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Mother's Action in a Class of Children

Aged Ten to Eleven

 

How should we teach French to the young children?

 

The best thing would be to tell them a story, using very simple words and phrases so that they can understand (a little story, short and interesting or amusing), and then afterwards ask them to write down in class what they have heard.

 

Yes, but the children are very noisy.

 

A minimum of silence is necessary. I know that the most undisciplined children are usually the most intelligent. But to be tamed they must feel the pressure of an intelligence that is more powerful than their own. And for that, one must be able not to come down to their level, and above all know how to remain unaffected by what they do. In fact, it is a yogic problem.

 

Can calm in the teacher provide the solution to all these problems?  

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Yes, but for that the calm must be perfect in all parts of the being so that the power can express itself through him.

           

(The children's notebooks had been sent to Mother for her assessment.}

 

I have put marks in the children's notebooks without making any classification. Is this classification really necessary? Each one has different merits and it is difficult to grade them.  

 June-July 1960

 

(Extract from one of the teacher's letters:} I trust You and I trust the children because of You; as for myself, I know nothing and I want nothing, except what You want for us. Only show me at every step what should be done and how to answer. Lead us, and may we follow You silently in the depths of our hearts, whatever the outer results may be. Only let the children grow and flower in Your Peace and Love and let us all live together for You.

 

The relationship that has really been established between the class, you, the children and me, is certainly the most important thing and it must be preserved at all costs. But that depends on an inner attitude much more than on an outer framework or material organisation. In fact, this same attitude should be present throughout the whole school and all the classes, in all the teachers and all the students. This is what must be obtained and what we must strive for.

 

(There was a considerable improvement in the class. The teacher wrote) All this, which has so completely changed, is the result of Your work in us, isn't it? 

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Yes, certainly.  

 

(The teacher asked whether, because of the experiment which was going on with Mother, it would not be better to keep the same children the following year, rather than to take another group.}

 

An experiment should be flexible and plastic enough to be applicable and adapted to all the children, with any changes in detail that their different characters may require. So you may rest assured that the experiment will continue. Only the children may not be the same ones.

  

(The teacher had organised work-groups with the children. The results were uneven and the class was noisy. The teacher asked whether they should continue.}

 

Let them continue with the experiment. Little by little things will settle down and the results will improve.  

 

(After an excellent period, the work with the children became more difficult.}

 

This slackening is no doubt due to the approach of the holidays.

October 1960  

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