What is Montessori
Over one hundred years ago, Dr. Maria Montessori discovered that children are born with a profound desire to interact with their environment in an intelligent way. She found that children flourished when they were left free to direct their own learning, within a prepared environment. She pioneered a radical approach to education based on the scientific study of how children grow and learn, and the design of living and learning environments that meet their changing developmental needs.

In Montessori environments
is encouraged

1

Autonomy and Independence

2

Self esteem

3

Will

4

Self-control and self-discipline

5

An environment without competition

Montessori pedagogy

Mixed age groups

(Age to 3, 3 to 6, 6 to 12 and 12 to 18) enable the children to collaborate with and learn from each other. Classrooms resemble workplaces or laboratories, with different children working on different activities, alone or in small groups, following their interests and learning at their own pace. Visitors stepping into a Montessori community often say they are struck by the hum of harmonious and varied activity.

Hands-on learning by doing

The children learn through hands-on work rather than by listening to an adult speaking. They work using materials that are designed to help them master skills or areas of knowledge and understanding appropriate to their stage of development. These Montessori materials have been created and refined through practical experience working with tens of thousands of children over the past 100 years. 

Individualised learning

Each child’s experience is unique to them. Personalized lessons are offered to individuals or small groups. This allows for a highly individualized interaction between the adult and each child. The adult knows intimately what each child has mastered, or where they need additional practice.

The result? Children develop concentration, confidence,

self-discipline and a love of learning. And as one might expect,

studies show these children also do better academically.

Montessori areas

Practical life

It is considered the most important part, helps children develop coordination, concentration, independence, order and discipline. It covers exercises for social relationship, tolerance and courtesy, perfect control and refinement of movement.

Language

The first step toward reading and writing is sensory. Children use your index finger to know each letter sensuously through the use of letters outlined with sandpaper. This helps them to recognize geometric shapes, while developing their skills and learn the letters phonetically. The finger is then replaced by a pencil to later write.

Sensorial

It refers to the development and refinement of the five senses: sight, sound, touch, smell and taste. The purpose of the exercises is to educate the senses, so the child can learn about the environment, and be able to discriminate its subtler aspects.

Mathematics

Again the introduction to numbers and mathematics is sensory. The child learns to associate numbers to quantities, gradually moving to more abstract forms of representation. Early education in this sense, helps the child to lay the groundwork for reading and learning of mathematics. The activities developed with sensory materials make the child pass “from concrete to abstract” and help to discriminate sizes, colors, shapes, weight, etc.

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