book review-How to Raise a Wild Child
Well, the summer is definitely winding down and it's time for a review of something from the summer reading pile.
Scott Sampson's new book, "How to raise a Wild Child" was perfect reading as the Lake Michigan wind blew the beach grass flat and required extra strong page holding.
After I pack up and return this book (yes, Mom, and all the others) to the local library, I will head to my favorite local bookstore in Northfield and buy it ASAP.
It's an easy and engaging read with loads of quality advice for parents and others to engender a meaningful, lasting connection between children and the natural world. (disclaimer-stolen from jacket cover..)
I'm suggesting this book to everyone this year and will continue to encourage the adults I know to choose experiences for their children carefully. I'm also planning to follow Sampson's advice and will pare down the store bought playground toys at school. More of what he proclaims as the five best toys for children--(1) stick, (2) box, (3) string, (4) cardboard tube, and (5) dirt. Check.
Sampson outlines his goals in writing this book. "The first is to sound the alarm bell and broaden awareness on humanity's disconnect from nature." Second is to scientifically explore the process of nature connection. I found this section very interesting, with info on children's ever-shrinking attention spans and the role of digital technologies (hey, he is a TV producer). His third
and primary goal is "to help parents, educators, and others become nature mentors for the children in their lives." I would say Scott Sampson did just that, and so much more.
"In wildness is the preservation of the world."
----Henry David Thoreau
excerpt from "How to Raise a Wild Child":
Learning in Place
Let's step back for a moment and imagine some of the qualities we might want to see in a reinvented, truly student-centered learning environment. Such a setting would celebrate student's autonomy and individuality, building on strengths and interests to drive curiosity. It would foster (rather than choke) inspiration and engagement through plenty of active, real-world experiences, many of them beyond the classroom walls. Emphasis would be on character development grounded in fundamental values, like beauty, truth, and goodness. And, if truly successful, this system would engender a deep-seated, resilient sense of wonder that, in turn, would translate into a lifelong love of learning.
Remarkably, a robust movement has recently emerged within education that embodies all of these qualities...Schools in the traditions of Steiner (Waldorf) and Montessori have long been at the forefront of this movement.
"The land is where our roots are. The children must be taught to feel and live in harmony with the Earth.”
"The things he sees are not just remembered; they form a part of his soul.”
"The child is both a hope and a promise for mankind.”
----Maria Montessori
Scott Sampson's new book, "How to raise a Wild Child" was perfect reading as the Lake Michigan wind blew the beach grass flat and required extra strong page holding.
After I pack up and return this book (yes, Mom, and all the others) to the local library, I will head to my favorite local bookstore in Northfield and buy it ASAP.
It's an easy and engaging read with loads of quality advice for parents and others to engender a meaningful, lasting connection between children and the natural world. (disclaimer-stolen from jacket cover..)
I'm suggesting this book to everyone this year and will continue to encourage the adults I know to choose experiences for their children carefully. I'm also planning to follow Sampson's advice and will pare down the store bought playground toys at school. More of what he proclaims as the five best toys for children--(1) stick, (2) box, (3) string, (4) cardboard tube, and (5) dirt. Check.
Sampson outlines his goals in writing this book. "The first is to sound the alarm bell and broaden awareness on humanity's disconnect from nature." Second is to scientifically explore the process of nature connection. I found this section very interesting, with info on children's ever-shrinking attention spans and the role of digital technologies (hey, he is a TV producer). His third
and primary goal is "to help parents, educators, and others become nature mentors for the children in their lives." I would say Scott Sampson did just that, and so much more.
"In wildness is the preservation of the world."
----Henry David Thoreau
excerpt from "How to Raise a Wild Child":
Learning in Place
Let's step back for a moment and imagine some of the qualities we might want to see in a reinvented, truly student-centered learning environment. Such a setting would celebrate student's autonomy and individuality, building on strengths and interests to drive curiosity. It would foster (rather than choke) inspiration and engagement through plenty of active, real-world experiences, many of them beyond the classroom walls. Emphasis would be on character development grounded in fundamental values, like beauty, truth, and goodness. And, if truly successful, this system would engender a deep-seated, resilient sense of wonder that, in turn, would translate into a lifelong love of learning.
Remarkably, a robust movement has recently emerged within education that embodies all of these qualities...Schools in the traditions of Steiner (Waldorf) and Montessori have long been at the forefront of this movement.
