FREQUENTLY
ASKED QUESTIONS
Contents
Why Do Montessori Classes
Group Different Age Levels Together?
Why Do Montessori Classes
Tend To Be Larger than Those Found in Many Other Schools?
Why Do Most Montessori
Schools Ask Young Children to Attend Five Days a Week?
Why
Is Montessori So Expensive Compared to Other Schools?
Why
Do Montessori Schools
Want Children to Enter at Age 3?
How Can Montessori Teachers
Meet the Needs Of So Many Different Children?
Why Is A Montessori Classroom
Called a "Children's House?
What Do Montessori Schools
Mean by the Term "Normalization?
Is Montessori for All Children?
Is Montessori Opposed to
Homework?
Is Montessori Unstructured?
Are There Any Tests in
Montessori Programs?
How Do Montessori Schools
Report Student Progress?
Will My Child Be Able to
Adjust to Traditional Public or Private Schools after Montessori?
Is Montessori Opposed to
Competition?
Is It True that Montessori
Children Never Play?
Is Montessori Opposed to
Fantasy and Creativity?
What's the Big Deal about
Freedom and Independence in Montessori?
What If a Child Doesn't
Feel Like Working?
What about Children with
Special Needs?
Wasn't Montessori First
Developed for Children with Severe Developmental Delays?
Is Montessori Effective
with the Highly Gifted Child?
Isn't Montessori Elitist?
Does Montessori Teach Religion?
Why Do Montessori
Classes Group Different Age Levels Together?
Sometimes parents worry that by having
younger children in the same class as older ones, one group or the other
will be shortchanged. They fear that the younger children will absorb
the teachers' time and attention, or that the importance of covering the
kindergarten curriculum for the five-year-olds will prevent them from
giving the three- and four-year-olds the emotional support and
stimulation that they need. Both concerns are misguided.
At each level, Montessori programs are designed to address the
developmental characteristics normal to children in that stage.
- Montessori classes are organized to
encompass a two- or three-year age span, which allows younger students
the stimulation of older children, who in turn benefit from serving as
role models. Each child learns at her own pace and will be ready for
any given lesson in her own time, not on the teacher's schedule of
lessons. In a mixed-age class, children can always find peers who are
working at their current level.
- Children normally stay in the same
class for three years. With two-thirds of the class normally returning
each year, the classroom culture tends to remain quite stable.
- Working in one class for two or
three years allows students to develop a strong sense of community
with their classmates and teachers. The age range also allows
especially gifted children the stimulation of intellectual peers,
without requiring that they skip a grade or feel emotionally out of
place.
Why Do Montessori Classes Tend To Be Larger than Those
Found in Many Other Schools?
Many schools take pride in having very
small classes, and parents often wonder why Montessori classes are so
much larger. Montessori classes commonly group together twenty-five to
thirty children covering a three-year age span.
Schools that place children together
into small groups assume that the teacher is the source of instruction,
a very limited resource. They reason that as the number of children
decreases, the time that teachers have to spend with each child
increases. Ideally, we would have a one-on-one tutorial situation.
But the best teacher of a
three-year-old is often another somewhat older child. This process is
good for both the tutor and the younger child. In this situation, the
teacher is not the primary focus. The larger group size puts the focus
less on the adult and encourages children to learn from each other.
By consciously bringing children together in larger multi-age class
groups, in which two-thirds of the children normally return each year,
the school environment promotes continuity and the development of a
fairly stable community.
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Why Do Most Montessori Schools Ask Young Children to
Attend Five Days a Week?
Two-
and three-day programs are often attractive to parents who do not need
full-time care; however, five-day programs create the consistency that
is so important to young children and which is essential in developing
strong Montessori programs. Since the primary goal of Montessori
involves creating a culture of consistency, order, and empowerment, most
Montessori schools will expect children to attend five days a week.
Why Is Montessori So
Expensive Compared to Conventional Schools?
Montessori programs are normally more
expensive to organize and run than conventional classrooms due to the
extensive teacher education needed to become certified and the very high
cost of purchasing the educational materials and beautiful furniture
needed to equip each Montessori classroom.
Montessori is not always more
expensive. Tuition costs depend on many factors, including the cost of
the various elements that go into running a particular school, such as
the cost of the buildings and grounds, teacher salaries, the size of the
school,* the programs it offers, and whether the school receives a
subsidy payment from a sponsoring church, charity, or government agency.
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Why Do Most Montessori
Schools Want Children to Enter at Age Three?
