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Friedrich Fröbel

Friedrich Wilhelm August Fröbel or Froebel (German: [ˈfʁiːdʁɪç ˈvɪlhɛlm ˈʔaʊɡʊst ˈfʁøːbl̩] ; 21 April 1782 – 21 June 1852) was a German pedagogue, a student of Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi, who laid the foundation for modern education based on the recognition that children have unique needs and capabilities. He created the concept of the kindergarten and coined the word, which soon entered the English language as well. He also developed the educational toys known as Froebel gifts.

Friedrich Fröbel
Born
Friedrich Wilhelm August Fröbel

(1782-04-21)21 April 1782
Died21 June 1852(1852-06-21) (aged 70)
EraModern philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
Main interests
Pedagogy
Notable ideas

Biography edit

 
House in Oberweißbach where Fröbel was born

Friedrich Fröbel was born at Oberweißbach in the Principality of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt in Thuringia. A cousin of his was the mother of Henriette Schrader-Breymann, and Henriette became a student of his.[1] Fröbel's father, Johann Jacob Fröbel, who died in 1802, was the pastor of the orthodox Lutheran (alt-lutherisch) parish there. Fröbel's mother's name was Jacobine Eleonore Friederike (born Hoffmann). The church and Lutheran Christian faith were pillars in Fröbel's own early education. Oberweißbach was a wealthy village in the Thuringian Forest and had been known centuries long for its natural herb remedies, tinctures, bitters, soaps and salves. Families had their own inherited areas of the forest where herbs and roots were grown and harvested. Each family prepared, bottled, and produced their individual products which were taken throughout Europe on trade routes passed from father to son, who were affectionately called Buckelapotheker or "Rucksack Pharmacists". They adorned the church with art acquired from their travels, many pieces of which can still be seen in the renovated structure. The pulpit from which Fröbel heard his father preach is the largest in all Europe and can accommodate a pastor and 12 people, a direct reference to Christ's apostles.[citation needed]

Shortly after Fröbel's birth, his mother's health began to fail. She died when he was nine months old, profoundly influencing his life. In 1792, Fröbel went to live in the small town of Stadt-Ilm with his uncle, a gentle and affectionate man. At the age of 15 Fröbel, who loved nature, became the apprentice to a forester. In 1799, he decided to leave his apprenticeship and study mathematics and botany in Jena. From 1802 to 1805, he worked as a land surveyor.[citation needed]

On 11 September 1818, Fröbel wed Wilhelmine Henriette Hoffmeister (b. 1780) in Berlin. The union was childless. Wilhelmine died in 1839, and Fröbel married again in 1851. His second wife was Louise Levin.

Career edit

 
Allgemeine Deutsche Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau, nowadays the Keilhau Free Fröbel School

Throughout his career, Fröbel would move between his interests in nature and in education.[2] He began as an educator in 1805 at the Musterschule (a secondary school) in Frankfurt, where he learned about Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi's ideas. He later worked with Pestalozzi in Switzerland, where his ideas further developed. From 1806, Fröbel was the live-in teacher for a Frankfurt noble family's three sons. He lived with the three children from 1808 to 1810 at Pestalozzi's institute in Yverdon-les-Bains in Switzerland.

In 1811, Fröbel once again went back to school in Göttingen and Berlin, eventually leaving without earning a certificate. He became a teacher at the Plamannsche Schule in Berlin, a boarding school for boys, and at that time also a pedagogical and patriotic centre.

During his service in the Lützow Free Corps in 1813 and 1814 – when he was involved in two military campaigns against Napoleon – Fröbel befriended Wilhelm Middendorf, a theologian and fellow pedagogue, and Heinrich Langethal, also a pedagogue.

After Waterloo and the Congress of Vienna Fröbel found himself a civilian once again, and became an assistant at the Museum of Mineralogy under Christian Samuel Weiss during 1814–1816, studying and cataloging mineral crystals.[2] He became fascinated with their structure, and later would write: "I continually proved to be true what had long been a presentiment with me, namely, that even in these so-called lifeless stones and fragments of rock, torn from their original bed, there lay germs of transforming, developing energy and activity. Amidst the diversity of forms around me, I recognised under all kinds of various modifications one law of development...And thereafter, my rocks and crystals served me as a mirror wherein I might descry mankind, and man’s development and history...Geology and crystallography not only opened up for me a higher circle of knowledge and insight, but also showed me a higher goal for my inquiry, my speculation, and my endeavour. Nature and man now seemed to me mutually to explain each other, through all their numberless various stages of development."[2]

In 1816, he was offered a professorship in Stockholm, but he turned it down and instead founded the Allgemeine Deutsche Erziehungsanstalt (German General Education Institute) in Griesheim near Arnstadt in Thuringia. A year later, he moved the school to Keilhau near Rudolstadt. In 1831, work would be continued there by the other cofounders Wilhelm Middendorf and Heinrich Langethal.

