Meet Our Staff

Bela says, "when will school start?"

 
As we head into a new school year, we wanted to take this opportunity to introduce you to what we affectionately refer to as, "The League of Extraordinary Montessorians". We're enthusiastic, invigorated and share the same philosophy of nurturing the young child in exploration of the world. Together, we're really looking forward to sharing in the joys, adventures and challenges of the new year. Of course, we're always around to answer any questions that you might have, and help in any way we can. Please don't hesitate to get in touch. It's going to be a great year!
 
 
MEET OUR MONTESSORI CHILDREN"S HOUSE STAFF
 
 
MEGAN DURKIN
primary teacher:classroom one
head of school


 
EMMA KLEESE
assistant teacher:classroom one 
 
NICOLE REGAN                                                   
primary teacher:classroom two                                 
 
  
 DANIELLE PEDRETTI
assistant teacher:classroom two
  
 SHANA HODEL
primary teacher:on travel leave
 
 
 PAT ROGNE
ASC teacher
 
PATTY GALLIVAN
float assistant
 
 
SEE YOU IN SEPTEMBER!
 
 
 

 


 
 

 
 
 
 
 

Summer at MCH

Playful, meaningful connection with the world outdoors needs to be a fundamental ingredient of every childhood. An integral part of the Montessori philosophy is the belief that children learn through personal experience. The summer at Montessori Children’s House focuses on increasing the child’s awareness, particularly in the area of life sciences. The summer is an ideal time for exploration of our natural areas, bird life and other animal life surrounding our school. The children plant and maintain their own garden of flowers and vegetables.  Many practical life activities like washing, scrubbing and polishing are moved outdoors. The program is designed to involve children in environmental education through interactive stories, songs and games.  They create arts and crafts projects and conduct experiments and scientific studies.  Regular cooking classes take place in our summer kitchen and feature healthy products picked from the garden. Outdoor exploration includes nature walks and scavenger hunts as well as tending our MCH garden and creating a mini-Farmer’s Market and lemonade stand.

A special session in late summer focuses on increasing the child’s awareness, particularly in the area of music learning.  Parents recognize the earliest signs of musical interest when children begin to capture portions of songs and move in response to music. To reinforce a child’s spontaneous musical activities leads to enhanced natural development of communication, expression, and cognition. It is also a lot of fun! Along with the American Orff-Schulwerk Association we at MCH are united in our belief that music and movement—to speak, sing and play; to listen and understand; to move and create—should be an active and joyful experience.   

Summer programs at MCH are open to current, past and future families who seek a nature based play environment where their children can explore and learn in a community of friends.

For more information visit our website or call 645-2445.                      
 







Hello, Julia Child!

This spring break I did not attend the annual AMS conference (I do intend to listen to some of the workshops via the folks at EGAMI A/V). I did visit an intriguing Montessori site, though, while in Pasadena, CA.
The Aria Montessori School on Euclid Avenue dates back to 1913 and surely must have been the school attended by Julia Child. It was also visited by Maria Montessori herself in 1917 a few years after her famous demonstration class at the pan-pacific expo in California.

 

Bulding the Pink Tower




"Building the Pink Tower" is a documentary film project that reimagines schools and learning through the lens of Montessori education.
 
In a climate of concern and criticism about American schools, Building the Pink Tower shines a light on what we want in education: eager learning, creative thinking, and collaborative work. The film will examine how Montessori schools nurture the imagination of children and lay a solid foundation for their success in life. And it will offer strategies for incorporating elements of Montessori philosophy into any classroom environment.

The filmakers spent a morning at Cornerstone Montessori School in Saint Paul, MN, to gather footage for the fundraising trailer. They were moved by what they saw.
 


