AMAZON SMILE

Metamorphosis Elementary School Of Monticello Inc

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

"Valen-time"

We have a tradition of celebrating every major holiday at our school, but after going with the flow of our culture for the first few years, we learned to tone down our celebrations. Montessori noted that sometimes "parents abandon children to the culture." Teachers and other adults do as well. However, even with her astute insight, surely she couldn't have forseen the over-the-top direction our culture would take - with just about everything. And it's easy, as a parent to just give in and say to oneself, "Everybody else is doing it." I've written a study regarding this subject, and have plenty to say about it, but it will take a series of posts. Today I'd rather share our most recent celebration...Valentine's Day.

Each year, close to the beginning of school, I like to start introducing the concept of celebrations. I read books from various cultures, we look at photos of people celebrating, and we talk about the components of a celebration. The children love knowing that there are some consistent traditions that humans from all over the world incorporate into their celebrations. We like to talk about this and list them again and again. We say, "We celebrate with clothing. We celebrate with food. We celebrate with decoration and art. (environment, face-makeup, cards, etc.) We celebrate with music. We celebrate with dance. We celebrate with fire." The children love this and actually begin to notice these different aspects of celebrating within the school community and within their outer community. To me, it is crucial that children get these kinds of lessons about the lives we are living. Otherwise, things are just thrown at them out of context, becoming just another thing to be whizzed through, thrown away and forgotten. On to bigger, better, louder, more expensive, and on and on. It's all dizzying to children and adults alike. I believe that this is a contributor to the rise in childhood depression that we are witnessing. They've seen it all and done it all by the time they are ten! What's left? So, instead of over-doing our celebrations, we make them truly special events that have meaning for the children. And that brings me to valentines.




It's taken a number of years to get all parents on board, but for the last several years we have had a commercial valentine-free celebration. We have included instructions in the parent handbook, and send home a reminder sheet weeks ahead of time. And voila! No store bought valentines come to school. Dr. Montessori said, "Of all things, love is the most important." I personally do not believe that buying a pack of Spiderman cards at the grocery the night before is teaching a child to love others. Love involves thought, and doing for others, and yes, a little work. So we insist that each child make the valentines. We also let our families know that parents are not to make them for the child. Assist? Absolutely. So we get great outcomes, including time together well spent, talking and laughing and making a mess and cleaning it up, and so on. Hopefully they start the project weeks early, but if they do it all the night before, a lesson is learned there too. It is the process, not the product that we are encouraging. And oh how the children love this! For weeks we've had various heart cutting materials on the shelf, along with gluing shapes, and fancier ideas for older children. Now they can set to work with an idea of what they are trying to accomplish. The day before the big day, we all take turns painting our mail sacks. Everyone is happy and excited. But the most astonishing thing to me is that on Valentine's Day itself, the children work throughout the morning as usual. They are not overly hyped up, just beaming with anticipation. In fact, this year, I put out some extra table materials that were new and enticing in case someone couldn't choose their work. I heard a first grade child invite another first grade child to play with these new things. The other child responded, "No. That wouldn't be a good idea. I have an equation I need to do, and if I play this I won't be finished before the party." The child who declined the invitation to play was not sad, in fact she went off happily to do her math problem. She's been in Montessori since age two, now she's six, and she knows her mind. Intrinsic motivation in bloom!

When the music box plays to call children to circle to celebrate, they put their work away and come carefully. We've talked, read stories, and prepared the children for this celebration for days now. The children know what this is all about. Children whose parents tell us that they cannot sit for five minutes at the dinner table, sit for a very long time indeed while cards are "mailed."







We take our time, and "ooh" and "ahh" over each child's creations. Children have cut special pictures from magazines, glittered, glued, drawn and painted. Some, from little ones, are just a tiny piece of paper with a crayon mark on it. But the children are so proud and shining as they give this gift to each of their classmates. When we are finished, we applaud, and have a dance. We've practiced our dance steps and we are ready. We've taken time to create our celebration, and we know how to party. We are a family of friends, sharing a peaceful tradition with meaning - and most of all, with real expressions of love.

FURTHER READING: This is an excellent article that has been featured in several publications. (I'm a braggy mom!), written by my oldest daughter Christina. Hope you will read and share.
 "Killing Special" by Christina Sanantonio

And finally, I would love some of you readers to become followers of this blog. I'm lonely here! And I would like to hear your comments and experiences with children, Montessori, and such! Please join and join in!

