Dibs In Search Of Self Quotes

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Perhaps there is more understanding and beauty in life when the glaring sunlight is softened by the patterns of shadows. Perhaps there is more depth in a relationship that has weathered some storms. Experience that never disappoints or saddens or stirs up feeling is a bland experience with little challenge or variation of color. Perhaps it's when we experience confidence and faith and hope that we see materialize before our eyes this builds up within us a feeling of inner strength, courage, and security. We are all personalities that grow and develop as a result of our experiences, relationships, thoughts, and emotions. We are the sum total of all the parts that go into the making of a life.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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Sometimes it is very difficult to keep in mind the fact that the parents, too, have reasons for what they do-- have reasons, locked in the depths of their personalities, for their inability to love, to understand, to give of themselves to their children.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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What are the purposes of examinations anyhow? Are they to increase our educational attainment? Or are they instruments used to bring suffering and humiliation and deep hurt to a person who is trying so hard to succeed?
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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A child is only confused by questions that have been answered by someone else before he is asked.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)
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the important things are what we remember after we have forgotten everything else.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)
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Understanding grows from personal experience that enables a person to see and feel im ways so varied and so full of changeable meanings that one’s self-awareness is the determining factor.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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research is a fascinating combination of hunches, speculation, subjectivity, imagination, hopes, and dreams blended precisely with objectively gathered facts ties down to the reality of a mathematical science
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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They left together - a little boy who had the opprtunity to state himself through his play and who had emerged a happy, capable child, and a mother who had grown in understanding and appreciation for her very gifted child. A child, given the opportunity, has the gift of honest, forthright communication. A mother who is respected and accepted with dignity can also be sincerely expressive when she knows that she will not be criticized and blamed.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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What would ultimately help Dibs the most was not the sand mountain, not the powerful, little plastic duck, but the feeling of security and adequacy that they symbolized in the creation he had built last week. Now, faced with the disappearance of the concrete symbols, I hoped that he could experience within himself confidence and adequacy as he coped now with his disappointment and realization that things outside ourselves change - and many times we have little control over those elements, but if we learn to utilize our inner resources, we carry our security around with us.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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didn’t ask him if he wanted to go. There was no real choice for him to make. I didn’t ask him if he would like to come back again. He might not want to commit himself. Besides, that decision was not up to him to make. I didn’t say that I would see him next week, because I had not yet completed the plans with his mother. This child had been hurt enough without my introducing promises that might not materialize. I didn’t ask him if he had had a good time. Why should he be pinned down to an evaluation of the experience he had just had? If a child’s play is his natural way of expressing himself, why should we cast it in a rigid mold of a stereotyped response? A child is only confused by questions that have been answered by someone else before he is asked.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)
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As I went down the East River Drive, I thought of many children I had known β€” children who were unhappy, each frustrated in the attempt to achieve a selfhood he could claim with dignity β€” children not understood, but striving again and again to become persons in their own right. Out of projected feelings, thoughts, fantasies, dreams, and hopes, new horizons grew in each child.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)
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It would have been so easy to take him in my arms and console him, to extend the hour, to try overtly to give him a demonstration of affection and sympathy. But of what value would it have been to add additional emotional problems to this child’s life?
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)
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Perhaps he felt safer in manipulating intellectual concepts about things, rather than probing any deeper feelings about himself that he could not accept with ease.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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Now that he had encountered concrete evidence of is changing world it would be important to work with his reactions to it- not with reassurance, not with lengthy explanations or apologies, not with words, words, words, thrown at him as a substitute, but with the experience he might now have to take a measure of his own ability to cope with a changing world.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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He was exchanging his anger and fear and anxiety for hope and confidence and gladness.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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His search for self was a tedious troubled experience that brought him increasing awareness of his feelings, attitudes and relationship with those around him. There were many feelings that Dibs had not dug out of his past and flung out in his play to know and understand and control better.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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Dibs was coming to terms with himself. In his symbolic playhe had pired out his hurt, bruised feelings, and had emerged with feelings of strength and security. He had gone in search of a self that he could claim with proud identity. Now he was beginning to build a concept of self that was more in harmony with the capacities within him. He was achieving personal integration.
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Virginia M. Axline
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The feelings of hostility and revenge that he expressed towards still flared up briefly, but they did not burn with hatred or fear.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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He had learned to understand his feelings. He had learned how to cope with them and to control them. Dibs was no longer submerged under his feelings of fear, anger, hatred and guilt. He had become a person in his own right. He found a sense of dignity and self-respect.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs in Search of Self)
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No one who reads this book with understanding can ever again think that human psychological growth, success in a schoolroom, or the acquisition of a complex skill can be achieved merely by overt repetition or by the reinforcement of simple patterns of response.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)
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If you understand why you do and feel certain ways, many people believe, then you can change your ways.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)
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I didn’t ask him if he had had a good time. Why should he be pinned down to an evaluation of the experience he had just had? If a child’s play is his natural way of expressing himself, why should we cast it in a rigid mold of a stereotyped response?
”
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)
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Perhaps there is more understanding and beauty in life when the glaring sunlight is softened by the patterns of shadows. Perhaps there is more depth in a relationship that has weathered some storms.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)
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There are things far more important in this world than a show of authority and power, more important than revenge and punishment and hurt. As educators, you must unlock the door of ignorance and prejudice and meanness.
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Virginia M. Axline (Dibs: In Search of Self)