


| |
Ochil Tower is a Camphill Community, which forms the foundation for Curative
Education provided for children in the school.
Mission Statement of the Camphill
Community
The Camphill Movement, which was founded in 1940, works to
create Communities in which vulnerable children and adults, many with additional
support needs, can live, learn and work with others in healthy social
relationships based on mutual care and respect.
Camphill is inspired by Christian ideals as articulated by
Rudolf Steiner and is based on the acceptance of the spiritual uniqueness of
each human being, regardless of disability or religious or racial background.
Three
Aims and Objectives
The aims and objectives of the Camphill Communities are based on the
philosophical, educational and social principles of Rudolf Steiner (1861 1925),
as elaborated by Karl König (1902 1966) who founded the Camphill Movement in
1940 in Aberdeen. Camphill Communities have been established in many countries
throughout the world.
These aims and objectives are realised:
- in a form of community life, which recognises the universality of the
human spirit as an essential element in its formation and working.
Expression is given to this in the celebration of festivals, concern for the
environment and mutual care.
- in developing shared living situations which recognise the needs of
individuals. The "staff/client" relationship is replaced by mutual
relationships based on sharing daily life in all its manifold aspects,
including the preparation and sharing of meals, caring for the household and
surroundings, creating social events, and so on.
- in operating financially so that there is a flexible relationship between
work and payment for work done. Some receive salaries, others have their
financial needs met on an individual and co-operative basis.
Return to Top
Organisational Practices
The Mission Statement and the aims and objectives have marked implications
for all aspects of life in a Camphill Community.
 | Legal Structure |
 | Management and decision making |
 | Co-Worker status |
 | Co-Worker / ‘Client’ relationship |
 | Financial arrangement |
 | Structure of the day, week and year |
 | Arrangement of life in the Community |
 | Individual expectations and aims |
The above aspects will be dealt with in detail in the remaining part of the
Policy Statement.
The Camphill School
Camphill Communities are involved in a variety of social, cultural and land
based activities, ranging from working with very young children with additional
support needs to people having reached old age, land based ventures practising
bio-dynamic agriculture and gardening, supporting Camphill specific training
initiatives, therapeutic and medical work, etc..
Ochil Tower is one of five Camphill Schools in Britain and Northern Ireland.
Camphill Schools provide Curative Education for children and young people.
Curative Education is a multi-disciplinary professional activity, dedicated to
the care, educational and therapeutic needs of young people with additional
support needs.
Return to Top
Description of Ochil Tower School
Ochil Tower is a small residential School, which was founded in 1966 by C. R.
Lewers and established as a Camphill School in 1972.
The school offers day placements, weekly and fortnightly boarding
arrangements. This arrangement allows us to tailor the individual provision to
the needs and gives the possibility for the pupils to develop and maintain
ongoing contact with their parents.
Most of the pupils live within a 50 miles radius.
Ochil Tower offers curative education to a wide group of children with
additional support needs.
Return to Top
Aims and Objectives
Holistic
To provide an educationally rich environment which meets the
individual needs of the children in a flexible and holistic manner.
Working Together
To work closely together with parents and professionals, to
share experience and knowledge: to recognise a common attitude towards the needs
and potential of the children.
Recognition
To recognise each child, who happens to have additional
support needs, as having an eternal individuality, and the same spiritual and
physical needs, as his fellow human beings.
Heal and Educate
To help, heal and educate children through creating
harmonious surroundings, where beauty, truth and goodness are striven for.
Enrich Lives
To enrich the children's lives with the experiences of the
course of the year, marked by the Christian festivals.
Comprehensive Education
To provide education from childhood through adolescence to
adulthood.
Unfolding Potential
To develop the whole range of each individual child’s
ability allowing the unfolding of his/her full potential.
Return to Top
Specific Aims And Objectives
These can be grouped broadly into the five categories listed below. They are
neither sequential nor mutually exclusive; indeed they overlap and interweave
with each other. Nevertheless, they do represent distinct areas of pedagogical
working.
Physical Development
- To instil a sense of ‘body image’, appropriate to each pupil
- To help the pupil master co-ordination of gross and fine motor skills
- To encourage the pupil’s creative expression through movement
Personal Development
To encourage self awareness and foster self esteem
To teach life skills so that the pupil can be led towards independence.
To instil a sense of purpose so that the pupil may begin to exercise
initiative and motivation in life.
To extend the pupil’s possibilities of self-expression
Social Development
To develop in the pupil an ethos of awareness, sensitivity and tolerance
towards other people.
To guide each pupil to form and maintain warm and caring interpersonal
relationships in a variety of contexts (e.g. family, co-workers, peers).
To lead the pupil to participate and co-operate in groups and to learn to
act out of a sense of community.
To develop the pupil’s communication skills
Intellectual Development
To teach a full understanding of the world and of himself so that the pupil
can make sense of his environment and of his own place within that
environment.
To assist in the development of the three areas of thinking, feeling and
willing.
a. Thinking, i.e. by cultivating the child's power of reasoning,
problem solving, information handling, literacy, numeracy, etc.
b. Feeling, i.e. by cultivating the powers of imagination,
creativity, aesthetic experience, interest, empathy, etc.
c. Willing, i.e. by cultivating the powers of motivation,
commitment, concentration, perseverance, etc.
3) To teach the pupil practical skills.
Moral Development
To promote a healthy questioning and consideration of all aspects of life so
that the pupil learns to exercise his or her own personal judgement.
To enrich the life experience of the pupil through a common daily practice
of Christian Festivals. Although our celebrations are essentially Christian,
the young people are also encouraged to understand and appreciate other
cultures and religions.
To instil a sense of personal responsibility for the wider community in the
pupil, i.e. to awaken the pupil's social conscience and enable him or her to
direct his actions accordingly.
Partnership
Partnership with a wide range of individuals and organisations is essential
if a young person is to benefit fully from his or her placement at Ochil Tower.
A school like Ochil Tower can only ever meet part of the overall needs of a
child but through appropriate links with parents, other professionals,
organisations and departments and the wider community, a joint comprehensive
service can be offered.
Return to Top
|