Montessori Method

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The Montessori system of education, named after Dr. Maria Montessori has today, become synonymous with pre-school education. Her concepts revolutionized the way the world saw small children.
              
  She referred to the mind of a child between 3 & 6 years of age, as the Absorbent Mind. During this time he literally absorbs everything in his environment through sensorial exploration. By sensorially absorbing the surroundings, a child forms his personality and himself. He constructs his mind, his memory, power to understand and ability to think through impressions gained from the environment.
 
 Educational research has also verified that the early years are the most important years of a child’s life. It is during the period between conception and four years that the child develops 50-60 % of his intelligence and another 30% between the ages 4 to 8 years. Very little develops after that.
  
  Today each parent wants to give their child the best education, however they have grown to realize that academic achievement alone will not prepare their child for life. Each child has certain vital needs as it grows up. In an academic environment these needs are generalized, hence these needs may be overlooked. However Montessori education strives to fulfill these individual needs.   
             
  Dr. Maria Montessori believed that a child has the inbuilt tendency to learn by himself. The child is the constructor of the adult. Mother Nature has endowed the child with necessary powers to fulfill this task. The child achieves various levels of growth, within the time spans fixed by nature. We have no control over them. All he needs is an encouraging environment, which fulfills his developmental needs.    
              
  The key elements of the Montessori Method are Self-education, individual instruction, didactic materials, a specially prepared environment, and the trained directress.
              
  A Montessori school provides prepared environments for children at each successive developmental plane where children are given freedom to work according to their inner urges. The child’s natural interest in learning is encouraged by giving opportunities in spontaneous, purposeful activities with the guidance of a trained adult. Within a framework of order eliminating the bane of competition, the children progress at their own pace and rhythm, according to their individual capabilities. These environments allow them to take responsibility for their own education. A sophisticated balance between liberty and discipline is prevalent.
              
    “The work of education is divided between the teacher and the environment” – Discovery of the Child

  Maria Montessori’s fame is largely due to the apparatus to which her name has been given and to the result it produces while bringing out the hidden learning powers of the child. Younger children are intensely attracted to these materials and use them spontaneously, independently, repeatedly and with deep concentration.  These materials are precision made, beautiful and enticing. The outstanding feature of these materials are that they have built-in “control-of-error” by which the child is enabled to judge his/her performance objectively and independently and to truly learn from one’s mistakes.
        
  A Montessori school is equipped with more than 100 different types of Montessori Apparatus, classified into Sensorial Material, Language Material, Arithmetic Material, and so on. Practical Life Exercises, through the use of Sensorial Material, instill care for themselves, for others and the environment. Using this material, children learn to grade and classify impressions. They do this by touching, seeing, smelling, tasting, listening and exploring the physical properties of their environment, through these specially designed materials.
              
 The teacher’s role is to provide the right environment for the child and make sure that the child can work at his own development in peace and freedom. The adult should understand that it is the child who has to achieve his goals. The adult cannot do it for him. Therefore, the adult should learn not think , ” I have to mould my child. I have to make him a doctor, engineer etc.” The role of building the child is that of nature and the child himself.
For ordinary schools, education is same as literacy, but Maria Montessori calls it as ” an aid to life”, making the Montessori system, a highly successful learning concept that has been acclaimed the world over.
             
 “Knowledge is necessary, but not sufficient. The well educated person is a well developed person who knows how to live a healthy life in every aspect of human existence – a well developed personality.”          
– M. Montessori .

A Comparison of Traditional Pre-school and Montessori

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

TRADITIONAL

 

MONTESSORI

     

Rigid Curriculum

 

Flexible curriculum

     

Progresses at teacher’s pace

 

Allows the child t o learn at his own pace

     

Constant guidance by teacher

 

Child free to discover on his own

     

Non scientific

 

Scientific method of teaching

     

Much role-play and fantasy

 

Reality orientated

     

Random placement – not necessary to return to specific place

 

Specific places for materials – sense of order

     

Teacher decides what the child has to learn

 

Child chooses activities according to inner needs

     

Teacher-centered environment

 

Child-centered learning environment

     

Use of reward and punishment in motivation

 

Self-education through self-correcting materials

     

All children are treated alike

 

Recognition of sensitive periods in each child

     

Play materials for non-specific skills

 

Multi-sensory materials to develop specific skills

     

Rigid rules not to move furniture and to sit in designated places

 

Liberty to move about self and furniture

     

Silence is on many occasions enforced

 

Liberty to speak (without disturbing others) as he pleases

     

Focus on imparting maximum quantum of knowledge

 

Focus on developing the child’s wholesome personality

Vishal Jain
Editor

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