"The land is where our roots are. The children must be taught to feel and live in harmony with the Earth.”
"The things he sees are not just remembered; they form a part of his soul.”
"The child is both a hope and a promise for mankind.”
----Maria Montessori
School's Out--Lessons from a Forest Kindergarten
Loving the outdoors!
What if one day a week, school was in the woods? On this podcast, NPR's Emily Hanford goes to Vermont to understand why teachers wanted to take their students into the forest, and what the kids -- and the teachers -- are learning from it.
Thinking of ordering this film for next year's parent meeting.
Patrick Durkin: Wisconsin’s political leaders suffering from 'nature-deficit disorder' :
News from the political environment of our neighboring state...and my brother in law!
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources and wildlife agencies nationwide have spent recent years trying to recruit, retain and re-engage hunters and anglers in a society increasingly disconnected from nature.
As Richard Louv noted in his 2005 book “Last Child in the Woods,” kids often prefer to play indoors because, as one fifth-grader said, “That’s where the electrical outlets are.”
Louv coined the term “nature-deficit disorder” to describe the chronic ailment.
Agencies, hunting and fishing clubs, and other private organizations responded by creating programs to introduce kids and nonhunters to the outdoors. They work together on mentored-hunt and nature-based programs to provide staffing, publicity and qualified instructors.
Likewise, schools and teachers team with agency staff to host workshops and outdoor classrooms in state parks, public forests and wildlife areas to show kids and young adults that there’s more to this world than TV, smartphones and electronic games.
Sigh.
Judging by Gov. Scott Walker’s proposals for the DNR’s 2015-17 budget, and some lawmakers’ efforts to inflict even more cuts, maybe all those hunting, fishing and outdoor mentors should have focused first on politicians. If lawmakers aren’t eliminating naturalists’ jobs, they’re shifting education and communications jobs from the DNR to the Department of Tourism while considering whether to auction off naming rights to our parks.
Talk about nature-deficit disorder. Besides eliminating 24 of 27 research scientists and two of three research technicians, the budget calls for eliminating 11 communications jobs, eight of 16 educator jobs, and the Wisconsin Center for Environmental Education at UW-Stevens Point.
These proposed cuts highlight what happens when people who really aren’t outdoorsmen and outdoorswomen dictate conservation and environmental policies. They simply don’t see natural-resource education and information as core missions for the DNR, and see no problem shipping such jobs to the tourism and education departments.
Are they blind to efforts by their colleagues and predecessors to make nature relevant to citizens? Do they not even realize the economic benefits of state parks?
A study released in 2014 found our state park system created 8,200 jobs and $350 million in income for Wisconsinites. The roughly 14 million “visitor-days” spent in state parks generated about $1 billion in economic benefits in 2013 alone. Much of that occurred in the “gateway” communities near the parks, with 60 percent coming from people outside the area.
And parks are just the most obvious destination for outdoor-folks, partly because they attract entire families. Young parents take their kids camping, hiking, fishing and canoeing in summer, hunting in fall, and special events and programs year-round to connect everyone to land and water.
Likewise, our parks, forests and wildlife areas give the DNR a face. Hunters and anglers have long enjoyed a love/fear relationship with game wardens, and kids and campers connect regularly with rangers and naturalists. Further, one reason the visitors are even there is because someone from the DNR told them about it. Repeatedly.
Whether through the agency’s magazine, Wisconsin Natural Resources, or in press releases and public announcements in newspapers and on TV and radio, agency staff help residents appreciate that our parks and other lands offer recreation few states can match. And most DNR staffers sought such work because they value natural resources and enjoy sharing that passion with others.
One wonders if DNR administrators are even capable of advancing nature-based principles when so many are political appointees whose expertise and interests lie elsewhere. For instance, the DNR’s communications director, Bill Cosh, has no formal training in natural resources or conservation communications, and neither does his boss, Mike Bruhn. Their experience lies in political-advising and policy-making, not communicating/appreciating an outdoors ethic.
Some label DNR Secretary Cathy Stepp similarly, but at least she recognizes that most DNR employees sought careers that engage their devotion to Wisconsin’s people, land, air, water and forests.
Last week, Stepp told DNR employees that Earth Day is “a celebration of the work you do throughout your careers to care for our little piece of the Earth.” Stepp went on to say:
“Wisconsin has a legacy of conservation leadership (that lives) on through each and every one of you. Because of your dedication to the natural resources, you carry on the legacies of great Wisconsin conservationists such as John Muir, Aldo Leopold and Gaylord Nelson.
