If you’ve had the experience of binding a book, knitting a sock, playing a recorder, then you feel that you can build a rocket ship-or learn a software program you’ve never touched. It’s not bravado, just a quiet confidence. There is nothing you can’t do. Why couldn’t you? Why couldn’t anybody? 

-Peter Nitze, Waldorf and Harvard graduate, and Director of an aerospace company

Grades Overview 

The journey from First Grade through Eighth Grade at Whatcom Hills Waldorf School is guided by the understanding that children learn best through multi-sensory lessons that engage their creative forces. Our time-tested, rigorous, academic education is brought to life by the class teacher who integrates storytelling (fables, mythological sagas, and stirring biographies of historical figures and events), drama, rhythmic movement, visual arts, and music into their daily work, weaving a tapestry of experience that brings each subject to life in the child’s thinking, feeling, and willing. In a Waldorf school, arts and academics are inseparable and learning is  infused with meaning through practical experiences. 

Our curriculum includes a number of specialty and enrichment classes such as art (watercolor painting, modeling, drawing, form drawing), world languages, handwork, music, movement, eurythmy and practical arts. Students also participate in weekly assemblies, class plays and field trips, including regional Waldorf school events, all carefully informed by child development and curriculum.


Typical Day:  

Start 8:30am • Main Lesson • Snack/Recess • Specialty Class (2) • Lunch/Recess • Specialty Class (2) • Close 3:00pm 

* Classes are dismissed at 1:15pm on Fridays *


First Grade 

After their rich experience in Kindergarten, our First Graders are physically robust and ready for more structured academic learning. Our First Graders are 6 years old by May 1st, which is very typical for Waldorf schools. Lessons administered with care and creativity help each child to develop healthy habits and self-discipline while continuing the all important learning foundation of imaginative thinking and curiosity. Literacy and numeracy is built through repetition, movement, imitation and rich images from stories. 

 Curriculum Highlights:

  • A pictorial, multi faceted exploration of the alphabet and sounds using an approach that involves nurturing reading, writing, listening and speaking skills
  • Study and performance of a class play
  • Fairy Tales and stories from around the world
  • Introduction to mathematics and four mathematical operations, using manipulatives and relatable stories to develop “number sense” strategies, mental math
  • Science - study of surroundings through nature walks and observation
  • Form drawing supports integration and handwriting 
  • Music - Singing and an introduction to the pentatonic flute
  • Practical arts - Handwork (learning to knit), crafts
  • Eurythmy and Movement - spatial awareness, and cooperative games and exercises to support physical development 
  • World Languages - Spanish & ASL

 

Second Grade

While the social cohesiveness and friendships so strongly fostered in First Grade begin to take root, individual personalities start to emerge even more strongly in Second Grade. Eager to explore the world around them, students become more aware of their separateness from others. Two extremes of moral conduct illustrated by stories of tricksters (such as fables) and tales of both ancient and more modern heroes / compassionate people. Math and language foundations from the previous year are built upon with rigorous learning of times tables, carrying and borrowing in addition and subtraction, and an introduction to place value . During their second grade year, our students all experience a thorough second grade assessment. This information is used by the class teacher to address each child’s unique needs, and to as a basis for further assessments or referrals where necessary.

Curriculum Highlights:

  • With a focus on phonics rules, our language arts curriculum includes reading, writing, spelling, listening skills, and speech work
  • Study and performance of a class play
  • Fables from around the world, legends, folk tales, and biographies
  • Mathematics - foundational arithmetic operations, such as times tables, place value, carrying and borrowing, mental math
  • Science - study of surroundings through nature walks and observation
  • Form drawing and an introduction to cursive handwriting
  • Music - Singing and pentatonic flute playing continue
  • Practical Arts - Handwork - knitting more challenging projects, crafts
  • Eurythmy and Movement - spatial awareness, and cooperative games and exercises to support physical development 
  • World Languages - Spanish & ASL



 

Third Grade

Significant developmental changes take place in this year as the “bubble of early childhood togetherness” bursts and children start to experience themselves as separate from others. Some may start to question everything and feel somewhat separate from the world, others may even feel loneliness and fear. This is an important time for the child to learn self sufficiency, investigate what it means to have a respectful relationship with the earth, and grow self-esteem through lots of hands-on work and the mastery of wonderful challenges.

