Who was Maria Montessori?

Montessori education derives its name from Maria Montessori, a woman, who in many ways, was ahead of her time. She was born in Chiaravalle, Italy, in 1870 and became the first female physician in Italy when she graduated from medical school in 1896. The clinical observations she made during her medical practice led her to analyzing how children learn, how they build themselves from what they find in their immediate environment.

She accepted a challenge in 1906: to educate 60 children of working parents in the San Lorenzo district of Rome. It was there that she founded the first Casa dei Bambini, or “Children’s House,” and developed what ultimately became the Montessori way of education. She saw the children’s almost effortless ability to absorb knowledge from their surroundings, as well as their tireless interest in manipulating materials. Every piece of equipment, every exercise, every lesson Dr. Montessori developed was based on what she observed children to do “naturally” by themselves and unassisted by adults.

Children teach themselves. This simple but profound truth inspired Montessori’s lifelong pursuit of educational reform. She tirelessly dedicated herself to furthering the self-creating process of the child.

In 1952, Maria Montessori died in Noordwijk, Holland, but her work continues. Today, there are close to 5,000 private and approximately 200 public Montessori schools in the United States alone, and Montessori schools exist on every continent except Antarctica.

Maria Montessori

Benefits of Montessori Education

Montessori education offers our children opportunities to develop their potential as they step out into the world as engaged, competent, responsible, and respectful citizens with an understanding and appreciation that learning is for life.

Each child is valued as a unique individual.

Montessori education recognizes that children learn in different ways, and accommodates all learning styles. Students are also free to learn at their own pace, each advancing through the curriculum as he is ready, guided by the teacher and an individualized learning plan.

Beginning at an early age, Montessori students develop order, coordination, concentration, and independence.

Classroom design, materials, and daily routines support the individual’s emerging “self-regulation” (ability to educate one’s self, and to think about what one is learning), toddlers through adolescents.

Students are part of a close, caring community.

The multi-age classroom—typically spanning 3 years—re-creates a family structure. Older students enjoy stature as mentors and role models; younger children feel supported and gain confidence about the challenges ahead. Teachers model respect, loving kindness, and a belief in peaceful conflict resolution.

Montessori students enjoy freedom within limits.

Working within parameters set by their teachers, students are active participants in deciding what their focus of learning will be. Montessorians understand that internal satisfaction drives the child’s curiosity and interest and results in joyous learning that is sustainable over a lifetime.

Students are supported in becoming active seekers of knowledge.

Teachers provide environments where students have the freedom and the tools to pursue answers to their own questions.

Self-correction and self-assessment are an integral part of the Montessori classroom approach.

As they mature, students learn to look critically at their work, and become adept at recognizing, correcting, and learning from their errors.

Montessori vs. Traditional Education:

Montessori

  • Emphasis on: cognitive structures and social development
  • Teacher has unobtrusive role in classroom activity; child is an active participant in learning
  • Environment and method encourage internal self-discipline
  • Instruction, both individual and group, adapts to each student’s learning style
  • Mixed age groupings
  • Children are encouraged to teach, collaborate, and help each other
  • Child chooses own materials and work from interests and abilities
  • Child formulates own concepts from self-teaching materials (in the prepared environment)
  • Child works as long as she/he wishes on chosen project
  • Child sets own learning pace to internalize information
  • Child spots own errors through control of error or feedback from the material
  • Learning is reinforced internally through the child’s own repetition of an activity and internal feelings of success (often referred to as ‘process over product’)
  • Muti-sensory materials for physical exploration throughout the entire learning environment
  • Organized program for learning care of self and environment (Examples include: preparation of food, mopping messy spills, feeding class animals, watering plants, etc.)
  • Child can work where she/he is comfortable, moves around and talks at will (yet disturbs not the work of others); group work is voluntary and negotiable
  • Organized program for parents to understand the Montessori philosophy and participate in the learning process