“Thank you for being leaders in conservation and providing above-and-beyond customer service to our internal and external partners. You inspire others to take care of our Earth by living out DNR’s mission, and I thank you for your part in providing a healthy and sustainable environment today and for generations. Have a great day celebrating the 45th anniversary of Earth Day!”
A day later, 57 of those employees received “at risk” letters about the possibility of losing their jobs because of budget cuts.
Unfortunately, that seems par for this course.
As Richard Louv noted in his 2005 book “Last Child in the Woods,” kids often prefer to play indoors because, as one fifth-grader said, “That’s where the electrical outlets are.”
Louv coined the term “nature-deficit disorder” to describe the chronic ailment.
Agencies, hunting and fishing clubs, and other private organizations responded by creating programs to introduce kids and nonhunters to the outdoors. They work together on mentored-hunt and nature-based programs to provide staffing, publicity and qualified instructors.
Likewise, schools and teachers team with agency staff to host workshops and outdoor classrooms in state parks, public forests and wildlife areas to show kids and young adults that there’s more to this world than TV, smartphones and electronic games.
Sigh.
Judging by Gov. Scott Walker’s proposals for the DNR’s 2015-17 budget, and some lawmakers’ efforts to inflict even more cuts, maybe all those hunting, fishing and outdoor mentors should have focused first on politicians. If lawmakers aren’t eliminating naturalists’ jobs, they’re shifting education and communications jobs from the DNR to the Department of Tourism while considering whether to auction off naming rights to our parks.
Talk about nature-deficit disorder. Besides eliminating 24 of 27 research scientists and two of three research technicians, the budget calls for eliminating 11 communications jobs, eight of 16 educator jobs, and the Wisconsin Center for Environmental Education at UW-Stevens Point.
These proposed cuts highlight what happens when people who really aren’t outdoorsmen and outdoorswomen dictate conservation and environmental policies. They simply don’t see natural-resource education and information as core missions for the DNR, and see no problem shipping such jobs to the tourism and education departments.
Are they blind to efforts by their colleagues and predecessors to make nature relevant to citizens? Do they not even realize the economic benefits of state parks?
A study released in 2014 found our state park system created 8,200 jobs and $350 million in income for Wisconsinites. The roughly 14 million “visitor-days” spent in state parks generated about $1 billion in economic benefits in 2013 alone. Much of that occurred in the “gateway” communities near the parks, with 60 percent coming from people outside the area.
And parks are just the most obvious destination for outdoor-folks, partly because they attract entire families. Young parents take their kids camping, hiking, fishing and canoeing in summer, hunting in fall, and special events and programs year-round to connect everyone to land and water.
Likewise, our parks, forests and wildlife areas give the DNR a face. Hunters and anglers have long enjoyed a love/fear relationship with game wardens, and kids and campers connect regularly with rangers and naturalists. Further, one reason the visitors are even there is because someone from the DNR told them about it. Repeatedly.
Whether through the agency’s magazine, Wisconsin Natural Resources, or in press releases and public announcements in newspapers and on TV and radio, agency staff help residents appreciate that our parks and other lands offer recreation few states can match. And most DNR staffers sought such work because they value natural resources and enjoy sharing that passion with others.
One wonders if DNR administrators are even capable of advancing nature-based principles when so many are political appointees whose expertise and interests lie elsewhere. For instance, the DNR’s communications director, Bill Cosh, has no formal training in natural resources or conservation communications, and neither does his boss, Mike Bruhn. Their experience lies in political-advising and policy-making, not communicating/appreciating an outdoors ethic.
Some label DNR Secretary Cathy Stepp similarly, but at least she recognizes that most DNR employees sought careers that engage their devotion to Wisconsin’s people, land, air, water and forests.
Last week, Stepp told DNR employees that Earth Day is “a celebration of the work you do throughout your careers to care for our little piece of the Earth.” Stepp went on to say:
“Wisconsin has a legacy of conservation leadership (that lives) on through each and every one of you. Because of your dedication to the natural resources, you carry on the legacies of great Wisconsin conservationists such as John Muir, Aldo Leopold and Gaylord Nelson.
“Thank you for being leaders in conservation and providing above-and-beyond customer service to our internal and external partners. You inspire others to take care of our Earth by living out DNR’s mission, and I thank you for your part in providing a healthy and sustainable environment today and for generations. Have a great day celebrating the 45th anniversary of Earth Day!”
