跟读练习: A Day in the Life of Waldorf Education: Alex Clark Explores Imagination and Nature at Acorn School! - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
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I've always been fascinated by how education shapes culture and communities.
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I've always been fascinated by how education shapes culture and communities.
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Today, I'm exploring a philosophy that has inspired students and families for over a century
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and is now seeing a resurgence as parents seek alternatives to traditional education.
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I'm Alex Clark, and today I'm stepping into a world where learning intertwines with creativity,
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imagination, and nature.
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Welcome to Acorn School, a Waldorf-inspired homeschool enrichment program that reimagines the very essence of how children learn.
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Hello, I'm Miss Alex.
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I'm going to be doing school with you today.
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Is that okay?
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Charlie, come here.
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Can you meet me?
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Hi!
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What are we learning about today?
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Butterflies!
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Oh!
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You knew!
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You knew it was butterflies!
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You were in a butterfly dress just for the occasion.
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Oh my gosh!
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That makes sense, why you guys have butterfly stuff.
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And you got the butterfly.
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That's what we're learning about today.
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Cool!
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You're going to the house?
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Yep.
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Who do you think lives in there when we're not here?
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Secret bugs.
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Secret bugs?
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Wow!
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Scorpions!
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Oh, you're probably right.
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Okay, well, you guys are scorpion patrol.
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Go look in that cabin,
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see if there's any secret bugs.
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I saw a scorpion before only of them.
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Oh, okay.
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Well, at least it was dead.
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Have you ever seen a scorpion?
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No. Me neither.
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But I saw a scorpion in the brown.
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You did?
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And it was yellow.
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Oh.
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I decided to create Acorn School because I grew up going to a Waldorf school and I loved it.
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It was absolutely magical.
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When I became a mom I knew I wanted to homeschool
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and I didn't want to send my kid to a Waldorf school although I loved them.
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I wanted something that I could do with my children.
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Acorn School was just this idea of maybe we could do once a week where we meet up
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and do something Waldorf inspired.
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My biggest thing was like I want to stay.
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I don't want to leave.
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I want to be there with my kids and kind of do it like a homeschool co-op style.
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And little did I know there was so many other people that wanted to do that too.
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So that's kind of how it evolved was there was a lot of people interested in joining us.
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us.
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Waldorf education is built on a holistic approach,
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one that nurtures the head, heart, and hands.
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It's about more than just academic knowledge.
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It's about growing the whole person,
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cultivating emotional intelligence, creativity, and a deep connection to the world around us.
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What makes Waldorf education stand out is its focus on experiential learning.
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Rather than sitting at desks all day,
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students here are encouraged to engage with the world around them.
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They explore the arts, immerse themselves in nature,
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and develop problem-solving skills through hands-on activities.
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Circle time!
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As the sun makes its way into our morning sky,
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we let the light wake up our minds.
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As the morning dew melts away,
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we let the light wake up our minds.
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As the morning dew melts away,
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we join together to learn and play.
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Say hello to the sun,
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to the birds and to your friends.
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Our day of adventure now begins.
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Thank you.
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The Waldorf education is special to me because the kids get so much creative freedom.
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They get so much time to play pretend and set up fun games for themselves.
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And I think that all of our crafts get to really bring out the creative expression in all of the kids.
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They get a lot of freedom.
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They get to have a lot of fun.
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I also think it's really special that in our classes, it's multiple ages.
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So the kids get to hang out not only with kids their age.
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It helps get them ready for the rest of their life
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because you're not always just going to be hanging out with kids in your grade
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or in your age of school." Waldorf education also places a strong value on imagination and creativity.
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Learning here isn't confined to textbooks — it's about bringing abstract concepts to life,
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whether through painting, storytelling, or building.
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Is it a worm?
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Well, you know, I'm trying to make a caterpillar,
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but worms are more my forte.
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The difference that parents will get with a Waldorf education would be that they get to be really involved,
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especially here at Acorn School,
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the parents get to help their kids with their craft instead of
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when I was in public school it was just me with all of my students
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and then the parents you know would help with homework
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but here the parents get to be with their kids helping them with every aspect of not only just class
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but social situations as well
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but perhaps one of the most distinctive features of waldorf education
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is its deep connection to nature at acorn school outdoor learning
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is not just an add-on it's an essential part of the the curriculum.
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Nature serves as both classroom and teacher.
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Whether it's through gardening, nature walks,
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or simply observing the changing seasons,
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students learn resilience, patience, and curiosity.
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Being outside allows children to develop critical life skills like problem solving and collaboration.
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They discover the world by doing,
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which fosters independence and confidence.
