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SABCL - Sri Aurobindo Birth Centenary Library

CWSA - Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo

CWM - Collected Works of The Mother

Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/14-March-1973.htm
14 March 1973 B- reads a letter to Mother from a teacher who expressed the desire “to get away from this agi- tation and to leave the school for this year. ” Then the circumstances that determined this decision were explained to Mother. As for me, I don't understand anything about all these matters. For me they are...What does A have to say about this?            A: I don't know what to tell you, Mother. Just tell me: what impression do you have? I have the feeling that a spirit of confusion has entered into the school and is making a...They mean the same thing and they use different terms, and so the terms clash. I know that they have a ver
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/Mother's-Action-in-a-Class-of-Aged-16 to 18.htm
-59_Mother's-Action-in-a-Class-of-Aged-16 to 18.htm In the course of each session, the ques- tions were formulated by each student indivi- dually and sent together to Mother. (The students wrote to Mother, asking to be allowed to work with her on a study on death. Mother gave these instructions orally to the teacher.}   The subject is: What is death? How should you begin? You must look into yourself, look inside; do not try to know by reading books or to find out what is happening in the vital and the mind: what you feel, what you think about death. The research should be carried out exclusively on a material plane: what is death, from the physical point of view? Y
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/Correspondence-(b).htm
-62_Correspondence-(b).htm Correspondence  (b) The teacher should not be a book that is read aloud, the same for everyone, no matter what his nature and character. The first duty of the teacher is to help the student to know himself and to discover what he is capable of doing. For that one must observe his games, the activities to which he is drawn naturally and spontaneously and also what he likes to learn, whether his intelligence is awake, the stories he enjoys, the activities which interest him, the human achievements which attract him. The teacher must find out the category to which each of the children in his care belongs. And if after careful observation he discovers two or three
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/5-April-1967.htm
VII CONVERSATIONS 5 April 1967 (Mother writes a note.) It is an answer to a question. Do you know what I told the teachers of the school? I have been asked another question. Here is the beginning of my reply: “The division between `ordinary life' and `spiritual life' is an outdated antiquity.” Did you read his question? Read it again to me. “We discussed the future. It seemed to me that nearly all the teachers were eager to do something so that the children could become more conscious of why they are here. At that point I said that in my opinion, to speak to the children of spiritual things often has the opposite result, and that
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/To-Women.htm
To Women about Their Body {Answers to Some Questions) 1. For God's sake can't you forget that you are a girl or a boy and try to become a human being? 2. Each idea (or system of ideas) is true in its own time and place. But if it tries to be exclusive or to persist even when its time is over, then it ceases to be true. The Mother * While handling children in the Group for Physical Education we meet certain problems with girl stu- dents. Most of these are suggestions put upon them by their friends, older girls, parents and the doctor. Please throw your light on the following questions so that we may be better equipped in our kn
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/24-Feb-1973.htm
24 February 1973 A: For this evening I would like to read you a letter from X, which follows on from what you said the other day in reply to her question: “We have no- ticed that in some children there is a very strong vital movement which follows the physical gesture. For others, it is just a game. There is even one boy who marches up and down the veranda, announcing that he is going to be a soldier in `Mother's Army'. Have you any precise indication to give us about these various cases?” Marches what?             A: He marches on the veranda. Not on the edge?            A: No, no. And then he makes
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/Curriculum.htm
Curriculum STUDY OF WORKS OF SRI AUROBINDO AND THE MOTHER Sweet Mother, how should one read your books and the books of Sri Aurobindo so that they might enter into our consciousness instead of being understood only by the mind? To read my books is not difficult because they are written in the simplest language, almost the spoken language. To draw profit from them, it is enough to read with attention and concentration and an attitude of inner goodwill with the desire to receive and to live what is taught. To read what Sri Aurobindo writes is more difficult because the expression is highly intellectual and the language is much more literary and philosoph
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/Psychic-Education.htm
  Psychic Education and Spiritual Education             So far we have dealt only with the education that can be given to all children born upon earth and which is concerned with purely human faculties. But one need not inevitably stop there. Every human being carries hidden within him the possibility of a greater consciousness which goes beyond the bounds of his present life and enables him to share in a higher and a vaster life. Indeed, in all exceptional beings it is always this consciousness that governs their lives and organises both the circumstances of their existence and their individual reaction to these circumstances. What the human mental consciousness does n
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/Teaching-French-to-Students.htm
  ABOUT TESTS Tests may be useful in giving you the academic worth of a child, but not his real worth. As for the real worth of a child, something else is to be found, but that will be for later on, and will be of a different nature. I am not opposing real worth to academic worth; they can coexist in the same individual, but it is a rather rare phenomenon which produces exceptional types of people. 1962 * (Mother's comments in the margin of a letter from a teacher about French in the school. The students were using work-sheets.) One of the reasons why the children do not make any progress in French is that the teachers do not
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of The Mother/English/CWMCE/On Education_Volume-12/26-Feb-1973.htm
26 February 1973 A reads out to Mother a series of questions to be answered by the teachers. A: And now the last question that we have is: “Mother wrote that there should be no difference in the mind of the child between play and work, especially for young children, for whom the joy of learning should come from interest. How do you think things should be so that there is no difference between play and work? Do you have any suggestions to make?” The most important thing is the parents and their school… school...going to school. We could very well not tell them, “You are going to school...You are coming...Today we shall play such and