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WHAT IS A MONTESSORI SCHOOL? Some of the most important decisions we make in our child’s life involve their education. The selections we make for them today can have a great impact on them tomorrow. Therefore, it is imperative that we understand the choices we have when we select a school for our child. Part three of a multi-part series is an introduction to Montessori schools. The following information is brought to courtesy of The American Montessori Society. Find a Montessori School near you · Children are to be respected as different from adults and as individuals who are different from one another. · Children create themselves through purposeful activity. · The most important years for learning are from birth to age six. · Children possess unusual sensitivity and mental powers for absorbing and learning from their environment, which includes people as well as materials. She carried her message throughout
the world, including the United States as early as 1912. After an
enthusiastic first response, interest in the U.S. waned until a
reintroduction of the method in the mid-1950's, followed by the
organization of the American Montessori Society in 1960. · The "whole child" approach. The primary goal of a Montessori program is to help each child reach full potential in all areas of life. Activities promote the development of social skills, emotional growth, and physical coordination as well as cognitive preparation. The holistic curriculum, under the direction of a specially prepared teacher, allows the child to experience the joy of learning, time to enjoy the process and insure the development of self-esteem, and provides the experiences from which children create their knowledge. · The "Prepared Environment." In order for self-directed learning to take place, the whole learning environment room, materials and social climate-must be supportive of the learner. The teacher provides necessary resources, including opportunities for children to function in a safe and positive climate. The teacher thus gains the children's trust, which enables them to try new things and build self-confidence. · The Montessori materials. Dr. Montessori's observations of the kinds of things which children enjoy and go back to repeatedly led her to design a number of multi-sensory, sequential and self-correcting materials which facilitate the learning of skills and lead to learning of abstract ideas. · The teacher. Originally called a "Directress," the Montessori teacher functions as designer of the environment, resource person, role model, demonstrator, record-keeper and meticulous observer of each child's behavior and growth. The teacher acts as a facilitator of
learning. Extensive training-a minimum of a full year following the
baccalaureate degree is required for a full AMS credential, including a
year's student teaching under supervision-is specialized for the age
group with which a teacher will work, i.e., infant and toddler, three to
six year olds, elementary or secondary level. · Teachers educated in the Montessori philosophy and methodology for the age level they are teaching, who have the ability and dedication to put the key concepts into practice. o A partnership established with the family. The family is considered an integral part of the individual's total development. · A multi-aged, multi-graded heterogeneous grouping of students. · A diverse set of Montessori materials, activities and experiences which are designed to foster physical, intellectual, creative and social independence. · A schedule which allows large blocks of time to problem solve, to see connections in knowledge and to create new ideas. · A classroom atmosphere which encourages social interaction for cooperative learning, peer teaching and emotional development. What
Happens When A Child Leaves Montessori? The Montessori child is free to learn because of
having slowly acquired an inner discipline from exposure to both
physical and mental order. This is the core of the philosophy. Habits of
concentration, perseverance and thoroughness established in the early
years will produce a confident and competent learner in later years. At
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