In 1820, Fröbel published the first of his five Keilhau pamphlets, An unser deutsches Volk ("To Our German People"). The other four were published between then and 1823.

In 1826, he published his main written work, Die Menschenerziehung ("The Education of Man") and founded the weekly publication Die erziehenden Familien ("The Educating Families"). In 1828 and 1829, he pursued plans for a people's education institute (Volkserziehungsanstalt) in Helba (nowadays a constituent community of Meiningen), but they were never realized.

From 1831 to 1836, Fröbel once again lived in Switzerland. In 1831, he founded an educational institute in Wartensee (Lucerne). In 1833, he moved this to Willisau, and from 1835 to 1836, he headed the orphanage in Burgdorf (Berne), where he also published the magazine Grundzüge der Menschenerziehung (Features of Human Education). In 1836 appeared his work Erneuerung des Lebens erfordert das neue Jahr 1836 (The New Year 1836 Calls For the Renewal of Life).

He returned to Germany, dedicated himself almost exclusively to preschool child education and began manufacturing playing materials in Bad Blankenburg. In 1837, he founded a care, playing and activity institute for small children in Bad Blankenburg. From 1838 to 1840, he also published the magazine Ein Sonntagsblatt für Gleichgesinnte (A Sunday Paper for the Like-Minded).

In 1840, he coined the word kindergarten for the Play and Activity Institute he had founded in 1837 at Bad Blankenburg for young children, together with Wilhelm Middendorf and Heinrich Langethal. These two men were Fröbel's most faithful colleagues when his ideas were also transplanted to Keilhau near Rudolstadt. In 1840 the educator Emily Ronalds was the first British person to study Fröbel's approach and he urged her to transplant his kindergarten concepts in England.[3]

He designed the educational play materials known as Froebel Gifts, or Fröbelgaben, which included geometric building blocks and pattern activity blocks. A book entitled Inventing Kindergarten, by Norman Brosterman, examines the influence of Friedrich Fröbel on Frank Lloyd Wright and modern art.

Friedrich Fröbel's great insight was to recognise the importance of the activity of the child in learning. He introduced the concept of "free work" (Freiarbeit) into pedagogy and established the "game" as the typical form that life took in childhood, and also the game's educational worth. Activities in the first kindergarten included singing, dancing, gardening, and self-directed play with the Froebel Gifts. Fröbel intended, with his Mutter- und Koselieder – a songbook that he published – to introduce the young child into the adult world.

These ideas about childhood development and education were introduced to academic and royal circles through the tireless efforts of his greatest proponent, the Baroness (Freiherrin) Bertha Marie von Marenholtz-Bülow. Through her Fröbel made the acquaintance of the Royal House of the Netherlands, various Thuringian dukes and duchesses, including the Romanov wife of the Grand Duke von Sachsen-Weimar. Baroness von Marenholtz-Bülow, Duke von Meiningen and Fröbel gathered donations to support art education for children in honor of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Goethe. The Duke of Meiningen granted the use of his hunting lodge, called Marienthal (Vale of Mary) in the resort town of Bad Liebenstein for Fröbel to train the first women as Kindergarten teachers (Kindergärtnerinnen).

After suppressing the German revolutions of 1848–49, the Prussian government continued a crackdown on new ideas, banning kindergartens in 1851.[2] This dismayed Fröbel, who died on 21 June 1852 in Marienthal, now a constituent community of Schweina.[4] His grave can still be found in the cemetery at Schweina, where his widow, who died in Hamburg, was also buried on 10 January 1900.

Legacy edit

 
The Fröbel Memorial at the Fröbel Kindergarten in Mühlhausen, Thuringia shows the pedagogical basic forms.
 
