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Montessori Education |
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| Nov29-12, 07:59 AM | #1 |
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Montessori Education
Does anyone have any experience with this at all? I've only recently heard of a Montessori School and I have only a vague idea what it is all about. Anyway, my wife came to me the other day and told me she would like to enroll our daughter into one. I'm generally ok with this, because from what I read, it, in some ways, seems better than the traditional schooling I went too.
I went to public schools all my life and did very well. However, there's a lot about public schools that I dislike, especially in my extremely rural area. At the same time, I'm unsure if my daughter wil receive the same quality of education. I'm afraid her reading, writing, and math skills will lag behind other students. Anyone have any thoughts? |
| Nov29-12, 09:46 AM | #2 |
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Mentor
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My daughter went to two Montessori preschools. The first one was a disaster - total chaos all the time, the kids were loud and out of control. My daughter hated it and I pulled her out after a month or so.
The second one was calm, quiet, and fun. She loved it and went there for two years. My takeaway lesson: the teachers are really the key to a good preschool. I wouldn't worry about her being behind other kids if the teachers are good. The very best thing you can do to wire a kid's brain properly: talk with them, read to them, play with them. Whether that's done in a Montessori structure or not is less important, IMO. |
| Nov29-12, 09:49 AM | #3 |
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Lisa,
How would you recommend one screen/interview teachers to make sure it's not like scenario 1? |
| Nov29-12, 10:04 AM | #4 |
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Montessori EducationI think if I'd stopped by several times at random times it would have given me a more accurate picture of what that school was really like. |
| Nov29-12, 10:05 AM | #5 |
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Mentor
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| Nov29-12, 10:06 AM | #6 |
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Yeah, I understand there's a kind of "let them learn creatively" mentality, but that it still has to be guided in some way. I can see how it could get out of control with the wrong staff.
There's one right down the street from us - just a small building. My wife and I don't have kids yet but we're already thinking about this stuff. |
| Nov29-12, 10:33 AM | #7 |
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Both of my kids were in two different Montessori schools and both schools were terrific, but I agree w/ lisab about the teachers being key. The method IS a good one, but without at least decent teachers, no method is likely to work and this method is open to the kind of disaster libab points out.
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| Nov29-12, 01:16 PM | #8 |
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I know some people who had Montessori education and a major remark is that they felt left behind in their development, because the school was more a playground that a structured development environment. When transferring to a regular education they had to catch up a lot.
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| Nov29-12, 01:25 PM | #9 |
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My public school experience was pretty good, although the first four years K-3 were in Australia, and the rest in the US. I was placed in academically able (AA), major works (MW = honors), and AP courses in math and science. I did regular English and humanities courses though. I think it is more difficult in rural areas though. |
| Nov29-12, 02:24 PM | #10 |
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But academically, there seems to be no advantage. As a parent, I would want to see how children from the school are scoring on national tests. It seems that although Motesssori doesn't believe in testing and grading, they have had to agree to testing starting around 2002. But if your child isn't happy in a traditional school, they're not going to learn as much if they're not happy. No one knows your child as well as you do and you know which type of environment is best for their personality. |
| Nov29-12, 08:58 PM | #11 |
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Thank you to everyone who took time to reply. I was mostly looking for people's experience with this sort of program and I'm relieved to hear they are have been mostly positive. I say 'relieved' because 9 times out of 10 when my wife 'ask' me for my opinion, it's her term for 'you got 1 day think of reasons why you agree with me'. :)
So once again thank you all. |
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