Dr.
Montessori identified four "planes of development," with each stage
having its own developmental characteristics and developmental
challenges. The Early Childhood Montessori environment for children age
three to six is designed to work with the "absorbent mind," "sensitive
periods," and the tendencies of children at this stage of their
development.
Learning that takes place during these
years comes spontaneously without effort, leading children to enter the
elementary classes with a clear, concrete sense of many abstract
concepts. Montessori helps children to become self-motivated,
self-disciplined, and to retain the sense of curiosity that so many
children lose along the way in traditional classrooms. They tend to act
with care and respect toward their environment and each other. They are
able to work at their own pace and ability. The three-year Montessori
experience tends to nurture a joy of learning that prepares them for
further challenges.
This process seems to work best when
children enter a Montessori program at age two or three and stay at
least through the kindergarten year. Children entering at age four or
five do not consistently come to the end of the three-year cycle having
developed the same skills, work habits, or values.
Older children entering Montessori may
do quite well in this very different setting, but this will depend to a
large degree on their personality, previous educational experiences, and
the way they have been raised at home.
Montessori programs can usually accept a few older children into an
established class, so long as the family understands and accepts that
some critical opportunities may have been missed, and these children may
not reach the same levels of achievement seen in the other children of
that age. On the other hand, because of the individualized pace of
learning in Montessori classrooms, this will not normally be a concern.
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How Can Montessori Teachers Meet the Needs of So Many
Different Children?
Great teachers help learners get to the
point where their minds and hearts are open, leaving them ready to
learn. In effective schools, students are not so much motivated by
getting good grades as they are by a basic love of learning. As parents
know their own children's learning styles and temperaments, teachers,
too, develop this sense of each child's uniqueness by spending a number
of years with the students and their parents.
Dr. Montessori believed that teachers
should focus on the child as a person, not on the daily lesson plan.
Montessori teachers lead children to ask questions, think for
themselves, explore, investigate, and discover. Their ultimate objective
is to help their students to learn independently and retain the
curiosity, creativity, and intelligence with which they were born. As we
said in an earlier chapter, Montes-sori teachers don't simply present
lessons; they are facilitators, mentors, coaches, and guides.
Traditionally, teachers have told us
that they "teach students the basic facts and skills that they will need
to succeed in the world." Studies show that in many classrooms, a
substantial portion of the day is spent on discipline and classroom
management.
Normally, Montessori teachers will not
spend much time teaching lessons to the whole class. Their primary role
is to prepare and maintain the physical, intellectual, and
social/emotional environment within which the children will work. A key
aspect of this is the selection of intriguing and developmentally
appropriate learning activities to meet the needs and interests of each
child in the class.
Montessori teachers usually present
lessons to small groups of children at one time and limit lessons to
brief and very clear presentations. The goal is to give the children
just enough to capture their attention and spark their interest,
intriguing them enough that they will come back on their own to work
with the learning materials.
Montessori teachers closely monitor
their students' progress. Because they normally work with each child for
two or three years, they get to know their students' strengths and
weaknesses, interests, and personalities extremely well. Montessori
teachers often use the children's interests to enrich the curriculum and
provide alternate avenues for accomplishment and success.
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Why Is a Montessori Classroom Called a "Children's
House?"
Dr.
Montessori's focus on the "whole child" led her to develop a very
different sort of school from the traditional teacher-centered
classroom. To emphasize this difference, she named her first school the
"Casa dei Bambini"or the "Children's House."
The Montessori classroom is not the
domain of the adults in charge; it is, instead, a carefully prepared
environment designed to facilitate the development of the children's
independence and sense of personal empowerment. This is a children's
community. They move freely within it, selecting work that captures
their interest. In a very real sense, even very small children are
responsible for the care of their own child-sized environment. When they
are hungry, they prepare their own snacks and drinks. They go to the
bathroom without assistance. When something spills, they help each other
carefully clean up.
Four generations of parents have been
amazed to see small children in Montessori classrooms cut raw fruits and
vegetables, sweep and dust, carry pitchers of water, and pour liquids
with barely a drop spilled. The children normally go about their work so
calmly and purposely that it is clear to even the casual observer that
they are the masters in this place: The "Children's House."
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What Do Montessori Schools Mean by the Term
"Normalization?
"Normalization" is a Montessori term that describes the process that
takes place in Montessori classrooms around the world, in which young
children, who typically have a short attention span, learn to focus
their intelligence, concentrate their energies for long periods of time,
and take tremendous satisfaction from their work.