Fröbelturm near Oberweißbach

Fröbel’s idea of the kindergarten had found appeal, but its spread in Germany was thwarted by the Prussian government, whose education ministry banned it in a Kindergartenverbot edict on 7 August 1851 as "atheistic and demagogic" for its alleged "destructive tendencies in the areas of religion and politics".[citation needed] Other German states followed suit.[citation needed]

The reason for the ban, however, may have been a confusion of names. Fröbel's nephew Karl Fröbel had written and published Weibliche Hochschulen und Kindergärten ("Female Colleges and Kindergartens"), which apparently met with some disapproval. To quote Karl August Varnhagen von Ense, "The stupid minister (Karl Otto) von Raumer has decreed a ban on kindergartens, basing himself on a book by Karl Fröbel. He is confusing Friedrich and Karl Fröbel."[citation needed]

The sudden ban caused a diaspora of teachers from Germany, spreading their ideas to other countries.[5] Fröbel's student Margarethe Schurz founded the first kindergarten in the United States at Watertown, Wisconsin in 1856 (though another student, Louisa Frankenberg, founded a school based in Fröbel's methods in Columbus, Ohio in 1836, prior to Fröbel's coining of the term "Kindergarten"[6].) In both schools instruction was in the German language, and primarily served immigrant communities. She inspired Elizabeth Peabody, who went on to found the first English-language kindergarten in the United States, in Boston in 1860.[7] The German émigré Adolph Douai had also founded a kindergarten in Boston in 1859, but had to close it after only a year. By 1866, however, he was founding others in New York City.[8]

From the mid to late nineteenth century, many missionary women from Western countries disseminated Froebel’s theory of kindergarten education across Japan. The prominent American missionary and Froebelian Annie L. Howe (1852–1943) was particularly influential through the establishment of her Glory Kindergarten teacher training school. Howe developed curricula specifically for Japanese students and trained hundreds of Japanese women to use Froebelian methods in kindergarten education.[9]

The pedagogue August Köhler was the initiator and cofounder in 1863 of the Deutscher Fröbelverein (German Fröbel Association), first for Thuringia, out of which grew the Allgemeiner Fröbelverein (General Fröbel Association) in 1872, and a year later the Deutscher Fröbelverband (German Fröbel Federation). Köhler critically analyzed and evaluated Fröbel theory, adopted fundamental notions into his own kindergarten pedagogy and expanded on these, developing an independent "Köhler Kindergarten Pedagogy". He first trained kindergarten teachers in Gotha in 1857. In the beginning, Köhler had thought to engage male educators exclusively, but far too few applied.

Thekla Naveau founded in October 1853 the first kindergarten in Sondershausen and on 1 April 1867 the first kindergarten after the Prussian ban was lifted in Nordhausen. Angelika Hartmann founded in 1864 the first kindergarten after Fröbel’s model in Köthen, Anhalt. In 1908 and 1911, kindergarten teacher training was recognized in Germany through state regulatory laws.

Since then, there are many kindergartens in Germany named after Fröbel that continue his method. Many have sprung from parental or other private initiatives. The biggest Fröbel association, Fröbel e.V., today runs more than 100 kindergartens and other early childhood institutions throughout the country through the Fröbel-Gruppe.

Committed to Fröbel's legacy is also the Neuer Thüringer Fröbelverein (NTFV; New Thuringian Fröbel Association), and in particular to protecting the legacy's business receipts. As well, the Association runs a school museum and the Fröbel Archive in Keilhau. Furthermore, it engages itself in Fröbel institutions worldwide (United States, United Kingdom, Japan). Through this network, the NTFV further continues one of the most prominent lines of modern pedagogy from the authentic "Fröbel town" of Keilhau. The Fröbel Diploma, now conferred by the Fröbel Academy in Nordhausen, can also be traced back to the NTFV. All this ensures that Fröbel’s ideas will live on into the future.

In 1892, followers of Fröbel established a college of teacher education in South West London to continue his traditions. Froebel College is now a constituent college of Roehampton University and is home to the university's department of education. The University of Roehampton Library is also home to the Froebel Archive for Childhood Studies,[10] a collection of books, archives, photographs, objects and multi-media materials, centring on Friedrich Fröbel’s educational legacy, early years and elementary education. The Demonstration School, originally located at Colet Court, Kensington, has evolved into Ibstock Place School, Roehampton.

Today the Pestalozzi-Fröbel-Haus in Berlin continues to train nursery school teachers.[11]

There is a National Kindergarten Day in the United States on his birthday, April 21.[12]

Cultural influence edit

Fröbel's building forms and movement games are forerunners of abstract art as well as a source of inspiration to the Bauhaus movement.[13][5] In Fröbel’s honour, Walter Gropius designed the Friedrich Fröbel Haus. Many modernist architects were exposed as children to Fröbel's ideas about geometry, including Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier, and Buckminster Fuller.[5]

Works edit

 
In the Netherlands, fröbelen means to be busy with arts and crafts, as promoted in a shop in Terborg.

