes to get what he wants if he thinks he is liable to be refused if he should ask. He will often conceal trivial things of no concern. A sneaking child is apt to be rather a sensitive child. A direct punishment is apt to make it worse for he is naturally afraid of it and it makes him more afraid. Every one has imitative instinct. Child gets basis of education through imitation. Through it he becomes conscious of his own powers, of his place in the world. It is -partly an effort to under- stand. A baby begins to imitate between four months and six months old. When you are sure that a baby deliberately imitates you are sure that he has developed will. Once in a while a baby will uncon- sciously imitate as moving his head in rhythm to something. Clapping hands. Peek-a-boo-wave good-bye are some things baby imitates. James says we are what we are to a very large extent, through imitation. Older children in kindergarten like to have a hard thing to do. Children who are imposed upon should be made to feel that such is the case. They should be encouraged to assert themselves and sometimes taught to hit back. We don't often meet such a child. When it is due to physical inability very little can be done. In the kindergarten w^e try to develop social instinct in the most fruitful ways. Seating children, working together, on circle, disci- pline all based in group games, programme work — all based on social instinct. Child is naturally affectionate if he is treated at all right. Attitude between kinder.orarten teacher and child should not be sentimental but respectful, affectionate and sympathetic. In kindergarten child has thing to make and if he can take it home, if it can be his very own, and if he can have some place to put his things, he will take much m.ore interest in them. Child will imitate you more than you have any conception of. Watch for unconscious imitation in children. Imitation will teach observation, new coordinations, and more power to express im.ages. Sending a child on errands. Consideration of his time — don't force him. — help to see that what he does for you he does for himself too. When there is friction it is generally because child is made to feel it is arbitrary instead of involuntary. Do not hold a child down too long. Father often makes mistakes by trying to hold boy down too long. Let him make his own decisions when he begins to grow out of childhood. Tell him your opinion, then 144 leave it to him. Child needs just this sort of thing. Can begin pretty early, even in kindergarten — let him choose colors, games, work, etc., and make him abide by first decision. It is the beginning of moral decision. Cause of so much friction between parent and child is be- cause child does not have enough "leave- way." Let child wear dress or hat or tie that he wants to. If child doesn't want to go to Sunday school, look into it, there is some reason. He should and must go — must get it into nervous system before he is twelve. Do not force child to do a thing that he abhors. Do not make everything too easy — difficulty makes it interesting. Problem is how to make our limitations a blessing. You do not inherit power that your father or mother have ac- quired along any line. You can inherit race tendencies or strong family characteristics but if your father is an artist you will not necessarily inherit it. Another theory is ''collection of reflexes handed down." Another one is that of organic selection — combination of rc-flex activity and primitive intelligence. Questions Instincts in general are for protection. What evidence have we of the relationship between mind and body? What is a fundamental nervous system? What is the function of the cerebrum. What are sensoiy, motor and association centers? What are visual, auditory, and motor aphasia? Why should auditory aphasia so often be accompanied by motor apahsia ? We should regard our work as teachers as assisting chiefly in what? according to James? Elxceptional Children. We generally find that a criminal man was a nervous or stupid child. Have child do things for other people if he is non-social, or nervous. Make him feel that he is part of the human family and that he is important. We are too apt to push adolescent boys into background — mak"* him feel awkward, and that he is not wanted. Child will grow out of ''smart-aleck" age — it is a sort of a ner- vousness, a feeling that they are nobody and must push themselves forward. Read Berry's "Little White Bird." Work on positive side of child. If you promise a child a thing he ought to have it. Do a thinT if you tell a child that you will. To say to a child's