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Montessori Difference
The Montessori approach is called a modern approach. The goal
of the education, the classroom environment, the role of the
teacher and the materials in the Montessori class are different
from those in traditional education.
The aim of the Montessori education, is to "develop each person's
abilities to the fullest extent while celebrating and enhancing
his or her uniqueness and cultural background. The goal of education
is the development of autonomous,competent, responsible, adaptive
citizens-lifelong learners and problem solvers."(Barron, 1992).
Which means that education is for life, not merely for the intellectual
accomplishment, the world is open to them, so their whole being
(physically, emotionally and spiritually) could be fully and
properly developed.
Through observation, Montessori found that children have a need
of Prepared environment where child-sized furniture and well-designed
materials are prepared. The class is a mixed-age group, so children
could learn informally from others. In Montessori class, because
children have different interest and developmental stages, individual
work is encouraged as well as team work, which foster independent
and collaboration. Children are free to move, to explore and
absorb. Children choose their own work and choose who to work
with, what work to do and when to do , they also can choose
not to do any work as long as not to disturb others; this freedom
"allows the children to grow in social grace, inner discipline
and joy". While in many traditional school, children usually
sit on chair, they cannot move freely, they do a lot of workbook
exercise and spend a lot of time preparing for test, in those
school, students tend to memorize facts and concepts, only to
quickly forget them when exams are over.
In many traditional school, teachers are the center, teachers
decide what and when children will do the work. In Montessori
school, children are the center of the class. Teachers are observers.
Through daily observation, record keeping and discussion with
other teachers, they set up a realistic goal and activities
for each child according to their need. "The teacher is the
architect of the environment, the resource person, and she or
he plans the varied array from which the child will choose."
(Loeffler, 1992) Teachers are facilitators, they "stand behind
the child and allows him to go forward as far as he can, where
the other method is to stand in front of the child and prevent
him from going further than limits imposed upon him by the teacher."
(Montessori, 1961).
Materials in the Montessori class are well-designed according
to the developing need of children. They are unique, first of
all the materials are designed with built-in control of error
and auto-education. Control of error gave children feed back,
clue and recognition when they make mistakes. Secondly, the
isolation of difficulty which help child to understand and discover
a single piece of material. Thirdly, the materials are designed
from concrete to abstract, from simple to complex, with a clear
sequence as a unit. In traditional school, they do not have
as many materials as Montessori class and you will find many
toys are for commercial purpose and manufacture made for satisfying
parents, not children.
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