Curriculum Highlights:

  • Language arts - multi faceted approach continues, foundational grammatical conventions such as parts of speech and punctuation. 
  • Study and performance of a class play
  • Tales & legends of Indigenous peoples, Hebrew stories
  • Self sufficiency lessons such as shelter building, cooking, fiber arts and clothing, agriculture & gardening
  • Mathematics - mental math, arithmetic, measurement, introduction to long division
  • Science - kitchen science, plant processes and dyeing of natural materials
  • Form drawing and cursive handwriting practice continue
  • Music - Singing, music notation and introduction to diatonic flute
  • Practical Arts -crocheting, spinning, weaving and sewing, gardening,simple woodworking projects
  • Eurythmy and Movement - spatial awareness, and cooperative games and exercises to support physical development 
  • World Languages - Spanish & ASL
  • Third graders participate in their first regional overnight event - Plough Days at Sunfield Farm & Waldorf School in Port Ludlow

 

Fourth Grade

Coming out of the “nine year change,” fourth graders emerge with increased confidence and a readiness to explore personal interests, gifts, strengths and challenges. The Norse sagas, full of characters with real human foibles who adventurously explore the world around them, are beloved by fourth graders and their unbridled curiosity. Likewise, through the study of the animal kingdom and the unique specializations of various species, the student learns more about the world and themselves. The geographical outlook is extended outwards from school/home environment to the neighborhood, city and county, then all the way to the state boundaries of Washington State. The study of the Salish coastal tribes of our region since time immemorial, as well as historical vignettes from Colonial history, enliven the fourth grader’s connection to the land and its use.

Curriculum Highlights:

  • Language arts - multi faceted approach continues, study of grammar and verb tenses
  • Study and performance of a class play
  • Norse stories, Coast Salish stories, local historical biographies
  • Geography - local geography and map making
  • Mathematics - mental math, arithmetic, introduction to fractions
  • Science - Zoology (human & animal studies) 
  • Form drawing, inspired by the Celtic woven forms and cursive handwriting practice continue
  • Music - singing and flute playing continue, as well as an introduction to an orchestral string instrument (violin, viola or cello)
  • Practical Arts - cross stitch, sewing and embroidery, woodworking
  • Eurythmy and Movement - spatial awareness, and cooperative games and exercises to support physical development 
  • World Languages - Spanish & ASL
  • Regional Waldorf Event - Coast Salish Cultural Sharing on Whidbey Island 

 

Fifth Grade

The Fifth Grade child is at a point of harmonious balance between childhood and adolescence, between the inner feeling world and the emerging world of intellectual objectivity. History moves from the mythological perspective to actual events, stirring the child’s experience of their own humanness, while geography leads the children further away into unfamiliar lands. Now it is possible for the child to gaze into the greater outer world while becoming ever more conscious of the world within. 

Curriculum Highlights: 

  • Language arts - whole literacy approach continues, grammar, composition
  • Study and performance of a class play
  • Study of Ancient Civilizations and Ancient Greece 
  • Geography of North, Central and South America
  • Mathematics - mental math, arithmetic, introduction to decimals, the metric system, geometry and free-hand geometric drawing
  • Science - Botany, includes mushroom foraging trips, and study of indigenous plant wisdom
  • Music - singing, flute playing, orchestral string instrument 
  • Practical Arts - four needle knitting in the round, felting, woodworking
  • Eurythmy and Movement - spatial awareness, and cooperative games and exercises to support physical development 
  • World Languages - Spanish & ASL
  • Mt. Baker Ski and Snowboard Day
  • Mountain School - 2 nights at the North Cascade Institute 
  • Regional Waldorf Event - Greek Games/Pentathlon

 

Perceiving beauty activates the same circuits that are active when we are highly curious. In effect, perceiving beauty may be a biochemical correlate of curiosity. From this perspective, the practice of play and the experience of beauty exercise critically important brain circuits involving the capacity to sustain attention, to engage in problem solving, and to come alive in a world full of wonder 

Henry Emmons, MD, David Alter, PhD

Middle School Overview

Developing adolescents at WHWS learn the value of meaningful human connections and transformative artistic expression through an integrated curriculum of math, science, humanities, world languages, the arts, music and movement. Our Waldorf teachers present academics experientially, with a focus on cause and effect, asking students to use careful observations and consider ideas from different perspectives before jumping to conclusions. Through these experiences, Waldorf students cultivate the capacities to be free thinking individuals, and of service to the world.


