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Q. Are all Montessori
schools alike?
A. No. Montessori is a philosophy and
method of education, not a franchise. Each school operates
independently. Each school is unique in the way it interprets
this philosophy for the community it serves, and in
its leadership, vision, staff credentials, and stability.
Q. What is “The
Absorbent Mind”?
A. This term as used by Dr Maria Montessori
to describe the transformation process which occurs
in the young child, who absorbs impressions from his/her
environment. the child creates his/her mind, memory
and personality from all these impressions, hence Dr
Montessori called this type of mentality "The Absorbent
Mind".
Q. What is a “Sensitive
Period”?
A. The term "Sensitive Period"
is Montessori's name for stages in a child's development
when the child shows unusual capabilities for acquiring
particular skills. Another term for this phenomenon
might be "periods of special readiness to learn
certain things".
Q. Why is family involvement
such a large part of Montessori?
A. Teaching children effectively requires
a close collaboration between parents and teachers.
Research confirms a direct link between student success
and parental involvement with the school. We need to
understand one another, share knowledge and insights,
and agree on goals.
Parents also participate in parent-teacher conferences,
as well as introductory or transitional program meetings.
Classroom observations and discussions with teachers
further inform parents about the child's experience
at school. And, there are innumerable opportunities
to assist in student activities like outings, events,
and performances. There are also enjoyable social functions
scheduled throughout the year.
Q. What makes a good
Montessori teacher?
A. A good Montessori teacher should:
- Have a thorough knowledge of Montessori philosophy
and practice.
- Be able to prepare and maintain a challenging environment
for children.
- Have the ability to observe and assess the need
of individual children.
- Be a facilitator.
- Maintain a safe environment.
- Be approachable and communicate with parents and
carers.
- Be consistent.
- Have the ability to work as part of a team.
- Behave in a professional manner.
- Continue her/his professional development.
Q. Does the school provide
religious training?
A. No. However, there is a spiritual
component to the Montessori philosophy, which recognizes
and respects the whole child, including an inner self,
where issues of character and civic virtues reside and
require nurturing.
Q. What does Montessori
mean for Children?
A. Montessori education has an international
reputation and influence. It is a holistic approach:
it develops and educates the child physically, intellectually,
socially and emotionally. It is child centered: each
child progresses at their own pace, not pressured to
achieve and encouraged to follow their own path of development.
It offers a unique combination of a highly structured
curriculum, even at pre-school level, and the freedom
for the child to choose their own activities. Because
they have this freedom of choice Montessori children
become enthusiastic learners.
Q. What does Montessori
mean for Parents?
A.
- REASSURANCE that the basics are
being taught in a concrete, fun way, at the age when
the child is most receptive to learning various concepts.
The unique learning materials designed by Maria Montessori
ensure this.
- KNOWLEDGE that your child is respected
and being treated as a valued individual, trained
by Montessori teachers, receptive to his/her individual
needs.
- RELIEF that priority is given to
developing social skills in children, to training
them to be thoughtful and courteous, and to making
them knowledgeable and appreciative of the richness
of cultural diversity that characterizes our multi-ethnic
society.
Q. Is Greenville Montessori
School licensed?
A. Yes, we are a N.C. Licensed Private
School.
| Emphasis on congnitive/social development |
Emphasis on social development |
| Teacher has unobtrusive role in classroom |
Teacher is center of classroom as
“controller” |
| Environment and method encourage self-discipline |
Teacher acts as primary enforcer of
discipline |
| Mainly individual instruction |
Mainly group instruction |
| Mixed age grouping |
Same age grouping |
| Grouping encourages children to teach
each other |
Most teaching done by teacher |
| Child chooses own work |
Curriculum structured for child |
|
School meets needs of students
|
Students fit mold of school |
| Child discovers own concepts from
self-teaching materials |
Child is guided to concepts by teacher |
| Child works long as wishes |
Generally allotted specific time for
work |
| Child sets own learning pace |
Pace set by group norm |
| Child spots own errors from feedback
from material |
If work corrected, errors usually
pointed out by teacher |
| Child reinforces own learning by repetition
of work and internal feelings of success |
Learning is reinforced externally
by rewards and punishment |
| Multi-sensory materials for physical
exploration with graded difficulty |
Some material for sensory development |
| Organized program for learning care
of self and environment (polishing shoes, etc.) |
No organized programs for self-care
instruction |
| Children can work where they choose,
move around and talk at will (yet not disturb others) |
Children usually assigned own chairs;
required to participate |
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