(Selected from those of his time at Keilhau)

  • An unser deutsches Volk (To Our German People). Erfurt 1820.
  • Durchgreifende, dem deutschen Charakter erschöpfend genügende Erziehung ist das Grund- und Quellbedürfnis des deutschen Volkes. Erfurt 1821.
  • Die Grundsätze, der Zweck und das innere Leben der allgemeinen deutschen Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau bei Rudolstadt. Rudolstadt 1821.
  • Die allgemeine deutsche Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau betreffend (Concerning the General German Educational Institution in Keilhau). Rudolstadt 1822.
  • Über deutsche Erziehung überhaupt und über das allgemeine Deutsche der Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau insbesondere. Rudolstadt 1822.
  • Fortgesetzte Nachricht von der allgemeinen deutschen Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau. Rudolstadt 1823.
  • Die Menschenerziehung, die Erziehungs-, Unterrichts- und Lehrkunst, angestrebt in der allgemeinen deutschen Erziehungsanstalt zu Keilhau. Erster Band. Keilhau-Leipzig 1826.
  • Die erziehenden Familien. Wochenblatt für Selbstbildung und die Bildung Anderer. Keilhau-Leipzig 1826.

References edit

  1. ^ "Henriette Schrader-Breymann".
  2. ^ a b c d Kahr, Bart (January 2004). "Crystal Engineering in Kindergarten". Crystal Growth & Design. 4 (1): 3–9. doi:10.1021/cg034152s. Retrieved 2019-04-11.
  3. ^ Ronalds, B.F. (2023). "Emily Ronalds (1795–1889) and her Social Reform Work". Transactions of the Unitarian Historical Society. 28 (2): 81–95.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-10-21. Retrieved 2015-10-27.
  5. ^ a b c "Froebel's Gifts". 99% Invisible. 9 April 2019. Retrieved 2019-04-11.
  6. ^ Contributor, Guest (2016-09-14). "Thank Two German Immigrant Women Kindergarten". Engage – Claremont Lincoln University. Retrieved 2023-04-16. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  7. ^ "Kindergartens: A History (1886)". Social Welfare History Project. 2015-07-15. Retrieved 2022-07-26.
  8. ^ "TSHA | Douai, Carl Daniel Adolph". www.tshaonline.org. Retrieved 2022-07-26.
  9. ^ Nishida, Yukiyo (2022). "Missionary Froebelians' Pedagogy and Practice: Annie L. Howe and Her Glory Kindergarten Teacher Training School". History of Education Quarterly. 62 (4): 447–474. doi:10.1017/heq.2022.7. S2CID 248037983.
  10. ^ "Froebel Archive for Childhood Studies". Studentzone.roehampton.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 2012-07-18. Retrieved 2011-11-12.
  11. ^ Pestalozzi Froebel Haus 2019-04-01 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 2 August 2015
  12. ^ "Celebrating National Kindergarten Day". IANR News. 2022-04-05. Retrieved 2022-07-26.
  13. ^ Frederick M. Logan, Kindergarten and Bauhaus, College Art Journal, Vol. 10, No. 1 (Autumn, 1950), pp. 36–43

Further reading edit

  • Berger, Manfred: 150 Jahre Kindergarten. Ein Brief an Friedrich Fröbel. Frankfurt 1990
  • Berger, Manfred: Frauen in der Geschichte des Kindergartens. Ein Handbuch. Frankfurt 1995
  • Fröbel, Friedrich (1900) The Student's Froebel: adapted from "Die Erziehung der Menschheit" of F. Froebel, by William H. Herford. 2 vols. London: Isbister, 1900–01. pt. 1. Theory of education – pt. 2. Practice of education (Substantially a translation of Froebel's work, with editorial comments and annotations)
  • Hebenstreit, Sigurd: Friedrich Fröbel – Menschenbild, Kindergartenpädagogik, Spielförderung. Jena 2003. ISBN 978-3-934601-58-1
  • Heiland, Helmut: Die Konzeption des Sachunterrichts bei Fröbel (1782–1852). In: Kaiser, A./Pech, D. (Hrsg.): Geschichte und historische Konzeptionen des Sachunterrichts. Baltmannsweiler 2004, pp. 69–72
  • Heiland, Helmut: Friedrich Fröbel in Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. Reinbek 1982
  • Heiland, Helmut: Die Schulpädagogik Friedrich Fröbel. 1993
  • Wollons, Roberta. L., (Ed). Kindergartens and cultures : the global diffusion of an idea. New Haven, CT, Yale University Press, 2000 ISBN 978-0300077889