reauest ''I'll se-^ about it," developes the teasing habit. Say either "yes" or "no." Do not talk about a child in front of the child or so he can hea" — It gives child impression that mother is an enemy. I. Impulsive movements. The stimuli comes from within. Is due to change in organism 145 of nervous cells. Example — Twitching in sleep. II. Reflexive movements. Stimuli comes from without. Such as tickling foot. III. Instinctive movements. A timid child is generally very self-conscious — so is an aggres- sive bold child. Any one who is very sensitive is just selfish. This is truer of the adult than the child. Difference between emotion and instinct is that an emotion will react on you physically while an instinct as a rule does not. Motor accompaniments of anger are expression of face, clench- ing fist, hot words. Fear, anger, jealousy appear very early. Curiosity, play, sym- pathy, love, rivalry, emulation, pride, ambition, and cleanliness com 3 later. The former are more related to emotions, the latter to in- stincts. Child has very strong social instinct. It can be easily destroyed or developed. He likes co-operation with others his own age. Cooperation means advancement. A baby's affection is very material being based on comforts, and the person who gives him most is the one he loves best. Child likes toys because they give him pleasure and because they are his, and because he ejects himself into them and makes them part of himself. Curiosity expresses itself in interest we take in things around us. Child's interests are very diversified and nearly everything ap- peals to him. Bright things, things he can play with and do with interest him most. Anything tha^" has activity or movement inter- est a child. Give him very few mechanical toys. If curiosity is abnormal, check it. It is not so much the ques- tion as the kind of child. Boys ask more questions than girls — due to racial conditions — men have been encouraged to be investigators for many genera- tions. Grown people make a mistake in not satisfying child's curiosity. Talk over sex-relations. Make appeal to curiosity through gifts. Say to child "what do you suppose is in this box." Shake it and see if you can hear it rat- tle? "Open it just a little way." Then let them play with the blocks until they get acquainted with them. Gaines When First on Game Circle. A good game for childre>\ yvhen they come on the game circle is to let them all be "something that is getting ready for winter." Some of them will be whirling leaves, seed-babies, caterpillars, squirrels, rabbits and farmers. Other exercises that are relaxing and invigorating: 1. "Rocking Horse." 2. "Jacks in Box." 3. "Windmill." 4. "See-saw." 5. "Swinging songs with motion." 146 6. ''Bouncing balls." , 7. "Short running marches." 8. "Running Horses." Hints for Kindergarten Room. Take a large piece of dark green card board nearly square. , Draw bare trunks of trees (about three) with a few bare branches '' on them. Draw these on white cardboard and color them brown — make them in proportion, to the green cardboard on which you paste them. Let children cut out birds of various species (in proportion to trees and cardboard), then paste these on the branches. Make one with ten birds, use an oriole and his nest, a woodpecker, blue-bird, robin, thrush, blue- jay, etc. All in colors, they will appeal to the children. J Have a large dark green screen and pin on it pictures of children with their mother. After children are gathered around piano and just before they bejgin to sing open the window and have them take four deep breaths. The first time exhale and make a noise like engines. The second time make a noise like the wind and the third time perfectly silent. Then sing the scale up to these words "How do you like to go to school," and down to these words "We like to run and skip to school." r . Next sing some child's name the first syllable on lower "do" and the last on upper "do" as Ester. . ("do" "do") . .have child answer "yes.. I., am., here" to "do" (upper) "la", ."sol", ."do." Then sing "Little Jack Horner," etc., and when they finish sing oh . . oh . . oh . . oh . . oh . . oh . . oh . . to the scale. _o This is a splendid drill and yet it can be so interesting that the children will enjoy every bit of it. Have them stand during singing time around the piano and thus relieve the long sitting period on the circle. Have another one on other side of room and paste children with animals. Let the children bring the pictures. On the black- board, along one side of the room, and low enough for children to see, have a border about a foot deep of animals