Introduction
"My
vision of the future is no longer people taking exams and proceeding
then on that certification . . . but of individuals passing
from one stage of independence to a higher [one], by means
of their own activity through their own effort of will, which
constitutes the inner evolution of the individual."
—Maria Montessori, From Childhood to Adolescence
Montessori
education is a flow experience; it builds on the continuing self-construction
of the child—daily, weekly, yearly—for the duration
of the program. Although Montessori schools are divided into
multi-age classrooms—parent infant (ages 0 to 3), preschool
(ages 3 to 6), lower and upper elementary (ages 6 to 9 and 9
to 12), and middle school (ages 12 to 14)—the prepared
environments introduce an uninterrupted series of learning
passages, a continuum.
The prepared environments described in this
section, along with their physical dimensions, desired outcomes,
and documented results, carefully reflect the natural learning
characteristics of the child at each stage of development. In
Maria Montessori's metaphorical language, "the successive
levels of education must conform to the successive personalities
of the child."
The prepared environments and the role of the
teacher in the classroom distinguish Montessori from other educational
approaches. For example, independent activity constitutes about
80% of the work while teacher-directed activity accounts for
the remaining 20%. The reverse percentages are generally true
for traditional education. The special environments enable children
to perform various tasks which induce thinking about relationships.
The prepared environment also offers practical occasions for
introducing social relationships through free interaction. The
logical, sequential nature of the environment provides orderly
structures that guide discovery: Theorems are discovered, not
presented; spelling rules are derived through recognition of
patterns, not merely memorized. Every aspect of the curriculum
involves creative invention and careful, thoughtful analysis.
In viewing learning outcomes at each Montessori level, it must
be emphasized that why and how students arrive at what they know
is just as important as what they know.
to The Montessori
Infant-Toddler Program
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