External links edit

  • Works by Friedrich Fröbel at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Friedrich Fröbel at Internet Archive
  • Friedrich Fröbel in the German National Library catalogue
  • Heinrich Heppe (1878), "Fröbel, Friedrich", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), vol. 8, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 123–124
  • "Friedrich Fröbel". Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German).
  • Information about Friedrich Fröbel
  • Friedrich Fröbel website
  • Friedrich Fröbel: His life and influence on education
  • How to make a Fröbel star
  • "Fröbel, Friedrich Wilhelm August" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

friedrich, fröbel, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, addi. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Friedrich Frobel news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Friedrich Wilhelm August Frobel or Froebel German ˈfʁiːdʁɪc ˈvɪlhɛlm ˈʔaʊɡʊst ˈfʁoːbl 21 April 1782 21 June 1852 was a German pedagogue a student of Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi who laid the foundation for modern education based on the recognition that children have unique needs and capabilities He created the concept of the kindergarten and coined the word which soon entered the English language as well He also developed the educational toys known as Froebel gifts Friedrich FrobelBornFriedrich Wilhelm August Frobel 1782 04 21 21 April 1782Oberweissbach Schwarzburg Rudolstadt Holy Roman EmpireDied21 June 1852 1852 06 21 aged 70 Schweina Saxe Meiningen German ConfederationEraModern philosophy 19th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophy German philosophyMain interestsPedagogyNotable ideasFroebel gifts Froebel star disputed Kindergarten Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Career 2 Legacy 3 Cultural influence 4 Works 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography edit nbsp House in Oberweissbach where Frobel was bornFriedrich Frobel was born at Oberweissbach in the Principality of Schwarzburg Rudolstadt in Thuringia A cousin of his was the mother of Henriette Schrader Breymann and Henriette became a student of his 1 Frobel s father Johann Jacob Frobel who died in 1802 was the pastor of the orthodox Lutheran alt lutherisch parish there Frobel s mother s name was Jacobine Eleonore Friederike born Hoffmann The church and Lutheran Christian faith were pillars in Frobel s own early education Oberweissbach was a wealthy village in the Thuringian Forest and had been known centuries long for its natural herb remedies tinctures bitters soaps and salves Families had their own inherited areas of the forest where herbs and roots were grown and harvested Each family prepared bottled and produced their individual products which were taken throughout Europe on trade routes passed from father to son who were affectionately called Buckelapotheker or Rucksack Pharmacists They adorned the church with art acquired from their travels many pieces of which can still be seen in the renovated structure The pulpit from which Frobel heard his father preach is the largest in all Europe and can accommodate a pastor and 12 people a direct reference to Christ s apostles citation needed Shortly after Frobel s birth his mother s health began to fail She died when he was nine months old profoundly influencing his life In 1792 Frobel went to live in the small town of Stadt Ilm with his uncle a gentle and affectionate man At the age of 15 Frobel who loved nature became the apprentice to a forester In 1799 he decided to leave his apprenticeship and study mathematics and botany in Jena From 1802 to 1805 he worked as a land surveyor citation needed On 11 September 1818 Frobel wed Wilhelmine Henriette Hoffmeister b 1780 in Berlin The union was childless Wilhelmine died in 1839 and Frobel married again in 1851 His second wife was Louise Levin Career edit nbsp Allgemeine Deutsche Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau nowadays the Keilhau Free Frobel SchoolThroughout his career Frobel would move between his interests in nature and in education 2 He began as an educator in 1805 at the Musterschule a secondary school in Frankfurt where he learned about Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi s ideas He later worked with Pestalozzi in Switzerland where his ideas further developed From 1806 Frobel was the live in teacher for a Frankfurt noble family s three sons He lived with the three children from 1808 to 1810 at Pestalozzi s institute in Yverdon les Bains in Switzerland In 1811 Frobel once again went back to school in Gottingen and Berlin eventually leaving without earning a certificate He became a teacher at the Plamannsche Schule in Berlin a boarding school for boys and at that time also a pedagogical and patriotic centre During his service in the Lutzow Free Corps in 1813 and 1814 when he was involved in two military campaigns against Napoleon Frobel befriended Wilhelm Middendorf a theologian and fellow pedagogue and Heinrich Langethal also a pedagogue After Waterloo and the Congress of Vienna Frobel found himself a civilian