We want to share this video which shows the magic of Montessori education. www.buildingthepinktower.org

Kids in the Kitchen


Winter is a great time to initiate, or expand on, children's roles in the family kitchen. Our weekly cooking classes at MCH follow the Montessori principles of empowering young children to be independent and feature hands on developmentally appropriate and fun projects for young children. Each year we compile a cookbook of our child friendly recipes for families to try at home and have their children take the lead in the kitchen. There are several good cookbooks on the market geared toward preschoolers, such as Molly Kasten's Pretend Soup and her newest, Salad People. Habits for healthy eating and participation in family life can never start too early. It's a great way to empower your child to develop fine motor skills, concentration, a sense of order, independence and more. The end results are sweet rewards--you'll be surprised what even picky eaters will try if they have helped to make it themselves.

First Lady Michelle Obama's blog, Let's Move, had the following post today:

At just 12 years old, Haile Thomas has made a big difference. A youth leader working hard to inspire kids to eat healthy, Haile joined First Lady Michelle Obama, along with a handful of other guests, for the President’s State of the Union Address on Tuesday evening.  
read more


Happy Lunar New Year!


Preparing for the new year.
tea table
jiaoze 
good luck signs for the doors



Last year's lion dance to bring in the year of the dragon--


Hoping for good luck for all in the year of the snake!

Games for Children

The following post from Montessorian, Maren Schmidt gives great examples of activities to do with young children to develop awareness and self-control.
 
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Learning to Stop and Think 
          
Impulsivity is a sign of Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) and probably most 36-month-olds' behavior would meet the criteria for being ADHD.   Some of the criteria follow: makes careless mistakes, has difficulty sustaining attention in work or play activities, does not seem to listen, does not follow through on instructions, has difficulty organizing tasks, avoids tasks that require sustained effort, is easily distracted, is forgetful about daily activities.
 
What happens during years three, four and five of a child's development determines whether that child learns to self-regulate behavior. Mastering certain key skills during this first six years of life makes a huge difference in a person's life.  
 
Learning to stop and think is one of those key skills. When I was a six-year-old my teenage neighbor taught me a singing cheer: Stop, look and listen. I've sung this cheer many a time with my preschool and elementary students to get the point clear and in the air when ADD behavior was everywhere.  
 
It really does boil down to those three words. We need to help our children learn to stop, look and listen.
 
Stop. One of the simple games I recommend for helping direct and redirect a young child's behavior is the Verb Game. Helping your child integrate thought and movement, i.e. having the body obey the will, is a great help to the young child.    
 
Directions for the Verb Game: On 3'' x 5'' index cards, with one word per card, write the following words: jump, walk, sit, stand, twirl, spin, squirm, wiggle, laugh, smile, nod, shake, blink, smack, stomp, tap, clap, click, rub, pat, crawl, freeze and stop.
 
I suggest writing these words down because in a moment of great need, I can never think of enough action words. But I can usually find the stack of cards.
 
Play the game by telling your child that you are going to play the Verb Game, that you'll say a word and both you and your child will do it together. Read ''jump'' out loud, and begin to jump. Jump for about ten seconds with your child, and then give the next command. After the fourth or so command, say, ''Don't jump.'' Wait about ten seconds, and see what happens.
 
What you more than likely will see is your child jump or do whatever you've instructed him or her to not do. Continue on with rest of the commands, and then offer your child a chance to give the commands. Play on a daily basis to help your child learn to follow directions by connecting mind and body, thoughts and actions.
 
Look.Helping your children to notice the world around them can be done with a game I call "What Do You See?" Take a detailed filled object-perhaps a photo from a magazine or an art postcard. Invite your child to play the "What Do You See?" game. Sit in a comfortable place and place the object in sight and say, "We are going to sit silently for 30 seconds and look at this picture. When 30 seconds is up I am going to ask you want you see."  
 
 
On small slips of paper write what your child tells you he or she sees in the picture. Try to elicit ten items, placing the labels around the picture. Review and re-read each label. "You looked at this picture and you saw a girl, a bike, a bike helmet, a pink dress, a black dog, a boy, roller skates, a fence, red flowers, green grass, a big tree."
 