A day later, 57 of those employees received “at risk” letters about the possibility of losing their jobs because of budget cuts.
Unfortunately, that seems par for this course.
Patrick Durkin is a freelance writer who covers outdoors recreation for the Wisconsin State Journal, at patrickdurkin56@gmailcom or write to him at 721 Wesley St., Waupaca, WI 54981.
Why Free Play Is the Best Summer School
This article from the Atlantic has interesting information about self-directed play for children. This is exactly what drives the Montessori environment (not really a "classroom") and the outdoor environment of our summer program.
The more time children spend in structured, parent-guided activities, the worse their ability to work productively towards self-directed goals.
Unscheduled, unsupervised, playtime is one of the most valuable educational opportunities we give our children. It is fertile ground; the place where children strengthen social bonds, build emotional maturity, develop cognitive skills, and shore up their physical health. The value of free play, daydreaming, risk-taking, and independent discovery have been much in the news this year, and a new study by psychologists at the University of Colorado reveals just how important these activities are in the development of children’s executive functioning.
The authors studied the schedules and play habits of 70 six-year-old children, measuring how much time each of them spent in “less structured,” spontaneous activities such as imaginative play and self-selected reading and “structured” activities organized and supervised by adults, such as lessons, sports practice, community service and homework. They found that children who engage in more free play have more highly developed self-directed executive function. The opposite was also true: The more time kids spent in structured activities, the worse their sense of self-directed control. It’s worth noting that when classifying activities as “less structured” or “structured,” the authors deemed all child-initiated activities as “less-structured,” while all adult-led activities were “structured.”
All of this is in keeping with the findings of Boston College psychology professor Peter Gray, who studies the benefits of play in human development. In his book Free to Learn: Why Unleashing the Instinct to Play Will Make Our Children Happier, More Self-Reliant, and Better Students for Life, he elaborates on how play supports the development of executive function, and particularly self-directed control:
Free play is nature’s means of teaching children that they are not helpless. In play, away from adults, children really do have control and can practice asserting it. In free play, children learn to make their own decisions, solve their own problems, create and abide by rules, and get along with others as equals rather than as obedient or rebellious subordinates.When we reduce the amount of free playtime in American preschools and kindergartens, our children stand to lose more than an opportunity to play house and cops and robbers. Some elementary programs recognize the importance of play and protect its role in preschool and kindergarten. Montessori schools and Tools of the Mind curricula are designed to capitalize on the benefits of self-directed free play and student-initiated activities. Tools of the Mind programs, for example, place even more importance on developing executive function than on academic skills. In their terminology, “self-regulation” is the key to success both in school and in life:
Kindergarten teachers rank self-regulation as the most important competency for school readiness; at the same time, these teachers report that many of their students come to school with low levels of self-regulation. There is evidence that early self-regulation levels have a stronger association with school readiness than do IQ or entry-level reading or math skills, and they are closely associated with later academic achievement.This is not news to most teachers, who, when tasked with educating increasingly crowded classrooms, hope and pray for students with well-developed executive function. The ability to self-direct can spell the difference between an independent student, who can be relied upon to get her work done while chaos reigns around her, and a dependent, aimless student, who is distracted by his classmates and must be guided from one task to the next.
Parents, if you really want to give your kid a head start on coming school year, relinquish some of that time you have earmarked for lessons or sports camp and let your children play. That’s it. Just play.
Watch and Wait
From the folks at Baan Dek:
On May 6, 1952, Maria Montessori passed away in the village of Noordwick aan Zee, on the North Sea, in the west of the Netherlands. As with those who were brave enough to live, great stories are told of how they met their end. In Rita Kramer’s biography, Montessori’s last moments are recounted thus:
“Maria had been thinking of making a trip to Africa, but it had been suggested that because of the state of her health she ought not to travel but arrange instead for her lectures to be given by someone else. Mario was with her and she turned to him and said, “Am I no longer of any use then?” An hour later she was dead of a cerebral hemorrhage.”
Three years before, at the Sorbonne in Paris, Montessori was awarded the Legion of Honor from France. She was also nominated for the Nobel Peace Price in 1949, 1950 and 1951, respectively. It was a time of great hope and promise – a certain sense of renewal and dedication to the future was everywhere self-evident.