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Montessori...So Misunderstood (Sing to the tune of the Dr. Pepper song)

"It is always very difficult for me to set forth my argument, because this argument is not a simple conception like a line, but is immense, if you will, like a desert or an ocean. So it is very difficult for me to know just what I can do in order to give you what I would, for I do not myself know the extent of this greatness. This desert or ocean is not a creation  of my mind, my soul, my knowledge, my evolution, but it is Education. Not the education that you know, but an unknown education that is new, that is efficient, that gives help and a new orientation, a new knowledge, permit me to say, a new Wisdom to the world."
Dr. Maria Montessori

I read with interest and admiration the article written by Laura Flores Shaw, that appeared in The Huffington Post this last January 27th. The title: Montessori: The Missing Voice in the Education Reform Debate, stirred me up, as I've been pondering this mystery for decades. (See link below.)
And especially over the last few years, as the fatally-flawed system of traditional education has been revealing its warts to the masses. (I know, I know - before I go any further, let me clarify that I am not blaming teachers, as so many reformers and reporters have done.) It's not fair, and that is probably part of the reason that Montessori advocates have not pushed harder in the past. Most teachers work damned hard, and are passionate about helping their students. However, that being said, it is also part of the problem. Montessori knew that children are not "empty vessels" to be filled up with facts that an adult thinks they are imparting. Actually, as I get older, I've come to believe that there is a bit of arrogance in individuals who go into teaching to teach. Those are the people that I think of as "apple-wearers," that go into teaching to "help others," and "get the summers off". I picture them in quilted vests with apples on them, soaking up the adulation of parents and community. Well, maybe not so much anymore, but still, that's my mental concept of that sort of educator. I digress. 

The article presented accurate, concise information about Montessori education, and questioned the absence of discussion of Montessori from the educational reform community. It's true, we never hear about Montessori even though education is such a hot topic these days. Ms. Shaw suggested that special interests who stand to profit from the status quo may be involved in the squelching. She's probably right that this is a component of the mystery. (A quick study of the numbers of government representatives that send their children to Montessori schools would be interesting, wouldn't it?) Another factor is that the general public knows very little about the method, or, even worse, has misconceptions about it. In fact, in my experience, people have dismissed and criticized Montessori because of faulty thinking. The first time this happened to me, a kindergarten teacher told me, "You don't want Montessori," shaking her head and raising her Maybelline brows." In a child development class I was visiting, a student said, "Montessori! Isn't that where they march the children around like little soldiers?" People seem to think Montessori education is a free-for-all, or military training, and these perceptions are based upon lack of understanding. My mentor used to say that she could have two different observers in her classroom on the same day, and one would come away saying, "It's too structured.", while the other would say, "There is not enough structure." It's because it's just so vast - it's almost too much to take in, just like Dr. Montessori said...the ocean...the desert. And I think it is entirely possible that some people will never get it. There is serious science behind this stuff. How Dr. Montessori must have felt, trying to continually educate people about her discoveries. They were big. They are big, possibly beyond the scope and imagination of many people.

For a long time in my life, I just couldn't take it when people didn't get it. I loved the method too much, and I felt a sense of personal failure when people missed the beauty of it. Something that has helped with this at our school is a simple "Observation Checklist." (Checklist example below) I find that observers are not so overwhelmed by all the activity when they have specific things to watch for from the children in the environment. This provides them with some structure upon which to build their perceptions. 

But my little checklist is beneficial after we get them in the door. We need to get more people in the door. We need to keep this conversation going, write those articles, share the research, shout if we have to - "...sound our barbaric yawps..." and challenge the powers that be to wake up and discover this "New wisdom," that is..."Education." With a capital "E."



The often misunderstood "line."

Movement and Cognition
Balance and Coordination
Music Appreciation
Fun



 

p.s. And we do march on the line. But not like soldiers. We march with the jubilance of children traveling to the beat of their own drum!



A simple checklist such as this seems to make observers more comfortable, give them a focus, and provide us with specifics to discuss at the end of their observation.

OBSERVATION CHECKLIST (Feel free to take notes!)
Points to look for when you observe
As you sit down to carefully observe in a Montessori classroom for the first time, what catches your eye? What do you notice on your second or third visit?


How is the classroom organized? What do you notice about the layout of activities, furnishings, and shelves?

Pay attention to the way the adults interact with the children. What do you notice?
Perhaps during your observation you will see the teacher correct or discipline a child.  What do you notice?

As you observe, try to look for any unwritten rules and procedures that the children are following.  What do you notice?

Focus on a particular child other than your own.  Follow her work during the course of at least a half hour.  How does she spend her time? How does she select work?

Hopefully, you will see the teachers present several different lessons during your visits to either small groups or individual children.  What do you notice about the way they teach?

What do you notice about the educational materials on the shelves and how the children work with them?

Focus on various materials.  What skills does each one isolate?

Try to catch children learning from one another.

What interactions do you notice between older children and younger children?

Is it apparent to you that some children have reached a level of self-direction and regulation, while others are still working to attain these traits?


by Laura Flores Shaw