coming out of Noah's ark. At Christmas time draw with colored crayon a large Christmar. tree and put different colored toys on it. This is the thing nearest the hearts of the children yet the "three Wise Men" and other Christmas pictures often take the place of it. I think it should .b'^'in the room, on the blackboard somewhere. '' " Have a color chart — six columns. Let each child bring some ffiiit the color of each color in the rainbow and you draw it with colored crayon in the column in which it belongs — for instance, red apple in column for red fruit, etc. Have chart for ball, cylinder and rectangle shapes in three divisions. Draw a ball at top of one, cylinder at top of other, rect- angle at top of last. Let children bring a picture of something that will go in each column. 147 Grapes. Baking pow- Piano. Apples. der can — Auto. Bread. Box of Books to Use. candy. 'Trimer," by Elenore Smith. Elliots, ''Mother Goose Songs." "Songs of the Child World — No. 1," by Riley and Gaynor. ''Songs for Little Children — Part 1 — For the Kindergarten and Primary Schools," by Elenore Smith. "One and Twenty Songs," by Corinne Brown. "Goose Step March," by A. Gosling. "Dance of the Fairies," Polka. "Small Songs for Small Singers," by W. H. Nudlinger. "Songs of the Child world — No. 2," by Riley and Gaynor. "Song Stories for the Kindergarten," by Mildred Jane Patty S. Hill. "Finger Plays," by Emilie Paulson. "Dance of Brownies." "Popular Folk Games and Dances," by Mari R. Hafer. "Instrumental Characteristic Rythms — Part II," by C. S. Ander- son. "Mother Goose Songs for Little Ones," by Ethel Crawinshield. "Tilts and Lyrics — for the School Room," by Alice C. D. Riley and Jessie S. Gaynor. "Songs and Music of Froebels Mother Plays." "Small Songs for Small Singers," by W. H. Nudlinger, with pictures by W. Bobbett. "Songs and Games for Little Ones," by Gertrude Walker and Harriet S. Jenks. The Oliver Ditson Co., Boston. "Children's Old and New Singing Games," by Mari R. Hafer. "Brainard's Rythmical Movements, Marches, Skips, Etc. — for Home, School and Kindergarten." Skips. "Skipping Tag." "Skip by Turn." "Skip with Partner." "Skip to School by Nine." "Hippy Hop to Barber Shop." 148 Waltz Time. "Skating." ''Swings." "Hammocks." "Swimming." "Slow March — % time — step on first beat." "Swinging Step." Other Steps. "Goose Step." "Twining Wreath." "Going Thru Gates — Morning Bows — Flower Song." "Heel-Toe Polka." "Run, Run, Run, Hop, one foot and other foot." "Shoemake Dance." "Two Step Skip with Partner — go sideways.' "How-d'y Do, My Partner." jf » PART XIII LESSONS XX AND XXI of Home Study Course of Mothers Kindergarten School Copyright 1914 MOTHERS KINDERGARTEN SCHOOL KANSAS CITY. MISSOURI LESSON XX A YEARNS WORK IN NATURE STUDY IN TFIE KINDERGARTEN. We begin in the fall with the dog or cat family (usually the latter) because the children are familiar with them and interested in them. We take up their life and study it according to this outline. 1. Animal, (cat, rabbit, dog, etc.) 1. 2. Preservation of young through. 1. 3. Protection. 1. 4. Tending and making a safe shelter for their infancy. 2. 4. Guarding from danger or harm. 3. 4. Teaching them habits of self protection. 2. 3. Constant care. 1. 4. Cleaning. 2. 4. Providing and giving food. 3. 4. Teaching young to find their own food. Begin with animal life because it is active, (plant life is not and besides it is too different from child) because child's own or man's life is too near him — he can't see the whole thing and because it comes in between man life and plant life and just fits. Also be- cause it is familiar to most children because the common experiences make them better acquainted. Before long (two or three weeks) we begin the study of the seed, and we make a connection with animal life, comparing the family life of the plant and the animal. We make this connection stronger by calling them ''seed babies," and by making a very strong point of the protection and care of young by both plant and animal. Show how plant mother protects her baby and let the children feel the chestnut burrs and see protective colorings, bristles, etc. The means of dispersal is also a strong point, and right here we bring in about the farmer putting some away to provide for nextt years crop. We must put thought of life in the seed for we want the children i to feel the spark of life in every single seed. The mother put the spark of life there and it is ready to grow if it has the least chance. ''Grow up just like the mother, for the mother put some of her own life in each little seed," etc. Think of how* much life she must have had to put some in each little seed. All this life in the seeds Godi gave to the mother plant and she gave to the seeds. Methods for Fall Work. 1. Collection of seeds, (a seed chart is good). 