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Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi
'Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi' (
January 12,
1746 –
February 17,
1827) was a
Swiss pedagogue and educational reformer.
Birth, education and career
He was born on
January 12,
1746 in
Zürich,
Switzerland. His father died when he was young, and he was brought up by his mother. At the
University of Zürich he associated himself with
Lavater and the party of reform. His earliest years were spent in schemes for improving the condition of the people. The death of his friend
Bluntschli turned him from politics, however, and induced him to devote himself to education. He married at twenty-three and bought a piece of waste land at
Neuhof in Aargau, where he attempted the cultivation of
madder. Pestalozzi knew nothing of business, and the plan failed.
Before this he had opened his farm-house as a school; written in this time was ''The Evening Hours of a Hermit'' (
1780), a series of aphorisms and reflections. This was followed by his masterpiece, ''Leonard and Gertrude'' (
1781), an account of the gradual reformation, first of a household, and then of a whole village, by the efforts of a good and devoted woman. It was read with avidity in
Germany, and the name of Pestalozzi was rescued from obscurity.
The French invasion of Switzerland in
1798 brought into relief his truly heroic character. A number of children were left in Canton
Unterwalden on the shores of the
Lake of Lucerne, without parents, home, food or shelter. Pestalozzi collected a number of them into a deserted convent, and spent his energies in reclaiming them. During the winter he personally tended them with the utmost devotion, but in June
1799 the building was required by the French for a hospital, and his charges were dispersed.
Later years
In
1801 Pestalozzi gave an exposition of his ideas on education in the book ''How Gertrude teaches her Children''. His method is to proceed from the easier to the more difficult. To begin with observation, to pass from observation to consciousness, from consciousness to speech. Then come measuring, drawing, writing, numbers, and so reckoning. In 1799 he was able to establish a school at
Burgdorf, where he remained till
1804. In
1802, he went as deputy to
Paris, and did his best to interest
Napoleon in a scheme of national education; but the great conqueror said that he could not trouble himself about the alphabet.(see also:
Philipp Albert Stapfer)
In
1805 he removed to
Yverdon on the
Lake Neuchâtel, and for twenty years worked steadily at his task. He was visited by all who took interest in education
Talleyrand,
Capo d'Istria, and
Mme de Staël. He was praised by
Wilhelm von Humboldt and by
Fichte. His pupils included
Hippolyte Leon Denizard Rivail,
Charles Badham, Ramsauer, Delbrück, Blochmann,
Carl Ritter,
Friedrich Froebel and Zeller.
About
1815 dissensions broke out among the teachers of the school, and Pestalozzi's last ten years were chequered by weariness and sorrow. In
1825 he retired to Neuhof, the place of his youth; and after writing the adventures of his life, and his last work, the ''Swans Song'', he died at
Brugg. As he said himself, the real work of his life did not lie in Burgdorf or in Yverdon. It lay in the principles of education which he practised, the development of his observation, the training of the whole man, the sympathetic application of the teacher to the taught, of which he left an example in his six months labors at Stans. He had the deepest effect on all branches of education, and his influence is far from being exhausted.
Pestalozzi's complete works were published at
Stuttgart in 1819, 1826, and an edition by Seyffarth appeared at
Berlin in 1881.
References
Considerably more late-twentieth-century scholarly work on Pestalozzi has been published in the
German language than in English.
★ Biber, George Eduard. ''Henry Pestalozzi and his Plan of Education''. Orig. pub. London: John Souter, School Library, 1831. Repub. ISBN 1-85506-272-0. Among the earliest and probably the most influential 19th-century account of Pestalozzi's work in English, this was widely read in America (for instance, by
Bronson Alcott and
Ralph Waldo Emerson) and in England. Contains translated excerpts from many of Pestalozzi's works.
★ Silber, Kate. ''Pestalozzi: The Man and his Work''. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1960. ISBN 0-7100-2118-6. Written by a German-speaking lifelong Pestalozzi scholar, this remains the most recent complete biography in English.
★
External links
★
Encyclopaedic documentation about Pestalozzi – Publisher: Swiss association „Verein Pestalozzi im Internet“