In his book, Maria Montessori: Her Life
and Work, E.M. Standing described the following characteristics of
normalization in the child between the age of three and six:
- A love of order
- A love of work
- Profound spontaneous concentration
- Attachment to reality
- Love of silence and of working alone
- Sublimation of the possessive
instinct
- Obedience
- Independence and initiative
- Spontaneous self-discipline
- Joy; and
- The power to act from real choice
and not just from idle curiosity.
Is Montessori for All
Children?
The
Montessori system has been used successfully with children from all
socio-economic levels, representing those in regular classes as well as
the gifted, children with developmental delays, and children with
emotional and physical disabilities.
There is no one school that is right
for all children, and certainly there are children who may do better in
a smaller classroom setting with a more teacher-directed program that
offers fewer choices and more consistent external structure.
Children who are easily overstimulated,
or those who tend to be overly aggressive, may be examples of children
who might not adapt as easily to a Montessori program. Each situation is
different, and it is best to work with the schools in your area to see
if it appears that a particular child and school would be a good match.
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Is Montessori Opposed
to Homework?
Most
Montessori schools do not assign homework to children below the
elementary level. When it is assigned to older children, it rarely
involves page after page of "busy" work; instead, the children are given
meaningful, interesting assignments that expand on the topics that they
are pursuing in class. Many assignments invite parents and children to
work together. When possible, teachers will normally build in
opportunities for children to choose among several alternative
assignments. Some-times, teachers will prepare
individually negotiated weekly assignments with each student.
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Is Montessori
Unstructured?
At
first, Montessori may look un-structured to some people, but it is
actually quite structured at every level. Just because the Montessori
program is highly individualized does not mean that students can do
whatever they want. Like all children, Montessori students live within a
cultural context that involves the mastery of skills and knowledge that
are considered essential.
Montessori teaches all of the "basics,"
along with giving students the opportunity to investigate and learn
subjects that are of particular interest. It also allows them the
ability to set their own schedule to a large degree during class time.
At the early childhood level, external
structure is limited to clear-cut ground rules and correct procedures
that provide guidelines and structure for three- and four-year-olds. By
age five, most schools introduce some sort of formal system to help
students keep track of what they have accomplished and what they still
need to complete.
Elementary Montessori children normally
work with a written study plan for the day or week. It lists the tasks
that they need to complete, while allowing them to decide how long to
spend on each and what order they would like to follow. Beyond these
basic, individually tailored assignments, children explore topics that
capture their interest and imagination and share them with their
classmates.
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Are There Any Tests
in Montessori Programs?
Montessori teachers carefully observe their students at work. They give
their students informal, individual oral exams or have the children
demonstrate what they have learned by either teaching a lesson to
another child or by giving a formal presentation. The children also take
and prepare their own written tests to ad-minister to their friends.
Montessori children usually don't think of assessment techniques as
tests so much as challenges. Students are normally working toward
mastery rather than a standard letter grade scheme.
Standardized Tests:
Very few Montessori schools test children under the first or second
grades; however, most Montessori schools regularly give elementary
students quizzes on the concepts and skills that they have been
studying. Many schools have their older students take annual
standardized tests.
While Montessori students tend to score
very well, Montessori educators are deeply concerned that many
standardized tests are inaccurate, misleading, and stressful for
children. Good teachers, who work with the same children for three years
and carefully observe their work, know far more about their progress
than any paper-and-pencil test can reveal.
The ultimate problem with standardized
tests is that they have often been misunderstood, misinterpreted, and
poorly used to pressure teachers and students to perform at higher
standards. Although standardized tests may not offer a terribly accurate
measure of a child's basic skills and knowledge, in most countries
test-taking skills are just another Practical Life lesson that children
need to master.
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How Do Montessori
Schools Report Student Progress?
Because Montessori believes in
individually paced academic progress, most schools do not assign letter
grades or rank students within each class according to their
achievement. Student progress, however, is measured in different ways,
which may include:
Student Self-Evaluations:
At the elementary level, students will often prepare a monthly
self-evaluation of the past three month's work: what they
accomplished, what they enjoyed the most, what they found most
difficult, and what they would like to learn in the three months
ahead. When completed, they will meet with the teachers, who will
review it and add their comments and observations.
Portfolios of Student Work:
In many Montessori schools, two or three times a year, teachers (and
at the elementary level, students) and parents go through the
students' completed work and make selections for their portfolios.
