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The Montessori Developmental Continuum, continued
Copyright © 1996-2010 NAMTA. All rights
reserved. No one may copy or redistribute this text without written permission
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The
Montessori Preschool Program
The
Montessori preschool classroom is a "living room" for
children. Children choose their work from among the self-correcting
materials displayed on open shelves, and they work in specific
work areas. Over a period of time, the children develop into
a "normalized community," working with high concentration
and few interruptions. Normalization is the process
whereby a child moves from being undisciplined to self-disciplined,
from disordered to ordered, from distracted to focused, through
work in the environment. The process occurs through repeated work
with materials that captivate the child's attention. For some
children this inner change may take place quite suddenly, leading
to deep concentration. In the Montessori preschool, academic
competency is a means to an end, and the manipulatives are viewed
as "materials for development."
In the Montessori preschool, five distinct
areas constitute the prepared environment:
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Practical life enhances
the development of task organization and cognitive order
through care of self, care of the environment, exercises
of grace and courtesy, and coordination of physical movement.
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The sensorial area enables
the child to order, classify, and describe sensory impressions
in relation to length, width, temperature, mass, color,
pitch, etc.
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Mathematics makes use
of manipulative materials to enable the child to internalize
concepts of number, symbol, sequence, operations, and memorization
of basic facts.
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- Language arts includes
oral language development, written expression, reading, the
study of grammar, creative dramatics, and children's literature.
Basic skills in writing and reading are developed through
the use of sandpaper letters, alphabet cut-outs, and various
presentations allowing children to link sounds and letter
symbols effortlessly and to express their thoughts through
writing.
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Cultural
activities expose the child to basics in geography,
history, and life sciences. Music, art, and movement
education are part of the integrated cultural curriculum.
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The preschool environment unifies the psycho-social, physical,
and academic functioning of the child. Its important task is
to provide students with an early and general foundation that
includes a positive attitude toward school, inner security and
a sense of order, pride in the physical environment, abiding
curiosity, a habit of concentration, habits of initiative and
persistence, the ability to make decisions, self-discipline,
and a sense of responsibility to other members of the class,
school, and community. This foundation will enable them to acquire
more specialized knowledge and skills throughout their school
career. |
to The Montessori Elementary
Program
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