once again and became an assistant at the Museum of Mineralogy under Christian Samuel Weiss during 1814 1816 studying and cataloging mineral crystals 2 He became fascinated with their structure and later would write I continually proved to be true what had long been a presentiment with me namely that even in these so called lifeless stones and fragments of rock torn from their original bed there lay germs of transforming developing energy and activity Amidst the diversity of forms around me I recognised under all kinds of various modifications one law of development And thereafter my rocks and crystals served me as a mirror wherein I might descry mankind and man s development and history Geology and crystallography not only opened up for me a higher circle of knowledge and insight but also showed me a higher goal for my inquiry my speculation and my endeavour Nature and man now seemed to me mutually to explain each other through all their numberless various stages of development 2 In 1816 he was offered a professorship in Stockholm but he turned it down and instead founded the Allgemeine Deutsche Erziehungsanstalt German General Education Institute in Griesheim near Arnstadt in Thuringia A year later he moved the school to Keilhau near Rudolstadt In 1831 work would be continued there by the other cofounders Wilhelm Middendorf and Heinrich Langethal In 1820 Frobel published the first of his five Keilhau pamphlets An unser deutsches Volk To Our German People The other four were published between then and 1823 In 1826 he published his main written work Die Menschenerziehung The Education of Man and founded the weekly publication Die erziehenden Familien The Educating Families In 1828 and 1829 he pursued plans for a people s education institute Volkserziehungsanstalt in Helba nowadays a constituent community of Meiningen but they were never realized From 1831 to 1836 Frobel once again lived in Switzerland In 1831 he founded an educational institute in Wartensee Lucerne In 1833 he moved this to Willisau and from 1835 to 1836 he headed the orphanage in Burgdorf Berne where he also published the magazine Grundzuge der Menschenerziehung Features of Human Education In 1836 appeared his work Erneuerung des Lebens erfordert das neue Jahr 1836 The New Year 1836 Calls For the Renewal of Life He returned to Germany dedicated himself almost exclusively to preschool child education and began manufacturing playing materials in Bad Blankenburg In 1837 he founded a care playing and activity institute for small children in Bad Blankenburg From 1838 to 1840 he also published the magazine Ein Sonntagsblatt fur Gleichgesinnte A Sunday Paper for the Like Minded In 1840 he coined the word kindergarten for the Play and Activity Institute he had founded in 1837 at Bad Blankenburg for young children together with Wilhelm Middendorf and Heinrich Langethal These two men were Frobel s most faithful colleagues when his ideas were also transplanted to Keilhau near Rudolstadt In 1840 the educator Emily Ronalds was the first British person to study Frobel s approach and he urged her to transplant his kindergarten concepts in England 3 He designed the educational play materials known as Froebel Gifts or Frobelgaben which included geometric building blocks and pattern activity blocks A book entitled Inventing Kindergarten by Norman Brosterman examines the influence of Friedrich Frobel on Frank Lloyd Wright and modern art Friedrich Frobel s great insight was to recognise the importance of the activity of the child in learning He introduced the concept of free work Freiarbeit into pedagogy and established the game as the typical form that life took in childhood and also the game s educational worth Activities in the first kindergarten included singing dancing gardening and self directed play with the Froebel Gifts Frobel intended with his Mutter und Koselieder a songbook that he published to introduce the young child into the adult world These ideas about childhood development and education were introduced to academic and royal circles through the tireless efforts of his greatest proponent the Baroness Freiherrin Bertha Marie von Marenholtz Bulow Through her Frobel made the acquaintance of the Royal House of the Netherlands various Thuringian dukes and duchesses including the Romanov wife of the Grand Duke von Sachsen Weimar Baroness von Marenholtz Bulow Duke von Meiningen and Frobel gathered donations to support art education for children in honor of the 100th anniversary of the birth of Goethe The Duke of Meiningen granted the use of his hunting lodge called Marienthal Vale of Mary in the resort town of Bad Liebenstein for Frobel to train the first women as Kindergarten teachers Kindergartnerinnen After suppressing the German revolutions of 1848 49 the Prussian government continued a crackdown on new ideas banning kindergartens in 1851 2 This dismayed Frobel who died on 21 June 1852 in Marienthal now a constituent community of Schweina 4 His grave can still be found in the cemetery at Schweina where his widow who died in Hamburg was also buried on 10 January 1900 Legacy edit nbsp The Frobel Memorial at the Frobel