Student/Parent/Teacher
Conferences: Once the students' three-month self-evaluations
are complete, parents, students, and teachers will hold a family
conference two or three times a year to review their children's
portfolios and self-evaluations and go through the teachers'
assessment of their children's progress.
Narrative Progress Reports:
In many Montessori schools, once or twice a year, teachers prepare a
written narrative report discussing each student's work, social
development, and mastery of fundamental skills.
Will My Child Be Able
to Adjust to Traditional Public or Private Schools After Montessori?
By the end of age five, Montessori
children are normally curious, self-confident learners who look forward
to going to school. They are normally engaged, enthusiastic learners who
honestly want to learn and who ask excellent questions.
Montessori children by age six have
spent three or four years in a school where they were treated with
honesty and respect. While there were clear expectations and ground
rules, within that framework, their opinions and questions were taken
quite seriously. Unfortunately, there are still some teachers and
schools where children who ask questions are seen as challenging
authority.
It is not hard to imagine an
independent Montessori child asking his new teacher, "But why do I have
to ask each time I need to use the bathroom?" or, "Why do I have to stop
my work right now?" We also have to remember that children are
different. One child may be very sensitive or have special needs that
might not be met well in a teacher-centered traditional classroom. Other
children can succeed in any type of school.
There is nothing inherent in Montessori
that causes children to have a hard time if they are transferred to
traditional schools. Some will be bored. Others may not understand why
everyone in the class has to do the same thing at the same time. But
most adapt to their new setting fairly quickly, making new friends, and
succeeding within the definition of success understood in their new
school.
There will naturally be trade-offs if a
Montessori child transfers to a traditional school. The curriculum in
Montessori schools is often more enriched than that taught in other
schools in the United States. The values and attitudes of the children
and teachers may also be quite different. Learning will often be focused
more on adult-assigned tasks done more by rote than with enthusiasm and
understanding.
There is an old saying that if
something is working, don't fix it. This leads many families to continue
their children in Montessori at least through the sixth grade. As more
Montessori High Schools are opened in the United States and abroad, it
is likely that this trend will continue.R
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Is Montessori Opposed to Competition?
Montessori is not opposed to competition;
Dr. Montessori simply observed that competition is an ineffective tool
to motivate children to learn and to work hard in school.
Traditionally, schools challenge students to compete with one another
for grades, class rankings, and special awards. For example, in many
schools tests are graded on a curve and are measured against the
performance of their classmates rather than considered for their
individual progress.
In Montessori schools, students learn
to collaborate with each other rather than mindlessly compete. Students
discover their own innate abilities and develop a strong sense of
independence, self-confidence, and self-discipline. In an atmosphere in
which children learn at their own pace and compete only against
themselves, they learn not to be afraid of making mistakes. They quickly
find that few things in life come easily, and they can try again without
fear of embarrassment. Dr. Montessori argued that for an education to
touch children's hearts and minds profoundly, students must be learning
because they are curious and interested, not simply to earn the highest
grade in the class.
Montessori children compete with each
other every day, both in class and on the playground. Dr. Montessori,
herself an extraordinary student and a very high achiever, was never
opposed to competition on principle. Her objection was to using
competition to create an artificial motivation to get students to
achieve.
Montessori schools allow competition to
evolve naturally among children, without adult interference unless the
children begin to show poor sportsmanship. The key is the child's
voluntary decision to compete rather than having it imposed on him by
the school.
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Is It True that
Montessori Children Never Play?
All children play! They explore new
things playfully. They watch something of interest with a fresh open
mind. They enjoy the company of treasured adults and other children.
They make up stories. They dream. They imagine. This impression stems
from parents who don't know what to make of the incredible
concentration, order, and self-discipline that we commonly see among
Montessori children.
Montessori students also tend to take the things they do in school quite
seriously. It is common for them to respond, "This is my work," when
adults ask what they are doing. They work hard and expect their parents
to treat them and their work with respect. But it is joyful, playful,
and anything but drudgery.
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Is Montessori Opposed
to Fantasy and Creativity?
Fantasy and creativity are important
aspects of a Montessori child's experience. Montessori classrooms
incorporate art, music, dance, and creative drama throughout the
curriculum. Imagination plays a central role, as children explore how
the natural world works, visualize other cultures and ancient
civilizations, and search for creative solutions to real-life problems.
In Montessori schools, the Arts are normally integrated into the rest of
the curriculum.