The life of Maria Montessori, to be sure, was replete with travel and adventure. There was a great sense of personal and professional achievement. Yet, her singular purpose was a fearless commitment to see her newly discovered science of education disseminated across the world. Of course, her ambition was not merely to spread her observations, it was much more centered on how to empower children to follow their interests.
Montessori trusted that while her original insights would eventually be validated by science, as indicated by her global recognition, what mattered most wasn’t the method, practice or even implementation, but rather, the adoption by children. If the Montessori approach to education was to be truly successful, it would have to be at the hands of children.
It wasn’t teachers, or even parents that would see to the success of Montessori. No, it was future generations. It was, as Montessori might have said, not the fact that society was focusing its attention, but rather, what that attention was pointed towards: the child. The child held promises that had long since expired, or in the least faded away, in adults. Nevertheless, everyone could readily identify in the child, the outlines of what was to come.
Rita Kramer makes the case that, “An educator and teacher, Montessori ended her life by saying that neither teaching nor education brings about the child’s development.” Kramer continues, in a somewhat radical and far-seeing summary of the Montessori philosophy, one that contains the heart of what makes this approach so special:
Montessori was once asked to sum up her new approach to education. “Attendee, osservando – watch and wait.”
On May 6, 1952, Maria Montessori passed away in the village of Noordwick aan Zee, on the North Sea, in the west of the Netherlands. As with those who were brave enough to live, great stories are told of how they met their end. In Rita Kramer’s biography, Montessori’s last moments are recounted thus:
“Maria had been thinking of making a trip to Africa, but it had been suggested that because of the state of her health she ought not to travel but arrange instead for her lectures to be given by someone else. Mario was with her and she turned to him and said, “Am I no longer of any use then?” An hour later she was dead of a cerebral hemorrhage.”
Three years before, at the Sorbonne in Paris, Montessori was awarded the Legion of Honor from France. She was also nominated for the Nobel Peace Price in 1949, 1950 and 1951, respectively. It was a time of great hope and promise – a certain sense of renewal and dedication to the future was everywhere self-evident.
The life of Maria Montessori, to be sure, was replete with travel and adventure. There was a great sense of personal and professional achievement. Yet, her singular purpose was a fearless commitment to see her newly discovered science of education disseminated across the world. Of course, her ambition was not merely to spread her observations, it was much more centered on how to empower children to follow their interests.
Montessori trusted that while her original insights would eventually be validated by science, as indicated by her global recognition, what mattered most wasn’t the method, practice or even implementation, but rather, the adoption by children. If the Montessori approach to education was to be truly successful, it would have to be at the hands of children.
It wasn’t teachers, or even parents that would see to the success of Montessori. No, it was future generations. It was, as Montessori might have said, not the fact that society was focusing its attention, but rather, what that attention was pointed towards: the child. The child held promises that had long since expired, or in the least faded away, in adults. Nevertheless, everyone could readily identify in the child, the outlines of what was to come.
Rita Kramer makes the case that, “An educator and teacher, Montessori ended her life by saying that neither teaching nor education brings about the child’s development.” Kramer continues, in a somewhat radical and far-seeing summary of the Montessori philosophy, one that contains the heart of what makes this approach so special:
As we look back and reflect on this magnificent life Montessori led, with the vantage point of nearly three quarters of a century, we are humbled by her project and her willingness to, even at her last moment, engage in the noble effort to spread a different set of values throughout the world.“ all educators and teachers can do is refrain from placing obstacles in the child’s path by providing him with an environment in which he is “free to create himself ”
Montessori was once asked to sum up her new approach to education. “Attendee, osservando – watch and wait.”
Sewing Book
Simone reviews the book, "Sewing
in the Montessori Classroom" by Aimee Fagan
I loved this book from the opening page where Aimee says she is looking for practical life activities to include in her classroom. "I knew that I wanted activities that were culturally and socially relevant and appealing in my classroom, but what could those lessons be? ....For me, the answer was sewing." The book shows the sequence of sewing activities you could do with your child even at home. Each activity has very clear steps and beautiful photos. * The beginning sewing activities build from threading beads on a string to sewing cards. * Intermediate sewing activities include learning to sew button bracelets, bookmarks and simple felt finger puppets. * And more advanced activities progress to making pillows and drawstring bags. * Embroidery, french knitting and finger knitting are also included. All with really clear, simple instructions to follow. A really lovely modern Montessori book with projects you would love to make with your child. Available on Amazon or order it from your favorite independent bookstore! I have no affiliation with this book. Just think it is worth sharing! |
For the Love of Books!