Kindergarten in Muhlhausen Thuringia shows the pedagogical basic forms nbsp Frobelturm near OberweissbachFrobel s idea of the kindergarten had found appeal but its spread in Germany was thwarted by the Prussian government whose education ministry banned it in a Kindergartenverbot edict on 7 August 1851 as atheistic and demagogic for its alleged destructive tendencies in the areas of religion and politics citation needed Other German states followed suit citation needed The reason for the ban however may have been a confusion of names Frobel s nephew Karl Frobel had written and published Weibliche Hochschulen und Kindergarten Female Colleges and Kindergartens which apparently met with some disapproval To quote Karl August Varnhagen von Ense The stupid minister Karl Otto von Raumer has decreed a ban on kindergartens basing himself on a book by Karl Frobel He is confusing Friedrich and Karl Frobel citation needed The sudden ban caused a diaspora of teachers from Germany spreading their ideas to other countries 5 Frobel s student Margarethe Schurz founded the first kindergarten in the United States at Watertown Wisconsin in 1856 though another student Louisa Frankenberg founded a school based in Frobel s methods in Columbus Ohio in 1836 prior to Frobel s coining of the term Kindergarten 6 In both schools instruction was in the German language and primarily served immigrant communities She inspired Elizabeth Peabody who went on to found the first English language kindergarten in the United States in Boston in 1860 7 The German emigre Adolph Douai had also founded a kindergarten in Boston in 1859 but had to close it after only a year By 1866 however he was founding others in New York City 8 From the mid to late nineteenth century many missionary women from Western countries disseminated Froebel s theory of kindergarten education across Japan The prominent American missionary and Froebelian Annie L Howe 1852 1943 was particularly influential through the establishment of her Glory Kindergarten teacher training school Howe developed curricula specifically for Japanese students and trained hundreds of Japanese women to use Froebelian methods in kindergarten education 9 The pedagogue August Kohler was the initiator and cofounder in 1863 of the Deutscher Frobelverein German Frobel Association first for Thuringia out of which grew the Allgemeiner Frobelverein General Frobel Association in 1872 and a year later the Deutscher Frobelverband German Frobel Federation Kohler critically analyzed and evaluated Frobel theory adopted fundamental notions into his own kindergarten pedagogy and expanded on these developing an independent Kohler Kindergarten Pedagogy He first trained kindergarten teachers in Gotha in 1857 In the beginning Kohler had thought to engage male educators exclusively but far too few applied Thekla Naveau founded in October 1853 the first kindergarten in Sondershausen and on 1 April 1867 the first kindergarten after the Prussian ban was lifted in Nordhausen Angelika Hartmann founded in 1864 the first kindergarten after Frobel s model in Kothen Anhalt In 1908 and 1911 kindergarten teacher training was recognized in Germany through state regulatory laws Since then there are many kindergartens in Germany named after Frobel that continue his method Many have sprung from parental or other private initiatives The biggest Frobel association Frobel e V today runs more than 100 kindergartens and other early childhood institutions throughout the country through the Frobel Gruppe Committed to Frobel s legacy is also the Neuer Thuringer Frobelverein NTFV New Thuringian Frobel Association and in particular to protecting the legacy s business receipts As well the Association runs a school museum and the Frobel Archive in Keilhau Furthermore it engages itself in Frobel institutions worldwide United States United Kingdom Japan Through this network the NTFV further continues one of the most prominent lines of modern pedagogy from the authentic Frobel town of Keilhau The Frobel Diploma now conferred by the Frobel Academy in Nordhausen can also be traced back to the NTFV All this ensures that Frobel s ideas will live on into the future In 1892 followers of Frobel established a college of teacher education in South West London to continue his traditions Froebel College is now a constituent college of Roehampton University and is home to the university s department of education The University of Roehampton Library is also home to the Froebel Archive for Childhood Studies 10 a collection of books archives photographs objects and multi media materials centring on Friedrich Frobel s educational legacy early years and elementary education The Demonstration School originally located at Colet Court Kensington has evolved into Ibstock Place School Roehampton Today the Pestalozzi Frobel Haus in Berlin continues to train nursery school teachers 11 There is a National Kindergarten Day in the United States on his birthday April 21 12 Cultural influence editFrobel s building forms and movement games are forerunners of abstract art as well as a source of inspiration to the Bauhaus movement 13 5 In Frobel s honour Walter