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What's the Big Deal about Freedom And Independence in
Montessori?
Children touch and manipulate everything in their environment. In a
sense, the human mind is handmade, because through movement and touch,
the child explores, manipulates, and builds a storehouse of impressions
about the physical world around her. Children learn best by doing, and
this requires movement and spontaneous investigation.
Montessori children are free to move
about, working alone or with others at will. They may select any
activity and work with it as long as they wish, so long as they do not
disturb anyone or damage anything, and as long as they put it back where
it belongs when they are finished.
Many exercises, especially at the early childhood level, are designed to
draw children's attention to the sensory properties of objects within
their environment: size, shape, color, texture, weight, smell, sound,
etc. Gradually, they learn to pay attention, seeing more clearly small
details in the things around them. They have begun to observe and
appreciate their environment. This is a key in helping children discover
how to learn.
Freedom is a second critical issue as children begin to explore. Our
goal is less to teach them facts and concepts, but rather to help them
to fall in love with the process of focusing their complete attention on
something and mastering its challenge with enthusiasm. Work assigned by
adults rarely results in such enthusiasm and interest as does work that
children freely choose for themselves.
The prepared environment of the Montessori class is a learning
laboratory in which children are allowed to explore, discover, and
select their own work. The independence that the children gain is not
only empowering on a social and emotional basis, but it is also
intrinsically involved with helping them become comfortable and
confident in their ability to master the environment, ask questions,
puzzle out the answer, and learn without needing to be "spoon-fed" by an
adult.
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What if a Child
Doesn't Feel Like Working?
While Montessori students are allowed
considerable latitude to pursue topics that interest them, this freedom
is not absolute. Within every society there are cultural norms;
expectations for what a student should know and be able to do by a
certain age.
Experienced Montessori teachers are conscious of these standards and
provide as much structure and support as is necessary to ensure that
students live up to them. If for some reason it appears that a child
needs time and support until he or she is developmentally ready,
Montessori teachers provide it non-judgmentally.
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What about Children
with Special Needs?
Every child has areas of special gifts, a
unique learning style, and some areas that can be considered special
challenges. Each child is unique. Montessori is designed to allow for
differences. It allows students to learn at their own pace and is quite
flexible in adapting for different learning styles.
In many cases, children with mild
physical handicaps or learning disabilities may do very well in a
Montessori classroom setting. On the other hand, some children do much
better in a smaller, more structured classroom.
Each situation has to be evaluated individually to ensure that the
program can successfully meet a given child's needs and learning style.
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Wasn't Montessori's
Method First Developed for Children with Severe Developmental Delays?
The Montessori approach evolved over
many years as the result of Dr. Montessori's work with different
populations and age groups. One of the earliest groups with which she
worked was a population of children who had been placed in a
residential-care setting because of severe developmental delays.
The Method is used today with a wide range of children, but it is most
commonly found in educational programs designed for the typical range of
students found in most classrooms.r
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Is Montessori
Effective With the Very Highly Gifted Child?
Yes, in general, children who are
highly gifted will find Montessori to be both intellectually challenging
and flexible enough to respond to them as a unique individuals.
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Is Montessori
Elitist?
No. Montessori is an educational
philosophy and approach that can be found in all sorts of settings, from
the most humble to large, well-equipped campuses. In general, Montessori
schools consciously strive to create and maintain a diverse student
body, welcoming families of every ethnic background and religion, and
using scholarships and financial aid to keep their school accessible to
deserving families. Montessori is also found in the public sector as
magnet public school programs, Head Start centers, and as charter
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Does Montessori Teach
Religion?
Except for those schools that are
associated with a particular religious community, Montessori does not
teach religion. Many Montessori schools celebrate holidays, such as
Christmas, Hannukah, and Chinese New Year, which are religious in
origin, but which can be experienced on a cultural level as special days
of family feasting, merriment, and wonder.
The young child rarely catches more
than a glimmer of the religious meaning behind the celebration. Our goal
is to focus on how children would normally experience each festival
within their culture: the special foods, songs, dances, games, stories,
presents - a potpourri of experiences aimed at all the senses of a young
child.
On the other hand, one of our
fundamental aims is the inspiration of the child's heart. While
Montessori does not teach religion, we do present the great moral and
spiritual themes, such as love, kindness, joy, and confidence in the
fundamental goodness of life in simple ways that encourage the child to
begin the journey toward being fully alive and fully human. Everything
is intended to nurture within the child a sense of joy and appreciation
of life.
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