We love books!
It has been a pleasure to watch the success of our new bookstore, Content (the purveyors are parents at our school) here in Nfield. We are also excited to have Booker back on the road this summer and hope to hear the "beep, beep" in our parking lot during summer school in June and July.
Just because we love books so much, this post is a share from two favorite bloggers--Simone Davies at The Montessori Notebook and Dr. Dave Walsh at Mind Positive Parenting
In a nutshell--keep it real and let them chew on it.
1. Keep it real
Please come and visit me over at Jacaranda Tree Montessori (www.jacarandatreemontessori.nl/blog) and if you are ever in Amsterdam, I would love you to pop by and say hello!
It has been a pleasure to watch the success of our new bookstore, Content (the purveyors are parents at our school) here in Nfield. We are also excited to have Booker back on the road this summer and hope to hear the "beep, beep" in our parking lot during summer school in June and July.
In a nutshell--keep it real and let them chew on it.
1. Keep it real
Young children are interested in the world around them (rather than fantasy) so choose books with pictures of real objects and stories about known experiences, such as visiting grandparents, going shopping or getting ready in the morning.
One of my favourite books for young children is Sunshine by Jan Ormerod -- it has no words but the most beautiful illustrations of daily life.
It is also nice to have books which show children from all cultures.
And, in keeping with having books based on reality, save books with animals driving cars, animals talking or animals going to the supermarket until your child is a little older. Last time I looked, there were no teddy bears driving down my street.
2. Choose beauty
If you have been learning about Montessori for a while you would have heard of the term “absorbent mind”. Young children are like sponges and absorb everything - good and bad (!) - from their environment.
So when we choose books, we should also make sure that they are beautiful so that the children can already build appreciation for beauty.
When we choose beautiful things, how carefully we hold them as if they were works of art. And it won’t be lost on the child if the adult is also super excited to explore the book and admire the beauty.
3. Make them age appropriate
The age of the child will also impact the choice of book.
Materials
Board books are great for children under 1 who also enjoy exploring books with their mouths. Lift-the-flap books get interesting from 12 - 18 months and sturdy pages are also a good choice for toddlers. Then as the child gets older and are able to handle the books more gently, we can choose paper-back books and, for special editions, hard-back books.
Number of words
A book with one picture on a page is perfect for an infant; then a picture with a single word; then comes a picture with one sentence; followed by simple and then increasing complex stories.
For me, there are no strict rules though. For a very young child, I might make up my own sentence to sum up a page for a wordy book. Or often we have not even followed the story instead discussing the pictures, for example, “What do you think they are doing?” or “What can you see?”. And I have read books numerous times in reverse order as the child turns the pages from back to front, sometimes quite quickly. Hilarious.
4. Choose books with rich language
Even though the child is young, my favourite books use descriptive words, accurate language and avoid baby talk. Children under 3 also enjoy books with a nice rhythm and rhyme. Hairy Maclary from Donaldson’s Dairy has great realistic pictures and a beautiful rhyme - one book that the children will ask to read again and again.
5. Look for books with attractive details
I am sure I do not have to tell you that your child will want to read the same books over and over again. So it is extra fun when the books have lots of details in the illustrations and you can find new discoveries to discuss each time you read it.
A great example is the book by Dutch author/illustrator Charlotte Dematons called The Yellow Balloon. Again without any words, the pictures are so full of details that adult and child alike love to pore over this book to find new things, as well as look for the yellow balloon on each page.
And before I go, here is a small selection of the books that are being read over and over again in my classes at the moment.
For children under 1 year
For children from 1 to 2 years
For children from 2 to 3 years
So find a nice corner of the house, add a small chair or cushions, a small selection of books in a basket or front facing shelf, and you have a cosy reading corner that I am sure will be well used!
Please come and visit me over at Jacaranda Tree Montessori (www.jacarandatreemontessori.nl/blog) and if you are ever in Amsterdam, I would love you to pop by and say hello!
Connection
Freedom
A central tenet of Montessori’s pedagogy and philosophy holds that children must be free to follow their natural interests, leading to opportunities to develop their potential and increasing their knowledge of the world. Within the prepared environment, the child must experience freedom in a number of ways, including: movement, exploration, ability to interact socially, and the freedom to learn and grow without interference from others.
