Monday, August 12, 2013

An Overview: The Montessori Language Curriculum

I am happy and proud to say that I have completed the summer portion of the Montessori Certification program at the Houston Montessori Center! Yay!

I am very excited to apply all of the knowledge I have learned into the creation of Ladybird Montessori School! This is such an exciting time for my family and me! I am thrilled to share my love for education and the Montessori method with you as well!

I had promised some language and math posts a few weeks ago. Due to lack of time, I had to put off the posts until now. Over the next few days I will post about the Montessori Language and Math curriculum.

Today I will do an overview of Oral Language Development, Phonics, Writing, Handwriting, and Reading. This is just an overview, so I will not be showing every work found in the language area of the classroom. I am doing an overview to explain how the lessons build upon one another. A child does not receive a new lesson until he or she has mastered the previous concept taught. This ensures that a child is ready to learn everything being taught. There are no holes or gaps in the learning process, which eliminates a great deal of frustration children often encounter in traditional schools.

In the Montessori classroom, children are not taught their letters first. Teaching a child letters first is actually counter productive. A letter is abstract. It is a symbol. Children need to learn everything concrete first, before they can understand it in the abstract. Oral Language Development provides many concrete opportunities to develop a foundation for language arts. In a Montessori classroom the children learn a variety of songs, poems, rhymes, and finger plays. Poetry is very important because it uses rhythm, meter, and rhyme in a form not commonly used in stories.

One of the first lessons a child will receive in the Language area is an object to object work, which is usually the fruit basket. The child will be given a lesson matching wooden or plastic fruit to real fruit. The child will get to taste all of the real fruit, which is a fun sensory experience. After the object to object lesson, the child will have an object to card lesson (which is a bit more abstract), where the child matches the wooden fruit to a picture of the fruit.

The child will have a lesson on a variety of works that strengthen the child's ability to match objects that:
  • are the same
  • go together
  • same and different
  • are opposite
  • object to ground
  • patterning with objects 
The image below is an example of an object to card work using tools.

Below is an example of a patterning work.

The work moves from concrete to abstract, meaning it moves from objects (3-D) to cards and pictures (2-D).

Below is a picture of an environment card matching work.

The child will also have lessons in sequencing. Below is a picture of a sequencing work of a boy brushing his teeth.

Once the child has a solid foundation in Oral Language Development, the child will be ready for Phonics lessons.

The first lesson in Phonics is the "I Spy" game. The teacher will first play the game with objects in the room. For example, "I spy something in the vase that begins with the sound "f". The child would say, "You spy a flower!" The I Spy game would then move to concrete objects that are a small replica of the actual objects. For example, small items found in doll houses such as cups, bowls, a bed, a tub, etc.

Below is a picture of items that might be found in an "I Spy" object box.


Once the child can identify objects that begin with the 3 sounds found in the first sandpaper letter box, the child will have a lesson on the three sounds in the first sandpaper letter box. The child will be introduced to the symbol by tracing it and saying the sound it makes. The child will not be asked to identify the letters name at this point. The name of the letter is abstract and serves no purpose at this stage in the learning process.


Once the child can identify the symbols by the sound they represent, the child will match the symbols to objects that begin with the sound.


 After the child knows enough beginning sounds, the teacher will bridge the sandpaper letters to the moveable alphabet. This lesson is a bridge into the Writing curriculum. Some examples of lessons with the moveable alphabet are pictured below.


 The child will also be receiving lessons on 3 letter (and then 4-5 letter phonetic words when ready) phonetic words, ending sounds, rhyming, sight words, and booklets during this time. Some examples of work are pictured below.
 Rhyming

 End Sounds
Phonetic Object Box - Secret Message

Commands

Reading Booklet

Around the time the above lessons are happening with the moveable alphabet and phonetic word building, the child will also have his/her first lesson with the Metal Insets. The Metal Insets help a child develop beautiful handwriting.



Some additional handwriting lessons are with the cornmeal tray, chalkboards, and paper. We move from unlined to lined. We do not use dry erase boards in an Early Childhood classroom. They do not provide a sensory experience when writing. Chalk on a chalkboard and pencil on paper make a sound and feeling for the child as he or she writes.









After the child is reading three and four letter words in phrases and sentences, he or she will move on to middle sounds and phonograms. During this time the child will also be doing works in reading sentences, matching rhyming pictures to words, etc. Some examples of works a child will be doing to master these concepts are pictured below.




Examples of lessons found in a language area of a Montessori classroom can go on and on. I did not post any pictures of the Readers, but once the child is reading 3 and 4 letter phonetic words the child will begin reading with the Lead Guide/Teacher using a variety of different Easy Readers/Books. When the child is ready, books will be sent home on a nightly basis so that parents can enjoy listening to their child read.

The language area is always changing and evolving to meet the needs of the children in the classroom. Each child is on his or her own journey through the work. Some children need more time, while others move quickly and need more challenging work. That is the beauty of Montessori. Every child learns at his or her own pace by receiving one-on-one lessons from the Lead Guide/Teacher in the classroom. There are no holes in the learning process, everything moves from concrete to abstract, and children are always provided with work that is challenging, yet doable (due to the foundation from the previous work mastered) for the child.