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Nature-based learning also helps children stay grounded,
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promoting emotional well-being in a fast-paced world.
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My favorite part of all Acorn School days is watching the kids free play
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and just watching the magic that happens and the interactions
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that happen and them being able to be out in nature and just run free.
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We don't even as moms like obviously we keep an eye on them
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but we feel so safe here and they can really play
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and engage with other children without us having to be hawking over what they're doing.
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And I feel like that gives them a lot of freedom to interact
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and be kids and get to know other kids and to have real life situations happen.
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I feel like at the normal playground,
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it's like you have to be a helicopter mom
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because you don't know who's there
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and you don't know what the other children are gonna talk about
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and you don't know if they're gonna be nice children and you don't know if they're gonna fall off the play structure,
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but here there's just so much freedom for them to be kids.
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Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
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It's like the earth is growing a little hair.
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The earth is growing.
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This is where grapes are going to grow up.
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Oh, wow.
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Here's our baby.
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What does this?
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I don't know.
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What does it feel like? like?
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They feel like stuffies.
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Feels like a stuffy?
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Do you think they're from the tree?
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Maybe they're from the mother nature.
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You think they're from mother nature?
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Hey daddy mom!
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We chose acorn school because family is incredibly important to us.
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I am a mom of four.
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I have an eight-year-old, I have a five-year-old,
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I have a very inquisitive two-year-old,
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and I also have a six-month-old,
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and it was very important to us to keep everybody together.
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I think that family is something that is really undervalued,
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the connection between siblings in particular,
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and I wanted to be able to keep everybody together for as long as I possibly could
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and foster the bond between them,
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and so Acorn School was the perfect opportunity for that.
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We were looking for some sort of enrichment program
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or a community since my daughter is an only child
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and making the choice to homeschool felt a little scary
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and challenging with an only child
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so we were really looking for a good strong community that had consistent friendships and relationships for her.
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I remember the first time that we came to class Adalyn just jumped right in
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but also as a mom it felt like I was able to jump right in
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and connect with the other moms and it just felt very safe and welcoming.
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In Waldorf it's really important that we're not just focusing on curriculum
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and learning how to read and write and do math but also that we're paying attention to the child's creativity,
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their self-development, their character are really important to us as a family.
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My oldest is about to turn five.
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She is very free-spirited.
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When we first came to Acorn School I was like there's no way she's gonna sit in circle
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and the teachers were so great about allowing her to kind of move through the day as she willed.
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So she would come, she would do things,
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and then she would like run and climb a tree and they were all about it.
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They were like, yes she can do whatever she needs to do.
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And my youngest child, she can be very stubborn
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but she is very creative and like loves to do things with her hands.
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She looks up to the older kids and they include her and everything and play with her also which is really sweet.
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In my opinion I think dad should support more free play
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just for the simple fact each of our kids is unique
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and they're their own individual and and they really get to develop themselves and find out who they really are,
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what they really know, how they really learn,
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as opposed to just the construct that we have where they're forced to sit down.
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My son is very rambunctious,
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but he's super hyper-focused on the things that he really likes.
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In my opinion, that's the best thing for him and for my family as well.
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By far the most magical thing to witness is just the kids' relationships.
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The way that they talk about each other,
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the way they play pretend with each other.
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When you overhear them saying kind and nice and inclusive things with each other,
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it really just reinforces how special and impactful and different it is here
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because when you hear their playing and their make-believe and their own little worlds,
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it just reminds you how important that is for them.
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Childhood education, I think, should focus on children first and foremost.
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I think that it should focus on the fundamentals of childhood.
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We need to really get into what makes sense to a child's brain,
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what fosters their imagination, how to bring things into their consciousness that maybe aren't really highlighted in a typical setting.
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And I think that those things are incredibly important and those are the things that I focus on actually most,
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more than traditional academics at this age with our children's education.
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For me, growing up, I really excelled in public school,
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but I lost my love for learning you have to get an A
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and you have to do all these things with so much pressure.
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And so for my own children,
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I wanted an education that focused on what they love and that as they learn,
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they would stay engaged in it and excited about it
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and wouldn't get to this place where they're disillusioned because they're just worrying about what they're gonna get on a test.
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I think childhood education should really focus on the individual needs of the child,
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what they love, what they're passionate about,
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and who they wanna be as people.
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Everybody is here from grandmothers to babies to toddlers to siblings.
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Families feel like they can come here together.
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They don't only come here for my six-year-old,
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but I come here for my whole family to get an experience that's really special.
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Wow, no red 40 at this table, it's amazing.
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This was such a beautiful experience to see these kids in nature.