Gropius designed the Friedrich Frobel Haus Many modernist architects were exposed as children to Frobel s ideas about geometry including Frank Lloyd Wright Le Corbusier and Buckminster Fuller 5 Works edit nbsp In the Netherlands frobelen means to be busy with arts and crafts as promoted in a shop in Terborg Selected from those of his time at Keilhau An unser deutsches Volk To Our German People Erfurt 1820 Durchgreifende dem deutschen Charakter erschopfend genugende Erziehung ist das Grund und Quellbedurfnis des deutschen Volkes Erfurt 1821 Die Grundsatze der Zweck und das innere Leben der allgemeinen deutschen Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau bei Rudolstadt Rudolstadt 1821 Die allgemeine deutsche Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau betreffend Concerning the General German Educational Institution in Keilhau Rudolstadt 1822 Uber deutsche Erziehung uberhaupt und uber das allgemeine Deutsche der Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau insbesondere Rudolstadt 1822 Fortgesetzte Nachricht von der allgemeinen deutschen Erziehungsanstalt in Keilhau Rudolstadt 1823 Die Menschenerziehung die Erziehungs Unterrichts und Lehrkunst angestrebt in der allgemeinen deutschen Erziehungsanstalt zu Keilhau Erster Band Keilhau Leipzig 1826 Die erziehenden Familien Wochenblatt fur Selbstbildung und die Bildung Anderer Keilhau Leipzig 1826 References edit Henriette Schrader Breymann a b c d Kahr Bart January 2004 Crystal Engineering in Kindergarten Crystal Growth amp Design 4 1 3 9 doi 10 1021 cg034152s Retrieved 2019 04 11 Ronalds B F 2023 Emily Ronalds 1795 1889 and her Social Reform Work Transactions of the Unitarian Historical Society 28 2 81 95 Frobel s biography Archived from the original on 2016 10 21 Retrieved 2015 10 27 a b c Froebel s Gifts 99 Invisible 9 April 2019 Retrieved 2019 04 11 Contributor Guest 2016 09 14 Thank Two German Immigrant Women Kindergarten Engage Claremont Lincoln University Retrieved 2023 04 16 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Kindergartens A History 1886 Social Welfare History Project 2015 07 15 Retrieved 2022 07 26 TSHA Douai Carl Daniel Adolph www tshaonline org Retrieved 2022 07 26 Nishida Yukiyo 2022 Missionary Froebelians Pedagogy and Practice Annie L Howe and Her Glory Kindergarten Teacher Training School History of Education Quarterly 62 4 447 474 doi 10 1017 heq 2022 7 S2CID 248037983 Froebel Archive for Childhood Studies Studentzone roehampton ac uk Archived from the original on 2012 07 18 Retrieved 2011 11 12 Pestalozzi Froebel Haus Archived 2019 04 01 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 2 August 2015 Celebrating National Kindergarten Day IANR News 2022 04 05 Retrieved 2022 07 26 Frederick M Logan Kindergarten and Bauhaus College Art Journal Vol 10 No 1 Autumn 1950 pp 36 43Further reading editThis article lacks ISBNs for the books listed Please help add the ISBNs or run the citation bot July 2019 Berger Manfred 150 Jahre Kindergarten Ein Brief an Friedrich Frobel Frankfurt 1990 Berger Manfred Frauen in der Geschichte des Kindergartens Ein Handbuch Frankfurt 1995 Frobel Friedrich 1900 The Student s Froebel adapted from Die Erziehung der Menschheit of F Froebel by William H Herford 2 vols London Isbister 1900 01 pt 1 Theory of education pt 2 Practice of education Substantially a translation of Froebel s work with editorial comments and annotations Hebenstreit Sigurd Friedrich Frobel Menschenbild Kindergartenpadagogik Spielforderung Jena 2003 ISBN 978 3 934601 58 1 Heiland Helmut Die Konzeption des Sachunterrichts bei Frobel 1782 1852 In Kaiser A Pech D Hrsg Geschichte und historische Konzeptionen des Sachunterrichts Baltmannsweiler 2004 pp 69 72 Heiland Helmut Friedrich Frobel in Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten Reinbek 1982 Heiland Helmut Die Schulpadagogik Friedrich Frobel 1993 Wollons Roberta L Ed Kindergartens and cultures the global diffusion of an idea New Haven CT Yale University Press 2000 ISBN 978 0300077889External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Friedrich Frobel nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Friedrich Frobel nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Froebel Friedrich Wilhelm August Works by Friedrich Frobel at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Friedrich Frobel at Internet Archive Friedrich Frobel in the German National Library catalogue Heinrich Heppe 1878 Frobel Friedrich Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie ADB in German vol 8 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot pp 123 124 Friedrich Frobel Biographisch Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon BBKL in German Froebel Education Centre Demonstration School for The Froebel Institute Information about Friedrich Frobel Friedrich Frobel website Friedrich Frobel His life and influence on education Friedrich Frobel s letters How to make a Frobel star Frobel Friedrich Wilhelm August New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Friedrich Frobel amp oldid 1176458905, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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