2. Seed stories, (Brown Seed Story is good). 151 3. Verses, (help to sum it up). 4. Seeds that are brought in and classified. 5. Get seeds out and look at them occasionally all winter. 6. Planting seeds for Jack o'lantern and after Thanksgiving. 7. "Squirrel's Surprise," is also a very good story. 8. Notice buds in trees all winter from the time the leaves fall. At same time speak of roots down in the ground and how they are getting ready. We do not drop all of fall work when we take up Christmas work, but keep it in mind all winter long. We can never succeed if we wait until spring to plan our spring work. We must never forget from the first day and we must make every bit of fall work fit into spring work, even through the winter. This is very essential, and we should be able to pick up threads of fall in spring. A calendar will help the continuity of our nature work wonder- fully. Draw a picture of the fall season on the blackboard and then change it with the seasons to illustrate each. Every morning take just a few minutes to talk about the weather and to make a record on the calendar. For example if weather is sunny, paste a yellow circle on that day, etc. Here is the chance to keep in touch with nature work all year. If day is sunny, we can speak about how nice and warm the seeds must be, etc. January is the hardest month to plan for. But use work of frost, snow, formation of ice, winter birds, rabbits and other wild animals. Story of "Why Bear Sleeps All Winter" and "Raggylug." In Feb- ruary things begin to suggest themselves. Now we can begin to have a jar of buds sitting in the window, and to plant bulbs, etc., for Easter time. We begin seed planting soon after bringing in bulbs and buds. Now we come to the goal we started for in the fall. Last fall we told children of life in the seed and now we're going to show it to them. Let children plant seeds and plan definitely so they'll feel the push, force, and life of the seed. Let each table have its own pot or box. Bring them on circle every morning and appoint a child to water them and then talk about them. We make a point of comparison (nothing so good for observation) between buds in house and those out doors on the trees. We notice all signs of spring — change in character of wind — often rain, longer days, brighter sunshine, whiteness of cottonwood, redness of maple, guminess of cottonwood buds, sparrows gathering stuff for nests, return of early birds, first rain that brings up earth worms, etc. We can add to the picture on the calendar the first blade of grass or violet. We should keep just ahead of the season out of doors so children will commence to watch. Observation is largely a matter of cultivation. Then comes our return to family life. We take up work of classifying. We also take up different birds and learn their habits. One of last subjects in plant work and one that sums up the sub- ject is to bring in a blossom and show the formation of a seed — show how little cradle is formed there in the blossom (all that holds 152 the little life is there). We can also show the children the pollen on the stamen and how it helps to make the little seed and how it is waiting for it because it brings life. We should not allow children to pull flowers apart. Put it in a jar and let petals fall off — and watch the stamen dry up. The little seed receptacles will grow a little, enough at least to see how the little green fruit is forming. This completes the cycle of the seed. In spring in connection with '*Brown Seed Story" if we make a point of identity and seed it will help child to get the life idea. Let the child know that warmth and moisture are going to bring both to life; that seed is an egg and an egg is a seed. In each case the mother has put her own life into it and each life has it. We should dwell on the spiritual side of nature-work for it is one of the best means to make children feel and know God. Have cocoon in kindergarten and let children see butterflies and moths come out. Have an outdoor garden if possible. The thought of continuity and all that it implies should run through our nature work from September until June. By laying the right emphasis on the life that changes its form from lower to higher, we can bring out the resurrection beautifully. And we can make the feeling of it so strong in a child that he will never be able to get away from it. Right here in our nature work we can make the children feel the goodness, power and love of God so strongly that it will never pass — it will become a foundation. No matter how much work we put in nature study it is never wasted, for it is the foundation of many many things. Everything in our nature work depends upon interest aroused through imagination. It is certainly a wonderful thing to cultivate imagination and to lead a child to see invisible through visible. Spring Work. I. Seeds and Plants. 