Point at each label as you name the items. Gather the labels, read them one at a time, hand the label to your child and let them place on the picture. Afterwards place the picture and the labels in a basket and place on an activity shelf for your child to repeat by either looking or, looking and labeling. Needless to say, this looking exercise is also an early reading activity.  
 
Listen. Children love quiet. All they need is to learn how to listen. Children enjoy a listening game where everyone gets quiet for about two minutes, which is a very long time for three- and four-year-olds, and for some 34-year-olds, too.    
 
In my preschool class I'd set an hourglass-type egg timer in the middle of our group to give the children a focal point and concept of how much longer they should sit and listen. In the quiet the children heard each other sigh, squirm and change positions. In short the children became aware of how a simple movement disrupts the mood of the group. At the end of the two-minute period, I would go around the group and ask each child what they heard as they listened.
 
Without exception, the children were amazed at what they could hear. Birds outside even though all the doors and windows were shut. Cars at the stop sign a block away. A fire truck leaving the station a mile away. The rumble of a train. The neighbor's tractor or leaf blower. The refrigerator. The heat clicking on. The air going through their noses. The clock ticking in the adjoining room. The faucet dripping in the bathroom. In the quiet the children listened.
After this five- to ten-minute listening exercise the children appeared more confident and controlled in their actions, left the group lesson with tranquil smiles and worked the rest of the morning with deeper concentration than before the lesson.   
 
Stop, look and listen. Cheer your children on to learn how to stop and think, essential skills for a lifetime. 
             
 

Google Doodle Celebrates Educator Maria Montessori

Google on Friday honored Italian physician and educator Maria Montessori with a homepage doodle celebrating her 142nd birth anniversary.


The drawing (below, right) features some of the tools that form the basis of Montessori's educational methods, which emphasize hands-on, individualized learning within mixed age groups in a child-friendly setting.

Montessori was born in 1870 in Chiaravalle, Italy and early on rejected the traditional gender roles of her time, choosing to attend technical school, which few girls did, according to her NNDB biography. Upon graduation, she continued her education at the Regio Istituto Tecnico Leonardo da Vinci, where she excelled and developed a passion for the biological sciences.

In 1890, she applied to University of Rome but was denied entrance to the medical program because of her gender. Instead, she enrolled to study physics, mathematics, and the natural sciences and was eventually allowed to study medicine. In 1896, she presented her thesis to an all-male board and they were so impressed that they awarded her a full medical degree, making her the first female doctor in Italy.

After working in insane asylums with mentally handicapped children, in 1904 she began re-engineering the field of children's education. She believed that all children have an inner drive to learn, and that children learn best when in a safe, hands-on learning environment.

Montessori also found that children help teach each other when put into groups with other kids of their own age range. She believed that teachers should pay close attention to students, not the other way around.

Her early efforts were so successful that she amassed a large following of parents and teachers who wanted to learn her methods. She later gained support from Thomas Edison, Helen Keller, and Alexander Graham Bell, who founded the Montessori Educational Association, headquartered in Washington D.C.

Montessori died in 1952 in The Netherlands. Her methods are still in use today in public and private schools all over the world.

Google's co-founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page, both went through the Montessori education system and have credited it for their success.

"I think it was part of that training of not following rules and orders and being self-motivated, questioning what's going on in the world, doing things a bit different," Page said in an interview with ABC (below).

For more from Angela, follow her on Twitter @amoscaritolo.



Kid's State Dinner


Watch Live: Monday August 20, 2012 at 10AM EST
On Monday August 20, 2012 First Lady Michelle Obama will be hosting the first ever Kids’ “State Dinner” at the White House welcoming 54 budding chefs to a formal luncheon in the East Room! The guests, who are aged 8-12, represent all U.S. states, three territories and the District of Columbia, and each of them (and their parents) submitted a healthy recipe as part of the Healthy Lunchtime Challenge.