I'm looking into preschools for DD, there are always waiting lists around here and I'm interested in one particular Montessori school. Can you tell me the pros/cons of them? I'm not very familiar, I know they tend to be less structured, more child-led. Any advice would be great! Thanks!
Warning
No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
Re: Pros/Cons for Montessori Schools?
I laugh b/c most of my friends either love love love it or hate it. From what I can tell Montessori is more about self-guided learning as opposed to other pre-k's with more traditional style sit and learn curriculum. With that said many of the traditional pre-k's we have visit incorporate many Montessori like principals. I've also heard some local montessori pre-k's don't do it as well.
I would just honestly tour traditional pre-k's and local montessori and make a decision from there.
I love a lot of Montessori principles, but it would be a terrible fit for my DD. She is a VERY creative child, always creating SOMETHING whether it's art, crafty stuff, telling stories, writing plays complete with dialog, making up songs, etc. She really needs to be in an environment that encourages that type of play/learning, which is not a Montessori focus. She's actually in a Waldorf based PS right now which fits her perfectly.
I have a client (I'm a hairdresser) who is a Montessori guide (has been for 8 or 10 years) at an awesome school here and we've talked about it at length; she agrees with me completely, especially after meeting DD, so even if it's the world's most amazing program it may nopt be so amazing for your DC.
Lily has been in a Montessori program since 15 months. I absolutely love it. I'm not familiar with a typical preschool environment, but I feel like she is learning an absolute ton and there are no limits on that learning.
For example, just after she turned 3 her teacher called me to tell me how excited she was that Lily was starting to spell. She said Lily knew her letters better than some 4 year olds, so they were pushing ahead with spelling. In a typical classroom, I'm not sure this would be possible. But because she's in a class with 3-5 year olds, they can work ahead in areas where they show interest and strength.
Also, if you watch a Montessori class, it's pretty impressive. There is nice music going, and a group of 3-5 year olds will just sit, each working on their own "work." I like how each child can chose his own "work" and how they really teach respect and proper ways to deal with emotion and conflict. I'm sure most preschools work on that, but I like the kindness of the Montessori model. They also really, really stress independence, which is great.
Everyday when I pick Lily up from school she wants to show me her favorite "work." I love it. She tells me the rules and shows me how to do it. It shows me she's engaged and enjoying herself, which is awesome.
If your child isn't a self-starter, I've heard the Montessori method may not be ideal. Otherwise, I don't see any cons unless it's just not your style.
It was not for my DD at all. For all the creative free-spirited stuff that they talk about, it's actually very structured and that was not my DDs thing. I also strongly dislike the multi-age method of learning. I had DD in a montessori for a year and there was nothing that was so bad that I took her out mid-year but I didn't send her back. The kids were only allowed to speak in a whisper and for me, preschool aged kids need to be able to make noise and run around, it all felt too staged for me. Maybe it was this particular school, but it rubbed me the wrong way.
She is now in a Reggio Emilia school which is similar to a montessori but is a lot more hands-on learning and creative play type of thing. For me it was all the pros of monetssori without the cons.