1. Plant seeds in kindergarten. 2. Let each have his own little box, if possible and plant his own seeds. 3. Draw them at different stages in growth. 4. Seeds may be planted in egg shell or sponge. 5. Plant sweet peas — have window garden of peas, beans, lettuce and radishes. Watch growth. 6. Plant some seeds in moistened saw dust or cotton to ob- serve germination. 7. Make garden in sand bed (if there is one). And also with 6th gift. 8. Plant grass seed in a sponge and watch development. II. Flowers. 1. Tell about snow drop and crocuses. 2. Bring in first weeds and become acquainted. 3. Have plant potted in kindergarten. 153 4. Paper cutting of various flowers. 5. Use rings to outline flowers. 6. Draw or paint leaves and dandelions. 7. Take a trip to green house — build with 5th gift. 8. Take walks and bring back flowers. 9. Make May baskets to hold wild flowers. 10. Draw and paint Pussy Willow. 11. Gather milk weed pods for refilling pillows in doll houses (if made during fall and winter). III. Twigs. 1. Take from bushes and trees, put in water in kinder- garten to watch leaves gradually unfold. Draw at difterent stages of growth. IV. Elements. 2. Rain, \^ind, sun and effects on all growing things. 3. Draw picture of windy day, (kites, weather vanes, etc.) 4. Build wind mill. 5. Make pin wheels. 6. Bring cocoons into kindergarten, watch, draw and model in clay. V. Animal. 1. Have rabbits, turtles, and chickens as pets. Fish, snails, and tadpoles where children can observe and care for them. Model and draw them. 2. Earth worms — observe out of doors after rain — bring to kindergarten in a box of earth and watch them. Observe castings and dig them up. 3. Cut out and mount pictures. 4. Make border of rabbits. At Easter time make posters of rabbits and chickens. 5. If possible let children see a hive of bees. 6. Observe ants. VI. Birds. 1. Talk about their return northward in spring and nest building. 2. Take children to see bird houses in parks, etc. 3. Speak of most common birds and show colored pictures of them. 4. Have a real bird's nest in the kindergarten and observe how it is made. 5. Make clay nest and eggs and mother bird. 6. Model bird (common one) in clay and paint it. 7. Watch return of birds. Methods of Work. Our object is to get children to feel the relationship between ttheir lives and the life of plants and animals, thru the imagination. 154 We appeal from first to last in nature work in the kindergarten to the imagination, and if it isn't reached work is unsuccessful. We are striving to enlarge the child spiritually; to show the relation of life; to show the unity of all things; and to make him feel that he is one of God's creatures. The whole tendency of this nature work is to lead children to observe. LESSON XXI NATURE WORK— References. Birds. Chapman's (Little hand book). F. M. Bailey (Little hand book). Food of birds in relation to agriculture. Weed book — best on food. Dugmore on "Nesting Habits of Birds." Irene Wheelock — "Nestings of Forest and Marsh." O. F. Miller's (all good). John Burroughs' "Wake Robin." Blanchan's (both of them). ^ "The Robin Story" by Fannie Hardy Eckstorm (her book on woodpecker is the best of its kind published). Animals. "Wild life near Home," by Sharp (it is also called "A Watcher in the Woods"). (Good.) Ernest Seton Thompson's (all of his). Charles G. D. Roberts. William J. Long. Insects. "Moths and Butterflies," by Mary Dickerson. "Butterfly Books," by Scudder. "The Life of a Bee." The Bee People. The Margaret Marley Books. "The Fairyland of Science," by Arabella Buckley. John Burrough's book on bees. Clarence Weed's "Seed Books." Clarence Weed's "Insect Books." Trees. "A Guide to the Trees," by Alice Lousnburg. "Our Nature Trees," by Harriet Keeler. Ten New England Blossoms and their Insect Visitors," by Weed. << Seeds. "Seed Dispersal," by Beale. "Seed Babies," by Margaret Morley. 156 / STORY TELLING CLASSIFICATION IN OBSERVATION. Means of Impression. 1. Tell them the story. 2. Let them retell it. 3. Tell own experiences. 4. Dramatize story. 5. Pictures and object itself if available. 6. Real experiences with animal — cat or chicken, (in case you are studying animals instead of plants). 