NOTICE: We closed down Spin Distribute on December 31st, 2022. ❗
Spin Distribute has been a wonderful SEO service since early 2009. Unfortunately, after almost 14 years, it no longer meets the very strict quality criteria of our company.
We pride ourselves on only providing SEO services that are best-in-class. Unfortunately Spin Distribute no longer qualifies.
For this reason we closed down new sign-ups and new orders on Spin Distribute on December 31st, 2022.
Of course all your existing orders will be delivered in full. Thank you!

- Aaron Sustar, CEO, INFINET LLC
SmileyTech Solutions - Smile about your Online Business!

Take your IM business and SEO efforts to the next level!

Log In

Once you are logged in, you are able
to use all of our services.
Your Email Address:
Your Password:
 
What can I do when logged in?
Once you are logged in, you are able to use all of our services. This includes:

You can submit new articles, so we can make unique versions of them and distribute them for you.
If you want to simply publish the same article on 800 websites, you can tell us to do that.
You can see the archive and current status of all your article distributions.
You can order any number of high-quality articles - just let us know your keywords.
You can browse the archive of all the articles we have written for you.
You can order our Complete Service (10 high-quality articles plus 10 article distributions).
You can purchase more credits for our services and check your affiliate earnings.
Much more ...

SpinDistribute.com Article Directory

« Back to articles from category "Education"

The following article was published in our article directory on September 27, 2012.
Learn more about SpinDistribute Article Distribution System.

Five differences that enable Montessori elementary students to thrive

Article Category: Education

Author Name: Heike Larson

"I remember setting foot in that Montessori classroom. I sat down on a chair ... near the door. I had just stepped into someone's living room. Or was it a science laboratory? Or maybe an office building. I couldn't put my finger on exactly what was different at first, but this was unlike any classroom I had ever seen. It felt different too. Peaceful. Purposeful."
- Trevor Eissler in Montessori Madness

Montessori elementary classrooms are fundamentally different from traditional elementary school rooms. In fact, they are so different that it can be hard to understand how they work, and why they are so great at helping children thrive.

While it would be easy to write volumes about this topic (and some have: read Paula Polk Lillard's book, Montessori Today, if you want a detailed description of the Montessori elementary classroom), here are five key differences, and how they matter to your child's success.

1. Teachers are guides, not lecturers. They individualize instruction to keep each child optimally challenged. In traditional elementary education, much instruction happens at an all-class level; students generally move through the same curriculum at the same pace. This is more true now then ever, as mandatory standardized testing forces teachers to ensure that all students meet common minimum standards. This approach by definition fails to optimally challenge most of the students, most of the time: a child who is advanced in a subject will be bored; one who is behind will quickly become anxious and concerned about his shortcomings.

Montessori is different. Most instruction happens in small groups: teachers observe students and bring together children who are ready for a particular lesson. After a lesson, each child has time to practice a skill or further explore an area, either alone or with freely chosen partners. Writes Lillard: "Because the children are in a period when they have immense energy and curiosity, the secret to maintaining their interest is to keep them challenged."

In a Montessori classroom, an advanced student will be challenged to perform at his best: it's not unusual for a 3rd grade Montessori student to tackle what would typically be considered 5th grade math, for example. At the same time, a child who struggles can get the extra support he needs, without suffering the negative effect on his self-esteem that comes from needing remedial work in a traditional elementary school setting.

2. Children have choices, there's no one-size-fits all curriculum. Students are encouraged to be curious; they are engaged and love learning. When do you do your best work: when someone makes you do a task, or when you freely choose it? Autonomy is a huge factor in motivation, and Montessori elementary enables children to have a say in their learning. Of course, each child has to learn certain skills; mastering arithmetic isn't optional. But instead of forcing each child to complete the same worksheet, the Montessori elementary classroom ensures repetition by offering a variety of materials for practicing a given skill: multiplication practice includes work with the Bead Chains, the Stamp Game, the Checkerboard, the Large Bead Frame, and the Flat Bead Frame.

When we take our students on field trips, the people we encounter, from museum guides to park rangers, regularly comment that our students are the most curious and engaged group of children they have seen. This is a common refrain for Montessori elementary schools: the children love learning, because they have a chance to be actively engaged in the process.

