Post on 02-Dec-2021
DR. MARIA MONTESSORITHE MONTESSORI METHOD OF EDUCATION
Maria Montessori was born in Italy in 1870
She became Italy’s first qualified woman doctor in
1896Maria Montessori was a trail
blazer for women’s rights
Her focus became children with disabilities
Dr. Montessori believed in supporting a child’s freedom
and growth.
Dr. Montessori believed that no human being is educated by
another person. “He must do it himself or it will never be
done”
Montessori brought forth a revolutionary faith in children
that turned the role of teacher into an observer, one
who guides and supports child led interest
Montessori built her entire educational approach around
the special needs and characteristics of each of these four stages of growth which she
termed “Planes of Development”
Birth to six (infancy)Six to twelve (childhood)
Twelve to eighteen (adolescence)
Eighteen to twenty-four (transition to adulthood)
The Montessori classroom is indeed a child’s world, geared to the size, pace and interests of the child. This is where the young child cultivates his/her
desire to learn
Casa dei Bambini – In Italian it means “Children’s House” was Dr. Montessori’s First School. It opened in San Lorenzo, Rome, on January 6th back in 1907
Dr. Maria Montessori
Casa dei Bambini 1907
Casa dei Bambini 2019
YMA Intermediate Programs (Gr 4 -6) & High School (Gr 9 – 12) Student Government
MONTESSORI CURRICULUM
Curriculum materials promote the
development of social skills, emotional growth
and physical coordination as well as cognitive preparationThe use of materials is based on the young
child’s unique aptitude for learning which Dr.
Montessori Identified as the “absorbent mind”
CurriculumPractical Life Exercises
Sensorial Development Exercises
Language Exercises
Math Exercises
Cultural Art Exercises
In the Montessori classroom the objective is approached in
two ways: first by allowing each child to experience the excitement of learning by his own choice, rather than being
forced; and second, by helping him to perfect all his natural tools for learning, so
that his ability will be a maximum in future learning
situations
The multi-age classroom enables younger children to
learn from older children and experience new challenges through observation. Older children reinforce their own
learning by teaching concepts they have mastered, while
developing leadership skills and serving as a role model. There is cooperation rather than competition between
ages. This arrangement mirrors real work experiences in which individuals work and socialize
with people of all ages
MONTESSORI VS. TRADITIONAL
• EMPHASIS ON COGNITIVE STRUCTURE AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
• TEACHER’S ROLE IS UNOBTRUSIVE; CHILD ACTIVELY PARTICIPATES IN LEARNING
• ENVIRONMENT AND METHOD ENCOURAGE INTERNAL SELF-DISCIPLINE
• INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP INSTRUCTION ADAPTS TO EACH STUDENT’S LEARNING STYLE
• MIXED AGE GROUPING• CHILDREN ENCOURAGED TO TEACH, COLLABORATE, AND
HELP EACH OTHER• CHILD CHOOSES OWN WORK FROM INTERESTS, ABILITIES• CHILD FORMULATES CONCEPTS FROM SELF-TEACHING
MATERIALS
• EMPHASIS ON ROTE KNOWLEDGE AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
• TEACHER’S ROLE IS DOMINANT, ACTIVE; CHILD IS A PASSIVE PARTICIPANT
• TEACHER IS PRIMARY ENFORCER OF EXTERNAL DISCIPLINE• INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP INSTRUCTION CONFORMS TO THE
ADULT’S TEACHING STYLE• SAME AGE GROUPING• MOST TEACHING IS DONE BY TEACHER AND
COLLABORATION IS DISCOURAGED• CURRICULUM STRUCTURED WITH LITTLE REGARD FOR CHILD’S
INTERESTS• CHILD IS GUIDED TO CONCEPTS BY TEACHER
MONTESSORI VS. TRADITIONAL
• CHILD WORKS AS LONG AS HE/SHE WANTS ON A CHOSEN PROJECT
• CHILD SETS OWN LEARNING PACE TO INTERNALIZE INFORMATION
• CHILD SPOTS OWN ERRORS THROUGH FEEDBACK FORM MATERIALS
• LEARNING IS REINFORCED THROUGH CHILD’S OWN REPETITION OF ACTIVITY, INTERNAL FEELINGS OF SUCCESS REPETITION
• MULTI-SENSORY MATERIALS FOR PHYSICAL EXPLORATION DEVELOPMENT
• ORGANIZED PROGRAM FOR LEARNING CARE OF SELF AND SELF-CARE ENVIRONMENT (SHOE POLISHING, SINK WASHING, ETC.
• CHILD USUALLY GIVEN SPECIFIC TIME FOR WORK• INSTRUCTION PACE SET BY GROUP NORM OR TEACHER• ERRORS CORRECTED BY THE TEACHER• LEARNING IS REINFORCED EXTERNALLY BY REWARDS,
DISCOURAGEMENTS• FEW MATERIALS FOR SENSORY, CONCRETE MANIPULATION• LITTLE EMPHASIS ON INSTRUCTION OR CLASSROOM
MAINTENANCE
YMAWORLD AS CLASSROOM
“BRINGING EDUCATION TO LIFE AND LIFE TO EDUCATION”
• Classes connect to the world helping students understand personal and global interdependence
• Field connect to the world helping students on trips to conduct first-hand research such as studying wildlife and nature, exposure to the arts and other cultures, and business and entrepreneurship