7. Drawing from object. 8. Modeling from object. 9. Bringing in things after interest is aroused you can bring up characteristics of animals or plant, (for example, the cat's eyes, or turning of the sunflower). 10. Talks. 11. Classifying (in plant study). 12. Walks. Means of Expression. 1. Dramatization — games. 2. Songs and rhymes — more expressive than impressive be- cause children haven't vocabulary and they feel things that they can't express only in these songs and rhymes. 3. Occupation work. 1. Free Drawing. 2. Free Modeling. Expressing what they have learned. 3. Sewing the pictures. 4. Free cutting. 5. Illustrative work with gifts. The following points are necessary to remember in carrying out nature programs: First Point: Mothers love. This can be expressed even in plant life by the cradles the mother makes for her baby seeds. Second Point: Things that will be of interest to the children. Third Point : How to go about it. Morris Reed No. II on "The Bag Worm." etc Stories in Connection with Nature Work. Seeds. "Little Brown Seed." ^'Mother Apple Tree and Her Babies." "The Big Red Apple." "Milk-weed Babies." "Burr Babies." Animals. "The Lazy Young Squirrel." etc. 157 ''Mr. and Mrs. Bushy Tail." "Susie's Dream. 'Taliby Gray.' "Mrs. Chinchilla. ''Raggylug." 'Why the Bears Sleep all Winter." Birds. ''Robin Stories." "The Nest of Many Colors." "The Storks." Caterpillar. "The Lesson in Faith." Other Stories. "The Little Chicken that Wouldn't Eat Gravel." "Mrs. Speckle." "Sleeping Beauty Story." "Story of Siegefried." "Prosperine" — (in Hawthorne's Wonder Book). "The Lamb With the Longest Tail." "The Wind's Work," by Maude Linsay. Verses. Seeds. The Pumpkin Seed, "A Fairy Seed I Planted, etc." Apple Seeds, "We've Lived in a House Red, Yellow and Round." Burr Brothers — "Close by the Side of the Road They Grew." The Apple is Good for a Number of Things. Little Milkweed Babies. Other Fall Work. "Jack Frost" — "Some One Has Been in the Garden," etc. "The Little Stream and Jack Frost." "The Pigeon," by Emile Paulson. "Stream was running at play," "Come Little Leaves." Winter Work. "The Roll of Bread." bv Maude Lindsay. "The Bowl of Milk," by Emile Paulson. Snow Flahe^ — "ilie Little Snow People are Hurrying Down," etc. "My Snowball." "I had a little snow-ball once," etc. '♦Snow"— "When the Little Honey Bees," etc. "If Snow Were Frosting." "Winter"— "When the Winds of Winter Beat," etc. Spring Work. "The Wind" — "I saw you toss the kites on high." 158 "Spring" — **I guess the pussy willows now." — Van Dykes. Pussy Willows — ''If I put you down by the fire," etc. ''Ducks" — "When first the grass grows green in spring." "Little Brown Seed" — "In the warm earth deep, so deep," etc. "Waiting to Grow." "It is Spring" — "The wind blows, the sun shines, the birds sing loud." Pussy Willows — "Listen !" said a Pussy Willow. Pussy Willows — "Did you ever hear of pussies that never scratch nor mew?" "Buttercup" — What makes the buttercup so yellow? Buttercup — "Oh, you buttercup, yellow buttercup, shining, down there in," etc. ^ Dandelion — "Bright Little Dandelion, will you now show, whether ■ my child likes," etc. "The Woodpecker." The Rain — "Who likes the rain? I, said the duck." Rain— "What doss the rumbling thunder say?" Rain — "Sprinkle, sprinkle comes the rain." "The Brook" — Little brook, little brook, you have such a happy look." "What Do We Plant." "What do we plant when we plant the trees?" etc. Songs in Connection with Nature Work. Fall. "I Love Little Pussy," or "Kitty and Doggy." "Pigeon House." "Jack Frost is a Roguish Fellow." "One day as Mr. Squirrel went up the tree to bed." "Dancing and whirling the little leaves came." Mr. Duck and Mr. Turkey. Beside the Barn Yard's Open Gate. Winter. "The Snow— "Flakes are Falling." "Merry Little Snow Flakes." "Shoemaker — " Spring. "In the Sunny Southland." "Dainty Pussy Willows." Wind Song. "At Easter Time." "Oh, you buttercup, dainty buttercup," etc. "Crocuses and Tulips." "Frog Song." "Tit-tat-toe." "Pitter patter falls the rain." . 159 "Other rain songs." 'The nest high up in the tree." GAMES. Fall. Dramatizing stories and 6ven songs and verses. Impersonating pumpkin rolHng, ducks, animals, gathering nuts and fruits; various things getting ready for winter; seeds; birds; especially pigeons and birds going soutfi; pitching hay and many other farmer in- dustries. Brownie Games. "Wind Mill." "Skating." "Jack Frost Games." Winter. Spring. "Swinging Games." Games, played to rhythm. Flower gardens (growth during soft music, swaying in breeze). Birds returning. 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