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This
special method named for its founder, the Italian physician, Maria Montessori,
stresses the importance of the development of healthy self-concept. Education,
she believed, is a preparation for life, not merely a search for intellectual
skills…the child has one intuitive aim - his self-development. He desperately
wants to develop his inner resources and his ability to cope with a strange,
complex world. The child who accomplishes this moves into harmony with
his world and becomes a full person. The Montessori Method pursues the
fact that the mind of the very young child is absorbent and thus the environment
should be prepared carefully to train his senses, to stimulate his curiosity,
to satisfy his need to know and protect him from unnecessary failure.
Montessori's philosophy and the psychological principals upon which she
devised a carefully graded series of self-teaching devices are now commonly
accepted and supported by current child development experts.

Montessori
World School provides a specially prepared environment that fosters satisfaction
in learning by discovery and a joy in achievement. The climate and selected
activities are prepared to interest and motivate the child and to protect
him from unnecessary failure. Dr. Montessori said, "Never let a child
risk failure until he has a reasonable chance of success." The Montessori
materials develop basic problem solving and observational techniques.
The child begins in the concrete with manipulative materials and gradually
works toward the abstract. Montessori's recognition of the importance
of a stimulating environment as a means of "freeing the child's potential"
is now supported by a multitude of studies in early learning.
All
Montessori classrooms are equipped with the specially designed and sequenced
materials, which Dr. Montessori devised. These materials, together with
highly trained, motivated Directresses (teachers), provide a classroom
where the child is stimulated and challenged but never pressured. In such
a climate, the child learns to feel good about himself and his right to
dignity and worth is protected.

The
role of the Montessori Directress differs considerably from that of a
traditional teacher. She observes and assists the child according to the
child's individual needs and interests. She is trained to recognize periods
of readiness and demonstrate the correct use of the materials to the children.
To reinforce in a positive manner, at times she will encourage a hesitant
child: at other times, she will divert a child who chooses material beyond
her ability.
She protects the child's integrity and allows the child to have freedom
of choice and to make decisions. The child's decisions are expected to
reflect a sense of responsibility. She is helped by the Directress' manner,
which is firm and consistent, yet patient and gentle.
Our Montessori Directresses are certified through a major Montessori Training
Program and are supported by dedicated, trained teacher's assistants.

The
very young child is in the process of forming her first impressions of
her own nature and ability, of other people, and of life in general -
impressions that can last a lifetime. To reach the highest potential possible,
the child must develop a healthy self-concept, wholesome attitudes and
values, desirable skills and habits, independence and self-reliance, the
ability to adjust and to think reflectively as well as a sensitivity in
human relationships and a curiosity and appreciation of nature and the
world that surrounds her.
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- Pervasive emphasis on grades, merits, social
conformity
- Children are grouped chronologically with one age per class.
- Class generally seated, as a group, at desks for lessons.
- Basal readers
- Class, as a group, studies one subject at a time.
- Children taught by "truth middlemen" (teachers, society's
conforming values).
- Class schedules limit the child's involvement.
- Relatively frequent interruptions - bells, adult interventions.
- Teacher society "corrects" pupil's "errors".
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Self-humanization as root, motivation.
- Non-graded
(2-3 years age span).
- Students
"work" at tables, on floor; freedom of movement
- Multisensorial,
more flexible reading and writing opportunities.
- Children
pursue their own self-paced curriculum, individually or in small groups,
in various parts of the learning environment.
- Children
in direct contact with the environment-natural, sensory and cultural
experiences.
- Long
blocks of time permit invaluable concentration.
- Relatively
few interruptions.
- Critical
cognitive skills developed before age 6.
- Children
learn from peers, self-correcting materials; teacher's role is that
of a "guide"
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