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Montessori Education
Questions and Answers
"Our aim is to not merely to make the
child understand, and still less to force to memorize, but so to touch his
imagination as to enthuse him to his inmost core.” Maria Montessori
What is
Montessori?
Montessori is a philosophy with the
fundamental tenet that a child learns best within a social environment, which
supports each individual’s unique development.
How Did it Begin?
Dr. Maria Montessori, the creator of what is called “
The Montessori Method of Education, “based this new education on her
scientific observations of young children’s behavior. As the first women physician to graduate from the University of Rome,
Montessori became involved with education as a doctor treating children labeled
as retarded. Then in 1907, she was
invited to open a childcare center for the children of desperately poor families
in the San Lorenzo slums of Rome.
She called it a “A Children’s
House,” and based the program on her observations that young children learn
best in a homelike setting, filled with developmentally appropriate materials
that provide experiences contributing to the growth of self-motivated,
independent learners.
Montessori’s dynamic theories
included such revolutionary premises as:
1. Children are to be respected as different from adults and as individuals
who are different from one another.
2. Children create themselves through purposeful activity.
3. The most important years for learning are from birth to age
six.
4. 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.
What makes
Montessori Education Unique?
1. 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
co-ordination 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.
2. 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.
3. The Montessori materials. Dr. Montessori’s observations for 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.
4. 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 years old, elementary of secondary level.
How Does it
Work?
Each Montessori class, from toddlers
through high school, operated on the principle of freedom within limits. Every program had its set of ground rules, which differs from age to age,
but is always based on core Montessori beliefs – respect for each other and
for the environment.
Children
are free to work at their own pace with materials they have chosen, either clone
or with others. The teacher relies
on his/her observations of the children to determine which new activities and
materials he may introduce to an individual child or to a small or large group.
The aim is to encourage active, self-directed learning and to strike a
balance of individual mastery with small group collaboration within the whole
group community.
The three-year-age span in each class
provides a family like grouping where learning can take place naturally. More experienced children share what they have learned while reinforcing
their own learning. Because this peer group learning is intrinsic to Montessori,
there is often more conversation – language experiences – in the Montessori
classroom that in conventional early education settings.|
How is
Creativity Encouraged?
Creativity flourishes in an atmosphere
of acceptance and trust. Montessori
recognize that each child, from toddler to teenager, learns and expresses
himself in a very individual way.
Music, art, storytelling, movement and
drama are part of every American Montessori program. But there are other things particular to the Montessori environment which
encourage creative development: many
materials which stimulate interest and involvement; an emphasis on the sensory
aspect of experience; and the opportunity for both verbal and non-verbal modes
of learning.
How Can a
“Real” Montessori Classroom be Identified?
Since Montessori is a word in the
public domain, it is possible for an individual or institution to claim to be
Montessori. But, an authentic
Montessori classroom must have these basic characteristics at all levels:
v
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.
v
A partnership established with the family. The family is considered an integral part of the
individual’s total development.
v
A multi-aged, multi-graded heterogeneous grouping of students.
v
A diverse set of Montessori materials, activities and experiences, which
are, designed to foster physical, intellectual, creative and social
independence.
v
A schedule, which allows large blocks of time to problem-solve to see
connections in knowledge and to create new ideas.
v
A classroom atmosphere, which encourages social interaction for
cooperative learning, peer teaching and emotional development.
What
Happens When a Child Leaves Montessori?
Montessori children are unusually
adaptable. They have learned to
work independently and in groups. Since
they’ve been encouraged to make decisions from an early age, these children
are problem-solvers who can make choices and manage their time well.
They have also been encouraged to
exchange ideas and to discuss their work freely with others and good
communication skills ease the way in new settings.
Research has shown that the best
predictor of future success is a sense of self-esteem.
Montessori programs, based on self-directed, non-competitive activities,
help children develop good self-images and the confidence to face challenges and
change with optimism
A Prepared
by
M AMERICAN
MONTESSORI SOCIETY
S
281 Park Avenue South
New
York, NY 10010.
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