Structure and Order
On the surface, structure and order may seem at odds with the importance of freedom in the prepared environment. The prepared environment is meant to reflect the considerable structure and order of the real world and presents an organized system that children must learn to understand in order to make sense of their surroundings and, ultimately, the world. The ordered environment supports children’s ability to reason and provides consistent opportunities for children to validate their expectations and interactions with the world around them in predictable and consistent ways.
Social Environment
The multi-age classroom groupings provide tremendous benefit to children as part of the prepared environment. Any number of benefits accrues to children as a result of learning within the Montessori social environment. The opportunity to be the youngest, middle and oldest student cohort over time affords children unique perspectives and experiences at each stage. At different times they receive help from older children or aspire to do things that older children do, they serve as role models or mentors for younger children and they have regular opportunities to develop compassion and empathy for others. In addition, children’s ability to work and play in a variety of group settings is explicitly supported by the social environment that is intentionally created as part of Montessori’s methodology.
Intellectual Environment
The prepared environment ultimately aims to develop the whole child, not just the intellect, but intellectual development will not occur without the previous aspects of the environment in place. The above aspects of the prepared environment, coupled with the Montessori curriculum and unique Montessori materials, supports children in moving from simple to complex ideas and from concrete to abstract understanding and manages to do so in a way that is truly individualized and differentiated.
Experiences in Nature
The opportunities we give them to interact and develop a relationship with the natural world, will help them to develop tools for environmental responsibility and ecological understanding. With young children sometimes spending up to 50 hours per week in early childhood settings, early childhood educators have an important role. Opportunities for our young children to explore the wonders of plants, bushes, trees, flowers, and animals are diminishing. We have to give them time and places to explore and interact with nature before they can understand it well enough to want to look after it.
It is a lot to explain on a short school tour... and the purpose of this post is certainly not to overwhelm parents during the decision making process. Our goal is to impart a bit of this way of looking at the world of the child. They truly know their own child and can envision an environment in which he or she would thrive. We hope that in their time with us they feel just that, and experience a real sense of connection.
Getting Into the Dirt
Happy Spring 2015!
Although it happens every year it still seems like a mini-miracle. Planting seeds at MCH with joyful, hopeful children. They are so close to the wonder of nature and we are ever fortunate to be working with them.
Reconnecting Children with Local Food and the Land
Although it happens every year it still seems like a mini-miracle. Planting seeds at MCH with joyful, hopeful children. They are so close to the wonder of nature and we are ever fortunate to be working with them.
Reconnecting Children with Local Food and the Land
National Montessori Week - Happy Thursday!
Montessori is brain-based learning.Just ask a pediatric
neuropsychologist!
Unknowingly, Dr. Maria Montessori, tapped into the very
structure of the human brain.
Neuroscientists, developmental
psychologists and pediatricians all
agree that the brain forms crucial
associations based on the very
same process of learning that Dr.
Montessori identified over a
century ago.
Dr. Steven Hughes-Good At Doing Things:
neuropsychologist!
Unknowingly, Dr. Maria Montessori, tapped into the very
structure of the human brain.
Neuroscientists, developmental
psychologists and pediatricians all
agree that the brain forms crucial
associations based on the very
same process of learning that Dr.
Montessori identified over a
century ago.
Dr. Steven Hughes-Good At Doing Things:
National Montessori Week - Happy Wednesday!
Infancy through high school,
Montessori’s got it all!
Montessori is more than a pre-
school. There are Montessori
programs all over the world for
children from infancy through high
school.
Take a look at the adolescent
curriculums used in two U.S.
schools…
National Montessori Week - Happy Tuesday!
Public, private and charter.
Montessori is for ALL children!
In the U.S., there are 400+ public
and 4,000+ private Montessori
schools. Montessori is growing
and it’s for ALL children!
Learn more about Montessori from
the students and staff of Baltimore
Montessori Public Charter School.
Montessori is for ALL children!
In the U.S., there are 400+ public
and 4,000+ private Montessori
schools. Montessori is growing
and it’s for ALL children!
Learn more about Montessori from
the students and staff of Baltimore
Montessori Public Charter School.
National Montessori Week - Happy Monday!
Someone said, “How children learn influences
who they will become”.
Alumni, tell us one thing you learned at Montessori
school that you still do today…
“Tell me and I forget. Teach me
and I remember. Involve me and I
learn.” –Benjamin Franklin
Will Wright, founder of “Sims”, said: “Montessori
taught me the joy of discovery…it’s all about
learning on your terms, rather than a teacher
explaining stuff to you”.
