Montessori FAQs
Our Montessori FAQs
I’ve been asked a lot if Montessori is only for kids who can plan well and are super independent. Or only for kids that can sit quietly and work and not run about.
How does it work in practice?
It can be difficult for parents to understand how there can be 25 children in a Montessori Primary Preschool class, all up to different lessons, and working on different subjects all at the same time. I often get asked: “how can the teacher manage all this?”
So, here’s an impression of how it works in practice.
Before the day starts, the Montessori teacher has prepared the classroom. Activities line the shelves at the children’s height in the various subject areas: meticulously prepared materials which scaffold onto each other, building skills on skills on skills. Once the child has mastered one activity, they receive a lesson for the next one if needed.
If you walk into a Montessori classroom in the middle of class, you will then see one child working on his math, perhaps sitting next to another child working on a language activity, and then a pair of children working on a project together or a group of children making a play. The idea is that the child can choose for themselves what they would like to work on, and the teacher will give them a lesson if needed. There is always something to work on in one of the subject areas, and so the teacher has time to come around to explain things and give lessons with each child.
As there is a mixed age group in the classroom, eg, from
- Infants 8 weeks – 18m.
- Toddlers 18m. – 3 yrs. old.
- Primary Preschool 3 – 6 yrs. old
- Elementary 6 – 12 yrs.old.
With this span of development and ages it often affords our older children the opportunity to be guides and leaders themselves. This exposure to helping younger children can truly build the confidence and maturity of older students. When you explain something to another child, you also consolidate your own learning. The younger children also learn a lot from observing children older than them.
Lastly, there is less time spent on “crowd control”, eg, getting everyone to sit and listen to a lesson, visiting the bathroom as a group etc. So, there is more time overall to help the children.