Traditional

  • Emphasis on: rote knowledge and social development
  • Teacher has dominant, active role in classroom activity; child is a passive participant in learning
  • Teacher acts as primary enforcer of external discipline
  • Instruction, both individual and group, conforms to the adult’s teaching style
  • Same age groupings
  • Most teaching is done by teacher and collaboration is discouraged
  • Curriculum structured for child with little regard for child’s interests
  • Child is guided and taught to concepts by teacher through assigned daily lessons
  • Child generally given specific time limit or time frame for work
  • Instruction pace usually set by group norm or teacher
  • If work is corrected, errors usually pointed out by teacher (as self-correction is typically absent)
  • Learning is reinforced externally by rote repetition and rewards and discouragements or better known as behavior modification
  • Fewer materials for sensory development and concrete manipulation
  • Less emphasis on self-care instruction and classroom maintenance leading to an environment maintained entirely by the adult
  • Child usually assigned own chair; encouraged to sit still and listen during group sessions which are typically not voluntary (group work and interaction is teacher controlled)
  • Voluntary parent involvement, often only as fundraisers, not participants in understanding and learning process

The Prepared Environment

Given the freedom and support to question, to probe deeply, and to make connections, Montessori students become confident, enthusiastic, self-directed learners. They are able to think critically, work collaboratively, and act boldly—a skill set for the 21st century. 

Mixed Ages

A multi-age setting enhances learning; children learn from one another, and they learn because of each other. Younger children get a chance to look ahead and see what is coming next by watching their older classmates work. Older children have the opportunity to reinforce their knowledge by sharing it with their younger classmates. Younger children emulate older children, and older children reinforce their knowledge by “teaching” the younger children.

A multi-age setting, whether it be preschool or elementary, provides children with opportunities for broad social development. The students’ constant interaction with each other teaches them how to get along with children of different ages and abilities, to respect each other’s work and work space, and to treat each other with courtesy. The children take an active role in maintaining their classroom, and it becomes a thriving community where everyone is treated with respect and dignity.

Self-confidence develops and children are given the opportunity for even greater leadership roles. Relationships and their complexities are supported by alert and sensitive adults who are trained to observe and enhance social interaction, not to repress it.

Freedom of Movement and Atmosphere

A child’s natural inclination is not to sit at a desk all day. For this reason, a Montessori environment allows for a variety of activity as well as a great deal of movement. Much of the work is done individually, but children often enjoy working on an activity with friends in small groups or on a whole class project.

The Montessori prepared environment respects and protects the child’s rhythm of life. It is a calm, ordered space constructed to meet her needs and match her scale of activity. Here, the child experiences a blend of freedom which goes hand in hand with self-discipline.

Fostering a Peaceful Community

One of the differences between Montessori education and other systems of education is that in a Montessori school the universal values of respect, trust, and tolerance are imparted to students through the use of “cosmic education.” In a Montessori environment, where subject matters are linked together and not isolated from one another, students come to know who they each are and where they stand in the “big picture” of human experience. By celebrating and exploring the diversity of cultures through art, religion, language, traditions, and day-to-day living, students come to understand the interconnectedness of all things, of all people, and the level of personal responsibility that is needed for the well-being of the world and all it’s inhabitants.

The Preschool Prepared Environment and Materials

The Montessori “prepared environment” of the preschool classroom is a “living room” for children, which is designed to facilitate maximum independent learning and exploration by each child. The classroom space is divided into five distinct areas: Practical Life, Sensorial, Mathematics, Language, and Culture. No subject is taught in isolation; the Montessori preschool curriculum is interdisciplinary and interactive.

Each area’s materials are arranged invitingly on low , open shelves. Each child may choose his work from the shelves so long as a lesson has been presented to him. He may work for as long as the material holds his interest. When the child is finished with the material, he returns it to the shelf from which it came.

The materials themselves invite activity and are the focal point of the classroom. The walls are kept clear of distracting pictures.

The Elementary Prepared Environment and Materials

The Montessori elementary environment balances the child’s developing imagination and powers of abstraction with down-to-earth, concrete, hands-on materials. The classroom is still divided by curriculum areas, but again, the subjects are not taught in isolation. Lessons are placed on shelves for individual children to use by themselves or with a small group of classmates, but hands-on materials will become of less importance, particularly at the higher elementary levels, when the child will begin to work more abstractly. Each lesson’s material has its structured sequences which have been designed to lead the child to discovery and understanding of the physical world.

Montessori provides diverse and creative passages to abstraction. Mathematics, for instance, is presented through three-dimensional manipulative materials, each providing a concrete way to experience an abstract concept. Likewise, the grammar materials use symbols and visual patterns to help the child discover parts of speech and analyze the structure, style, and logic of sentences. These exercises refine reading and writing skills and lay the foundation for foreign language study. The prepared environment provides the “keys” of each discipline in a manner that meets the elementary child’s needs for inspiration as well as order.

Frequently Asked Questions

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