What is meditation?
How can the mind know if it has found what it calls the ultimate, the immeasurable, the nameless, the most sublime?
What is meditation? Read Post »
How can the mind know if it has found what it calls the ultimate, the immeasurable, the nameless, the most sublime?
What is meditation? Read Post »
It is rarely that one comes across a book about young girls that is not merely a saga of their times, of the pain and struggles in their lives, but also takes a proactive approach to actually doing what the title suggests – Reviving Ophelia.
Review of “Reviving Ophelia: Saving the Selves of Adolescent Girls”, Mary Pipher (Ph D) Read Post »
This is a set of six videos on child development, each lasting from one to one and a half hours, anchored by Dr.
Review of “A Series on Children’s Development”, Dr. Joseph Chilton Pearce Read Post »
I am sure all you mathematics teachers out there have had the following experience.
I undertook training in Kindergarten education at the Children’s Garden School in Chennai in 1978.
Stepping into Kindergarten Read Post »
There was a slight movement on the branch above us, well over fifty feet high.
Learning through Birds Read Post »
The Kaigal Valley landThe Krishnamurti Foundation India has had in its care about 200 acres of beautiful forest land at Kaigal Valley near the town of Palamner since 1984.
Working with the People of Kaigal Valley: Beginnings of a Conservation Project Read Post »
Going back through my diary and taking out excerpts for the Journal has been a rewarding experience for me.
“A Meandering, Dancing, River of Learning”: Excerpts from a Teacher’s Diary Read Post »
A few years ago I made a transition from teaching French as a foreign language to adults to making materials for teaching Hindi as a second language to young school goers in South India.
Teaching and Learning Hindi as a ‘Second’ Language: Exploring a new Terrain Read Post »
Images of GeographyGeography – the very name conjures up images of misty mountains, bubbling brooks, rapidly flowing rills, deep gorges, endless undulating plains, and majestic rivers, so slow-flowing that they almost seem indolent, yet with a hidden power that man has sought to harness for aeons.
The Human Perspective in Teaching Geography Read Post »
Sherlock Holmes, as is well known, was a person who was subject to violent fluctuations of mood.
The Unbearable Ennui of being Sherlock Holmes: A Meditation in Three Movements Read Post »
Information technology is changing and morphing so dramatically – Gordon Moore’s now-famous law projects the doubling of computer power every 18 months – that its implications for education can hardly be viewed from any fixed point.
Computers, Internet and Schools: Are we connected to reality? Read Post »
There has been a great deal of discussion regarding the use of computers and Internet in school education, more specifically in the area of teaching/ learning processes.
Does Information Technology Herald a Learning Revolution? Read Post »
Living and teaching in a school situated in the hub of the IT revolution, the impact of computers on a child’s psyche is not hard to observe.
Helping students understand the place of studying Computer Science Read Post »
For me, the central questions raised by the advent of computers in education are:
Challenges for the Teacher in the Information Technology Era Read Post »
The information revolution is sweeping the world. Computer networks capable of storing, processing and transmitting vast amounts of data are webbing their way into the lives of people the world over.
Points of View: Computers in School Education Read Post »
Last year Brockwood Park School initiated a new art class to explore the expressions of Western contemporary art, focusing on the phenomenon of ‘Conceptual Art’.
A Course in Contemporary Art Read Post »
Introduction In this piece I will discuss an Anthropology module we did at Brockwood, as part of a new class called the ‘Main Lesson’.
Studying Culture at Brockwood Read Post »
Like the first page of a novel, the first scene of a play, or the first chords of a piece of music, the first week of a new school year must communicate a lot.
In the Beginning: The First Week of a New School Year Read Post »
Brockwood Park School in England, founded by Krishnamurti in 1969, is an international residential school that brings together around 60 students from around 20 countries, aged between 14 and 20.
From Brockwood Park School Read Post »
To a thinking person, it is quite clear that human beings have collectively contributed more problems to the earth than any other species.
The Ground beneath our Feet Read Post »
In educating children, apart from developing their physical, intellectual and aesthetic capacities, are we not concerned with a non-verbal movement of the mind, with a heightened quality of attention, of observation and listening?
On Nurturing a Non-verbal Movement of the Mind Read Post »
‘Hey! I thought you said you had vertigo!?’ ‘Yeah…
Will you take the Risk? Read Post »
One of the units of my 10th grade English class at Oak Grove School is ‘critical thinking.’ Traditionally, in U.S.
A New Look at Critical Thinking Read Post »
Working with the intentions of the Krishnamurti schools takes us deep into the question, ‘What is learning?’ We can explore this better when we do not divide or compartmentalize learning into academic and non-academic, and separate this from day-to-day living. As teachers, the question challenges our very deep conditioning about knowledge and its place in
The Open Classroom Read Post »
The work of the Kindergarten teacher involves many dimensions of understanding.
The Kindergarten Teacher Read Post »
Consciousness is the primary datum of existence, of human existence, and perhaps of all existence.
Towards a Consciousness Curriculum Read Post »
I wonder what the future holds for us in the Krishnamurti schools.
The Power of Truth Read Post »
There is a churning in the world of education. Teachers, parents, administrators and policy-makers are being driven to question anew: ‘What are we doing with our children?’ ‘What values, dispositions and concerns are we creating in them?’ ‘What is the quality of relationships with peers and others that our children are imbibing?’ ‘What will be their relationship with the society and environment they are part of?’ ‘Will future generations be able to find wholesome responses to the many complex challenges of their times?’ These questions are not speculative or academic, but stem from sensitive observation of everyday realities, as much in the classroom as in the society around us.
High in the mountains there were hardly any birds; there were some crows, there were deer and an occasional bear.
Freedom is to be a light to oneself Read Post »
“Keats complained that Newton had destroyed the poetry of the rainbow by explaining it.
Review of “Unweaving the Rainbow”, Richard Dawkins Read Post »
UNDERSTANDING OURSELVES KRISHNAMURTI FOUNDATION TRUST, BROCKWOOD PARK, BRAMDEAN, HAMPSHIRE SO24 OLQ, ENGLAND, 1999, £ 9 – 14 US $.
Introducing Books by Krishnamurti on life and learning Read Post »