I will publish a post on Grammar in the Monessori Early Childhood Classroom later this week.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

In awe and wonder...

Wow! What a month this has been! I apologize for the time between posts. I am just so busy!

I am 3 weeks into my Montessori certification program and I am LOVING it! The certification program at the Houston Montessori Center is amazing. I am even more confident now, that I am on the right path with my career as an educator.

This past week we discussed a child's choice and perceived control of his/her environment. Giving a child choices and some control over his/her environment makes a huge difference in the child's ability to learn and process information. When they have the ability to make their own schedule, they are more engaged in the work they choose and they are more focused. "And this freedom is not only an external sign of liberty, but a means of education" (Montessori, 1912/1964, pp. 81-84).

So far I have had training in these areas of the classroom:

Practical Life: In this area of the classroom you will find all of the tools necessary to clean the classroom (yes, the children clean up after themselves), wet spill clean up, dry spill clean up, crumbing, window washing, sweeping, dusting, dish washing, clothes washing, food preparation, pouring work, spooning work, tweezing, tonging, open and close work, dressing frames (button frame, tying frame, zipper frame, etc) and many other lessons that teach a child how to be independent and care for himself and his environment. Many of the lessons also strengthen the 3 finger grasp, which prepares the hand for writing with a pencil. It is amazing to see the children working with all of the practical life work. They are so proud of themselves when they wash the dishes, cut a carrot and serve it to their friends, pour their own water from a porcelain pitcher into their glass cup and drink it, etc. They are so proud of their work and they are so careful and precise with how they follow the lesson given to them by the guide in the classroom. Imagine as a child of 3, being allowed to touch the porcelain pitcher and actually pour from it, or being allowed to core an apple, slice it, and serve it to your friends! The children are so proud of their work. At this age, being independent and doing the work they see Mommy and Daddy doing at home is so special and important to them.

Sensorial: In this area of the classroom you will find the knobbed cylinders, pink tower, brown stairs, geometric cabinet, rough and smooth boards, thermal tablets, sound cylinders, bells, stereognostic (feeling) work, olfactory (smelling) work, gustatory (tasting) work, and many other works that strengthen the senses. This work is very important because it teaches the child to use her senses to understand her environment. It also provides the foundation for language such as big, small, thick, thin, tall, short, rough, smooth, hot, cold, etc. Much of the work is also seen again later in math work as the child develops in the classroom.

In my next post I will give a short paragraph overview on Math and Language.

I hope my short paragraphs do justice to the beautiful education program Maria Montessori developed. I am so excited to put everything I am learning into motion in my own classroom this fall!

More to come! :)

Friday, June 14, 2013

My New Path

I have created this blog to document my journey towards becoming a Montessori teacher, director, and owner of Ladybird Montessori School of Buda, TX.

Many have asked me what has led me to this, the creation of a Montessori School.

It started in 2007, when I became an assistant teacher at Mariposa Montessori School. While I was working there, I fell in love with the Montessori Approach to teaching. At one point while working there, I did tell Justin I wanted to stop working towards my Masters in Education and pursue a Montessori Certification with the intention of becoming a lead teacher at Mariposa, and maybe someday having a school of my own, like Whitney Falcon. The idea faded, just as other professional ideas I have had in the past (such as going to the Mountain Forests of Rwanda to study gorillas, just like Dian Fossey.) Lucky for me, my dream of pursuing Montessori has resurfaced and become a reality. I am happy to say that I can leave my dreams of African adventures to my brother-in-law, Marshal Foster! You can follow his journey at http://theangelsofafrica.blogspot.com

My four years in the classroom, gave me a great deal of insight into the public education system versus the Montessori classroom. I have discovered that the public school system tends to teach towards the middle. It is not the public school teachers fault for teaching the class to the middle. It is the design of the system that causes that. It is the TEKS and the Curriculum Road Maps. It is the objectives and skills that must be mastered by the end of each grading cycle. It is the 24 students to 1 teacher ratio. It is all of the high stakes tests. It is a one-size-fits-all approach to education. Any teacher that does it differently (and MANY of them do because they love their students and teaching) is having to go above and beyond during his/her own personal time and that is not fair to the teacher or the teachers family. I saw many amazing things happening in the public school I worked at, but it was all due to the teachers rebelling against the status quo and going the extra mile on their own accord. I did not have to ask myself if there was a better way. I already knew there was a better way. I knew Maria Montessori had figured it out by creating an environment of well designed materials that encouraged and enabled a child to design his or her own learning path. A model in which the child is his/her own teacher and the classroom teacher is merely the guide that helps light the way. An environment where there are a maximum of 12 students to every 1 guide in a Primary Classroom. I knew I wanted that way for my children. That is what has set me on this path. I am becoming a Montessori teacher, director, and owner because I believe in it and I know it works. More importantly, I am doing this for my children. I am doing this so that Jaxon and Fenix can have an education that I truly believe in and can stand behind with a passion that I can only describe as almost spiritual. It is my love for education and my love for my family that has set me on this path. That is why I am creating Ladybird Montessori School.

In this blog I will aim to inform my readers about the Montessori Method to education, outline the steps my husband, Justin, and I took to create Ladybird Montessori, document my journey towards obtaining my Montessori certification in the 2.5 - 6 classroom, and share the joys and trials I encounter along the way.