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Joined: 23 April 2008
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Posted: 14 November 2010 at 1:52pm |
Yes Nikki I think you should just go and have a look, observe a classroom. We spent a morning observing at the school (which goes from preschool through to high school) and that was the best insight into their approach.
Many of my misconceptions were corrected then; for example, like Freckle I thought Montessori was very individual rather than group focused, but if you go into a classroom you'll see lots of little groups working together, the older children 'teach' the younger ones, rather than the teacher (say in a primary school) leading the class.
Yes it does seem like 'work' but seeing how much the children love doing the so-called work (really, to them it is 'play'), and how much satisfaction they get out of it, changes your perspective on it. That's part of Montessori's key philosophy - that children learn best (and get personal satisfaction, leadership skills etc) through doing something productive, like we as adults get more out of doing productive work that is useful and rewarding, than just wasting it on leisure activities. The 2-year-olds at our playgroup race to be in first to make the bread for morning tea
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MrsMc
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Posted: 14 November 2010 at 2:04pm |
I love montessori, but like someone else said theyre not all the same, some are amazing, some arent.
One thing to remember when worrying about how focused it is is that there is plenty of time at home to 'be a boy' so to speak, to run around dressed as superman.
When you go to school, you go to learn, i think this is the way montessori works
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freckle
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Posted: 14 November 2010 at 2:31pm |
anakk wrote:
Many of my misconceptions were corrected then; for example, like Freckle I thought Montessori was very individual rather than group focused, but if you go into a classroom you'll see lots of little groups working together, the older children 'teach' the younger ones, rather than the teacher (say in a primary school) leading the class.
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I know they do do group work at Montessori, however, from my experience they are more focused on individual work than mainstream ECC. I have worked in many ECC (as I worked with special needs preschoolers) of all kinds and in general that has been my experience.
MrsMc wrote:
One thing to remember when worrying about how focused it is is that there is plenty of time at home to 'be a boy' so to speak, to run around dressed as superman.
When you go to school, you go to learn, i think this is the way montessori works |
I think that is sad - at preschool level children IMO should be going to preschool to have fun, play, interact with other kids, and as a consequence learn. There is plenty of time to get serious about academic learning once kids are at school...
Edited by freckle
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mum to 3 lovely girls :D
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Nikki
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Posted: 14 November 2010 at 10:25pm |
When I visited the kids were all outside (which is what they apparently do in the afternoon, the morning is more about learning from what I could gather) and they seemed to be doing what they normally do at daycare, just a little calmer and no yelling or crying! which I don't think is a bad thing.
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DS (5yrs) and DD (3yrs)
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TheKelly
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Posted: 14 November 2010 at 10:42pm |
freckle wrote:
I think that is sad - at preschool level children IMO should be going to preschool to have fun, play, interact with other kids, and as a consequence learn. There is plenty of time to get serious about academic learning once kids are at school... |
Agree! so true
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Shezamumof3
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Posted: 14 November 2010 at 11:29pm |
anakk wrote:
I should add that it's not that Montessori discourages the child's use of their imagination - what they discourage is 'fantasy', which they believe is something adults impose on children through fairy tales, monsters, superman etc. They believe imagination should grow out of experiences grounded in reality - which is why a child might get sent home for going to school wearing a dress-up costume. Montessori is ok with fantasy for older children - who have developed a grounding in reality - but not the under 6s. |
 but dressing up and playing make believe is what kids do!
That all sounds really silly to me. Regular daycare sounds better IMO, I wouldnt want DS sent home cos he wanted to dress up as batman or something!
Freckle, I agree, thats really sad...
Edited by Sheza
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freckle
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Posted: 15 November 2010 at 8:27am |
Nikki wrote:
When I visited the kids were all outside (which is what they apparently do in the afternoon, the morning is more about learning from what I could gather) and they seemed to be doing what they normally do at daycare, just a little calmer and no yelling or crying! which I don't think is a bad thing. |
But kids are learning ALL the time, they don't need set times to learn... They are constantly experiementing with their environment and testing out their perceptions...
Edited by freckle
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mum to 3 lovely girls :D
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Nikki
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Posted: 15 November 2010 at 9:32am |
Perhaps I should have said "inside time" instead of learning. Of course they are learning all the time. Didn't realise that would cause confusion sorry!
My point was - they were all outside playing and running around just as they do at my kids normal daycare ..... there was just less yelling and hitting and crying - which I think my son would like.
I will have a look into the dress-ups thing if I go to observe. My son has never been really into dress ups anyway, but as he goes to kindy too he would still get that there and at home.
As far as taking things into a centre -- I know my "normal" daycare and kindy would not allow kids to turn up in dressup or with toys from home either, so I don't think thats unusual (causes fights apparently - they both have signs up saying that, as did the other two daycare I looked at).
Thanks for all your opinions!
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DS (5yrs) and DD (3yrs)
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fattartsrock
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Posted: 15 November 2010 at 2:12pm |
Oh yeah we don't allow toys either, but they do bring them, we don't encourage them. Dress ups, well, not sure we have such a huge range that maybe they don't feel the need to come dressed in them but there is one wee girl who often comes as something.
Our pre school dosne't hae much yelling/hitting/crying either, but that said it is for kids over 2.5, so more like a kindy. We do "extension" classes twice a week for kids over 4 1/2 to get ready for school foccussing on literacy and numeracy, and while we ahve soem structured "lessons" they are always about things the kids want to learn about - as in the week before Jake left it was bones and skeletons and the week before that, pirates and ships and stuff.
Having said all that I have about montessori and my fervent dislike of it, Im also not a fan of hugfe "institutionalised" centres either. I like small centres that have small rolls, so more scope for better/quieter/more foccused stuff.
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Poline195875
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Posted: 01 October 2015 at 12:59am |
My kids attend palms preschool with Montessori curriculum and they like it very much. I'm glad to see that every morning they hurry up to go to this preschool.
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