Category Archives: Montessori

Montessori modified for home education.

abacus

Well, while we do not have a multi aged classroom of 30-60 children with 4-8 trained Montessori teachers, we can modify Maria Montessori’s method of education for our home.

What we’re doing together is NOT “The Montessori Method”. Maria made it clear that each Children’s House was to have a complete set of equipment and set up in such a way that, if you moved about from school to school, you couldn’t find any substantial difference, with either the physical room or the teaching staff. If her Method was to be held up as a ‘scientifically provable’ method of education, then each room needed to be almost like a ‘science experiment’, repeatable and identical in every detail possible.

 

We are not able to replicate her model here. We can modify the main principles to suit our continuing journey with learning though. We do this because we LOVE Montessori… it just ‘fits’ well with how we behave and how we relate to each other, our family and friends, and to the learning process. So we have some guiding principles from the Maria’s writings to draw upon, which are:

  • Follow the child.
  • If a child demonstrates observable concentration when learning a new skill or mastering a skill, do not interrupt.
  • Do not help the child with something they feel they can succeed in.
  • Ignite interest but let that interest be free to develop.
  • Freedom is the matching of Liberty to work, and the Will to work. Liberty comes from having a prepared environment where choices are available, Will comes from within the child’s desire to learn. The prepared environment includes a ’3 hour work cycle’, usually in the morning, where the children know they won’t be interrupted. Where learning is progressively introduced and also where they experience the highest amount of Will, or desire, to learn.multiplication board

Every change we have made has been based on our discussions, where both M and D have had the Freedom to choose, always.

Although I’ve ‘ticked off outcomes’ in both the Board of Studies NSW curriculum and the Montessori curriculum, we haven’t always followed a routine or used the materials during a work cycle. During our meetings and discussions both M and D wanted very much for us to have routines, to use the Montessori materials more and to have definite ‘computer use time’, as all three of us have spent far too much time on computers over the past couple of years. Do you have that problem in your home?

Here are some  more samples of the work we are currently doing.

Stomach modelcakeheart modelroutine

So far we’ve enjoyed one whole month of gently, at first, moving back into a regular daily routine. Last week went exceptionally well. After they follow a morning ritual of getting their bodies ready (bathroom, breakfast… you know lol), they then start a three hour work cycle. Food is eaten when required, but we stop for lunch after those three hours. Two more hours is then devoted to projects and what Montessori called the ‘Great Work’, which basically means ‘learning something they’re obsessed about’. After 2pm it’s free time, and computers can go on (if they weren’t already used for research etc). At 5pm we stop for a 30 min cleaning roster where everyone chooses what room they start in and we all have jobs that we can do independently. Night time brings dinner, bath/book/bed and then I have time to write, and prepare for the next day, before retiring myself.

writing

It’s still a work in progress, however, we’re definitely on a good path. No one is resisting the change, in fact they hold me to task and remind me to NOT be on Facebook before 2pm!

All the best!

 

 

Squirming child who won’t sit down and learn to write?

Let me begin by asking…

Have you got a squirming child who won’t sit down and learn to write? How about making some Sandpaper Letters to trace with their finger and then draw each letter as it’s written with chalk outside and have them trace it with their feet, walking on the line almost like a train would on a train track!

You can find information on making your own Sandpaper Letters at http://livingmontessorinow.com/2011/12/19/montessori-monday-inexpensive-and-diy-sandpaper-letters/

 

When my now 8 year old boy was first learning to read, some 3 years ago, I printed out the outline of large letters onto printable canvas paper, cut around them and spray glued them onto card (consonant sounds yellow, vowel sounds blue). He still has trouble knowing the ‘right way to write’ letters then I FINALLY worked out why… he’s a whole body learner! (uno… kinaesthetic squirmy/probably wrongly labelled ADHD if in a school because he can’t learn WITHOUT moving.) He can’t learn with just his eyes and his hand… he needs his WHOLE BODY involved!

He put all the letters in order, held down by pebbles so they wouldn’t blow away and then I wrote each each letter big with chalk on our footpath. D shuffled on the chalk lines in the same order/direction in which I wrote it down, tracing them with his feet and after the letter ‘d’ he said “Oh this makes more sense! Now I know EXACTLY ‘how’ the letter is made, not just what it looks like then trying to make that shape from my memory”

 

Home made tactile/sandpaper letters

Home made tactile/sandpaper letters

 

Waiting to go back to Montessori Home Ed

Let me start by saying that Unschooling and Montessori approaches to learning will go hand in hand by the time children are about 7. Although we ‘could’ keep using the Montessori materials and following the sequence of the curriculum Maria really did intend children to get into the world and learn from life. The Method can not be replicated in the home, as I’ve mentioned before. What I can do though is prepare the environment for what is called ‘strewed’ learning… putting things you’d like your child to discover in their general path. If the child is interested they will learn that ‘thing’, if not then they ‘move around it’ but it hasn’t become a forced lesson that’s failed or a hindrance to further learning. They are free to return to it at any time.

That’s been pretty much what I’ve been doing for our Home Ed journey since the sad demise of our storage shed. Cue the violins…

 

The sky said goodbye.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

How do we feel about this Shed?

Now to reclaim our Home!

What we do…. and then some

In the wee small hours…before crashing into bed (probably literally at this stage) I’m reminded that I need to share more of what we actually do with home education if this blog and my website link are to be in anyway useful.

Well their dad was a blacksmith when she was born!
 
Oh wow… that foil covered shield looks shiney!
Battle time… the only time they fight!

 

  • Monday Morning Meetings… we gather and go over what each of my munchkins want to do with their week academically, socially, inside, outside… what ever really. Then I raise the topics of what I feel would be good to cover and we discuss all of what we’ve raised. From this we write up a plan of things I need to do, they need to do, places we need to go, things we need to buy etc. Usually we come up with other things during the week but I have a written record of the conversation so I can monitor what is going on during the week, make comments, suggestions, give reminders etc. This process works best for us and stops us falling into the common unschooling trap of everyone going off to do their own thing, nothing gets done, gaps in sequential learning develop and well… we genuinely miss each other! It may seem strange, but when we’re off doing our own thing we may not see each other all day! Now that both of my children are capable of independent research they get heavily invested into what they are doing. Another aspect is Continue reading

Conference Reef and stuff!

It’s time for me to publish a post on my blog. What shall it be about hmmmm? Well I’m not really motivated to do more than say that life goes on, ups and downs…. oh we attended the Australian Unschooling Conference. It was very intense, sublime and the setting was awesome.

We swam in the warm waters of the Great Barrier Reef and although it broke my heart to be there, knowing what tourism and CSG etc is doing to the natural wonder I managed to balance out my own personal dilemma of contributing to the tourism.Once there I saw that the area we saw was fairly dull and up further was much brighter… I like (tongue in cheek) that we may have been ‘kept away’ from the pristine parts… but it’s still something I struggle with. I still feel as though a dream of mine has been fulfilled.

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