About the Montessori Method
Born
in Italy in 1870, Maria Montessori grew up to become Italy's first woman
doctor. While working at a psychiatric clinic in Rome she became interested
in the treatment of children and, at age 28 accepted a position as the director
of a school for unhappy little ones. (Dr. Montessori referred to them as
'mentally disabled children.')
During the next two years the young doctor spent long, tireless hours observing
and working with these children. Under her guidance her wards who had been
considered uneducable before she began her experiment, took a standardized
test along with 'normal' children and passed successfully. She was proclaimed
a Miracle Worker by the educational establishment.
Heartened by the results she'd achieved with special needs children, she
returned to school to study anthropology and psychology in the hopes that
she could find a way to apply the educational techniques she'd discovered
to. 'normal' children as well.
In 1907 at the age of 35, she was given a chance to try out her theories
when she was invited to take over the education of fifty filthy, ragged children
from the San Lorenzo slums of Rome. The techniques Dr. Montessori continued
to refine as she studied and worked with the slum children were so successful
that her Casa dei Bambini soon began to receive international attention.
In fact, visitors came from all over the world to see these children--and
their remarkable progress--for themselves.
In 1913, Maria Montessori's innovative--indeed, revolutionary educational
philosophy--had been recognized and applauded by such intellectual lights
of the time as Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Edison and Sigmund Freud and
many others.
Her fame would spread further with a demonstration she was asked to set up
at the 1918 Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco. A special
classroom was built at the exhibition with one glass wall behind which spectators
could sit and watch as Dr. Montessori worked with 20 children, none of whom
were familiar with the Montessori environment as it was already coming to
be called. The 4-month long demonstration project did much to popularize
Dr. Montessori's teaching techniques on an international level. And that
popularity continued to increase among enlightened educators and parents
with each book she released, each speech she delivered.
Since the early 20's, interest in the Montessori method has grown steadily
throughout the world. And in the last 20 years or so it has enjoyed a remarkable
resurgence in the United States.
Highlights of Montessori's educational approach
that make it unique:
No passive listeners
Rather than the outer-directed learning approach where children sit passively
for much of the time, receiving mostly verbal information from the teacher--vessels
being filled as it were, in a Montessori environment. the child is the leader.
It is the teachers job not to lead and lecture, but to observe and follow,
sensing when the child is ready to try something new and being ready to present
it at as close to the perfect time as possible.
The style of learning encouraged is very physical as well with much emphasis
on actively pursuing tasks be it dusting every speck off a plant's leaves
or discovering that 10 + 10=20.
No "gold stars"
Dr.Montessori discovered early on that rewards and punishments were not necessary
for children to learn--and learn happily. Instead, she found, if a child
was allowed to pursue her own interests--whether it be washing a table, feeding
the cat or learning the alphabet, the work itself--and the child's knowledge
that she had the ability to master it--were far and away enough of a reinforcement.
Learning from other children
In the Montessori classroom children are grouped in mixed ages and abilities--age
0 to 3, 3-6, 6-12 etc. There is a great deal of interaction between children
of differing ages, lots of socializing--and a tremendous amount of activity
involving older children teaching younger ones.
Character education
Maria Montessori believed that character education--teaching children to
take care of themselves, each other and the world around them was just as
important as pre-academic skills such as phonetics and number recognition.
Children are taught basic dressing skills as well as hygiene. And they're
also made responsible for keeping the classroom orderly and clean. 'Practical
Life' skills like mopping up a spill, feeding the rabbit or tying one's own
shoes figure large in Preschool
Power! as they do in the Montessori classroom where, once again, the
Montessori method provided marvelous inspiration.
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