Typical Day: 

Start 8:30am • Main Lesson • Snack/Recess • Two Specialty Class  • Lunch/Recess • Two Specialty Class • Close 3:00pm 

* Classes are dismissed at 1:15pm on Fridays *


Sixth Grade 

In Sixth Grade the child takes a firm, intentional step into the outer world, while also having increased awareness of the physical self and bodily changes. Geological study of the earth, the rise and fall of the Roman empire, and the Medieval age all speak to the developmental stages of the sixth grader. The child is able to relate to the logic, discipline and orderliness of the Roman era while empathizing with the struggle and growth it represented in human history.  The sixth grade curriculum offers students the opportunity to use their developing understanding of causal relationships and to sharpen skills already developed in previous grades. 

Curriculum Highlights:

  • Language arts - whole literacy approach continues as well as an emphasis on note taking, composition, essay writing, writing letters, individual research reports and presentations
  • Study and performance of a class play
  • History - Ancient Rome, the birth of Islam and Christianity, Medieval Europe
  • World Geography, a focus on biomes of the word and the continent of Africa
  • Mathematics - mental math, economics, and introduction to percentages, use of geometric tools and exploration of geometric constructions
  • Science - Geology, Physics
  • Music - choral singing, flute playing, orchestral string instrument 
  • Practical Arts - making stuffed animals, woodworking
  • Eurythmy and Movement - spatial awareness, and cooperative games and exercises to support physical development 
  • World Languages - Spanish & ASL
  • Cyber Civics
  • North Cascades Backpacking Trip
  • Regional Waldorf Event - World Games

 

Seventh Grade 

As the Seventh grade student enters puberty they are on their way to selfhood. Their intellect is growing and expanding in new ways. Students relate readily with the history block of the Renaissance and Reformation, which show the flowering of human potential, art, science and learning. The study of biographies of people who struggled with existing authorities and social institutions to bring about great change speaks to this developmental stage.

Curriculum Highlights:

  • Language arts - poetry and writing various forms of composition, essay writing, individual research reports and presentations
  • Study and performance of a class play
  • History - World and European history including the Age of Exploration, the Reformation, and the Renaissance
  • World Geography continues with emphasis on economic aspects (contracts and trade between cultures)
  • Mathematics - mental math, computation, algebra, geometry
  • Science - Astronomy, Chemistry, Physics, Nutrition and Human Physiology
  • Music - choral singing, recorder playing, string orchestra
  • Practical Arts - doll making, woodworking, gardening
  • Eurythmy and Movement 
  • Washington State History 
  • World Languages - Spanish & ASL
  • Cyber Civics
  • North Cascades Backpacking Trip
  • Regional Waldorf Event - Renaissance Faire
  • Regional Waldorf Schools event - Seattle Track and Field Meet
  • Multi Day Sailing Trip aboard the Schooner Adventuress

 

Eighth Grade 

The Eighth Grade student experiences a birth into more of an intellectual consciousness, and crosses the threshold from childhood into adolescence. Eighth graders become more aware of themselves, their drives, and the rhythms of their bodies. Students are encouraged to take greater responsibility for their learning and are given the opportunity for self-discovery through a year long “Eighth Grade Project” involving a mentor from the greater community. The overarching theme in this year is for students to find their connection to the whole world and, through that process, come to know themselves. 

As the eighth grader asserts their independence, they look for examples of earnest striving in the adults around them. Historical studies of revolutions and struggles for independence speak volumes to them. The year culminates in a special graduation ceremony celebrating each student’s individual accomplishments throughout their educational journey at our school.

Curriculum Highlights:

  • Language arts - short stories, essay writing, individual research reports and presentations
  • Study and performance of a class play
  • American History, Revolutions, Human Rights, Civics
  • World Geography continues with emphasis on economic and political aspects
  • Mathematics - computation, Algebra 1, 3D Geometry
  • Science - Organic Chemistry, Meteorology, Physics, Human Anatomy
  • Music - choral singing, recorder playing, string orchestra
  • Practical Arts - making clothing using sewing machines, woodworking, gardening
  • Eurythmy and Movement 
  • World Languages - Spanish & ASL
  • Cyber Civics
  • 8th Grade Challenge course (backpacking and rock climbing in the North Cascades)
  • Regional Waldorf Schools event - Seattle Track and Field Meet
  • Culminating 8th Grade Trip - River Rafting Expedition In Utah

 

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