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No screens, no seed oils,
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the full family present from grandma to dad,
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all of the siblings, everybody playing together in community together.
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This is what education is supposed to look like.
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This is what it really means to raise a child in a village community.
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These kids were so social.
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They were coming up to me right away telling me that they drank raw milk just like me.
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They were storytelling and using their imagination and putting on capes and princess crowns and frolicking through a sunflower field.
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This is what true childhood is.
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These are the days that they're going to remember when they're old and say,
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gosh, I remember loving being a kid.
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How many kids today can really truly say and mean that.
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I don't remember experiencing a day like this in
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so long where I just felt so fed from the community to the activity to being in God's design.
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It was just beautiful from start to finish.
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Not all Waldorf schools are going to be the same.
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You definitely want to ask questions,
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ask about curriculum, the values of the parents involved,
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but for me, Waldorf is magic and I just could not imagine something better for my future kids.
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Visiting Acorn School has been an inspiring journey into a world where education is a living,
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breathing art form.
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Here, learning isn't a passive experience.
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It's active, it's creative, and deeply connected to the natural world.
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Whether through storytelling, hands-on projects,
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or nurturing relationships with nature,
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Waldorf Education invites us to rethink what it means to grow and learn,
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which is exactly what I imagined for my own kids one day.
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It's a reminder that education isn't just about filling minds.
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It's about shaping hearts and hands for a future that is as imaginative as it is grounded.
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Goodbye, dear friends!
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If you want to see more mini documentaries like this from
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me of me experiencing a day in the life of something
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or someone make sure you tell us in the comments thumbs up subscribe to this channel
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and make sure
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that you go to culture pot to carry the podcast listen to my full interview with the teachers emily rose
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and star i want to be else and you can be on it
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or how about there's two Who else is in the planet?
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Yeah.
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Can I be a hippo?
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Yes.
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Oh, good.
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Mine's a little bit of a mess, but that's all right.
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Aren't we all?
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Do you think they're going to be friends?
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No. Oh.
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You did?
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Let me see.
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He disappeared?
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Yeah.
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All these ladybugs, I think they have a dentist appointment.
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Oh, is he escaping?
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Yes.
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No, no, no, no, no. He flew away.
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Oh.
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Where are they all going today?
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I don't know.
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Probably they need an appointment.
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They have an appointment.
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That's what I said.
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One thing about me, I'm horrible at crap.
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Do you think my mom will hang this in her house?
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Here you go, Finn.
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Yay!
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Yay!
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Are you all done?
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Not again, again.
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We already did it!
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You did it!
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Can you say bye-bye?
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Can you say thank you?
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Say thank you for coming to school?
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Can you wave?
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Yeah.
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Perfect.
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背景与上下文
欢迎来到Acorn School,这是一所受华尔道夫教育启发的家庭教育拓展项目。主持人亚历克斯·克拉克一直对教育如何塑造文化和社区充满兴趣。在这个视频中,她深入探讨了华尔道夫教育理念,分享了自己与孩子们在学习中如何结合创造力、想象力和自然元素的经验。通过与孩子们的互动,亚历克斯展示了教育如何为孩子们开启探索世界的新视野。这种独特的教育方法正在逐渐受到越来越多家长的关注,他们希望寻找替代传统教育的方案。
日常交流中的五大短语
- Can you meet me? - 你能来见我吗?
- What are we learning about today? - 今天我们学习什么?
- Wow! Secret bugs? - 哇!秘密的虫子?
- You're going to the house? - 你要去那幢房子吗?
- I love it! - 我喜欢它!
这些短语不仅适用于教育场景,也可以作为雅思口语练习中的重要表达,帮助学生在日常交流中更自信地使用英语。
逐步跟读指南
对于希望提升自身英语口语能力的学习者,建议采用“影子跟读(shadowspeaks)”的方法。这种方法能够有效提高发音、语调和流利度。以下是具体的步骤:
- 选择一段视频:可以从此视频开始,找到感兴趣的部分进行练习。
- 逐句分解:仔细听每一句话,理解其含义并尽量模仿发音。
- 停顿与重复:在视频播放过程中,可以暂停卡片并重复其内容,尝试做到与原声一致。
- 录音对比:录下自己的跟读内容,与视频中的原声进行对比,找出差距并加以改进。
- 练习日常用语:将上述提到的短语融入到自己的日常交流中,确保在实际场景中能够灵活运用。
通过这种“英语影子跟读”的方法,学生们不仅可以提高口语技能,还能在观看 看YouTube学英语 内容时,更轻松地理解和吸收所学知识。
什么是跟读法?
跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。