Montessori Mafia article
who they will become”.
Alumni, tell us one thing you learned at Montessori
school that you still do today…
“Tell me and I forget. Teach me
and I remember. Involve me and I
learn.” –Benjamin Franklin
Will Wright, founder of “Sims”, said: “Montessori
taught me the joy of discovery…it’s all about
learning on your terms, rather than a teacher
explaining stuff to you”.
Montessori Mafia article
Celebrating 108 Years of Montessori Education
February 22nd marks the start of National Montessori Education Week!
Dr. Maria Montessori (1870-1952) was an
Italian physician, educator, and innovator,
acclaimed for her educational method that
builds on the way children naturally learn.
Learn more about Dr. Montessori and her
amazing life and work!
Short-
Dr. Maria Montessori (1870-1952) was an
Italian physician, educator, and innovator,
acclaimed for her educational method that
builds on the way children naturally learn.
Learn more about Dr. Montessori and her
amazing life and work!
Short-
Long-
The Third Year--Montessori Kindergarten
It's that time of year at MCH when parents of our second year students begin the decision making process for re-enrollment. We applaud and support them in this important process. It can seem like an overwhelming responsibility to choose the best class for your child. We hold a special meeting just for them at our school to offer guidance and explain which choice we feel is the best for our Montessori students. While not everyone can stay for the third year at our school, our hope is that those who can will do just that. It is a gift that will pay huge dividends in the child's outlook on learning. We feel so strongly about it that all of our scholarship money in the past has gone to making the third year choice an easy one for parents. As an authentic Montessori school, we are committed to the three year cycle in the classroom and to offering the best possible Montessori primary education to each child. We serve the Watcher (3 year old), the Worker (4 year old) and the Teacher (5 year old). It is both our mission and our pure delight.
Here are some of the videos we'll share at the information meeting:
Here are some of the videos we'll share at the information meeting:
An Environment of Peace
After the passing of our beloved Bela bunny I wrote in our school newsletter about a new peaceful area in the classroom environment. This area was designed to help those seeking comfort with emotions and was set up after a discussion with the older children. On the table we have a book titled “Our Peaceful Classroom” which is written by children from Montessori schools around the world. Other items at the table include a stress ball, a large and small sand timer, a plant and a nature picture. The children also came up with a list of guidelines to follow while visiting the peace table. It is not visited as much now, but has remained an important part of the classroom.
Often at our school the entire environment is awash with peace and beauty as the community of children and adults work and thrive together, but there are also specific peace areas tucked away for children to access at their will.
As in many Montessori schools, our book area is called "the quiet corner".
Some schools call it the peace area, the silence corner, the peace table or the peace shelf. All these names and places in the Montessori classroom serve a similar purpose. It is an area where the children are able to go and calm their minds and bodies. It is often an area in the classroom for one child to visit at a time when they feel the need. While in this area, it is the expectation that the child is quiet and the other children are expected to not disturb the person visiting the peace area.
At times we have introduced another area we call the peace table. On this table we have a peace rose in a vase. The rose is used to practice conflict resolution and also when there is an actual conflict between two students. One brings over the peace rose to the student whom they are having a conflict with. While holding it, they state what happened and why they are upset to the other student. The rose is then passed. The child who was listening repeats back what the first child said. This is a skill that takes some work because it requires active listening during a conflict (something that is difficult for adults at times, too). The child who repeated the problem to the first student then gets a turn to either apologize or explain their point of view and it continues until the conflict is resolved. This takes practice, but the children appreciate the process and utilize it when a conflict arises.
In the sensorial area of the room there is also a peace shelf that has a basket with a little sign that says "Silence", a Book of Peace (peace symbols and words from around the world), yoga cards, a blindfold and massager, finger labyrinth and a liquid timer (which is quite mesmerizing). There is also a special basket used for practicing group silence that has a variety of quiet instruments (singing bowl, chime eggs, rain forest frog croaking) to play to signal the end of silence. Group silence is an activity practiced in both early childhood classes and elementary classrooms usually once per day. It is a time of quiet reflection and a chance to build self-control.
Peace education is an extremely important part of Montessori. We strive to give the children tools and opportunities to experience peace and learn about peaceful living in many ways. Consider making a peace area in your home for all the family to use. I am sure we could all benefit from some quiet time every now and then!
"The function of education is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically... Intelligence plus character - that is the goal of true education."
--Martin Luther King Jr.
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