3. The classroom is full of materials instead of textbooks and worksheets. Children learn to solve problems and think, instead of repeat memorized jargon. Much traditional elementary school work is unfortunately focused on work with textbooks and worksheets. While there is nothing wrong with books (we love free reading time!), you will not find traditional textbooks and worksheets in the Montessori elementary class.
Dr. Montessori viewed the early elementary years as a critical stage in the mind's development, when the concrete thinking of the preschool years matures into abstract thinking. During the Primary years, children explored many materials, such as the Trinomial Cube or the Golden Beads, primarily for the sensorial interest. Now, in elementary, children use materials to understand how the world works. They are interested in the why and the how of things; they've become "reasoning explorers of the abstract", in Lillard's vivid description.

The materials in Montessori are not mere instructional aids: Just like in Primary, much of their learning happens as the children use the materials to explore topics from grammar to division, from the fundamental needs of man, to the role of water in erosion. With the materials, learning is focused on the world; children acquire a mindset of thinking about things and figuring them out, rather than memorizing words or processes on an adult's say-so.

4. The day has two 2 - 3 hour work periods, instead of a schedule where activities are constantly changed. Protecting children from interruptions when productively engaged is key to their development of concentration and interest in their work. Dr. Montessori commented that traditional schools have broken up the day in many short time periods, in an attempt to hold the children's interest, and that they have failed miserably, as children remain mentally fatigued despite the alleged benefit of variety. In contrast, writes Montessori,

Montessori schools have proven that children need a cycle of work for which they are mentally prepared; such intelligent work with interest is not fatiguing and they should not be cut off from it by a call to play. Interest is not immediately born, and if when it has been created, the work is withdrawn, it is like depriving a whetted appetite of the food that will satisfy it.

This is why there is no morning recess in your child's class, and why we don't provide you with an hour-by-hour schedule. It's one of the often-overlooked benefits for Montessori elementary students: author Paula Polk Lillard notes upon observing in a Montessori elementary class that the children "have time to think. That is what impresses me most, I realize. These children are thinking."

5. Children learn with and from each other, in a mixed-age environment. Instead of competing with each other, they grow into a community, and practice all-important social skills every day. In traditional education, the emphasis in preschool is on "socializing" the child, and children are expected to do much together in groups. Come elementary schools, class time is largely focused on individual work, in strictly same-age classrooms, and social interactions are limited to recess and lunch.

This approach--focus on group activities in preschool, and individual activities in elementary school--is fundamentally wrong, according to Montessori. Young children in preschool, left to their own devices, often choose to do things by themselves, and much activity in a Montessori Primary class is in fact individual work. As children near the end of Primary, they often start to work together in pairs. In fact, becoming interested in and able to work with a peer is one indication that a child is ready to move up to elementary!

In Montessori elementary, children interact with each other, across age groups, all day. You'll often see 2-4 children working together on projects, negotiating roles and learning social skills in a safe, supervised setting as they choose co-workers and figure out that they can work with a range of companions, not just with their closest friends.

A Montessori elementary classroom is very different from traditional schooling. These five highlights are just a start to understanding this unique learning environment. We encourage you to explore more: Read up on how we teach each of the subjects on our web site. Pick up Paula Polk Lillard's book. And, most importantly, make time to observe in your child's Montessori elementary classroom!

About the Author: Heike Larson is a respectable Vice President of Outreach and blogger of LePort Schools. Check out their official website at LePortSchools.com for more information on Montessori Elementary.

Keywords: Montessori elementary

Learn more about SpinDistribute Article Distribution System. We also offer Professional Article Writing to everyone who's looking for high quality web content.

SpinDistribute.com Network

Each article you submit at SpinDistribute.com is sent through our innovative Article Distribution System to our network of more than 1840 publishers - about 55% of them are high-quality article directories, 30% of them are niche blogs and 15% of them are other content-rich websites.

To achieve the best possible success we only publish your article to most related websites. This means your article will show up on approximately 640 - 880 most related websites which will give you great SEO results.

We also offer a separate Professional Article Writing Service to everyone who's looking for high quality web content and well researched unique articles.

1 article = 800+ backlinks

ARTICLE DISTRIBUTION

Publish 800+ unique versions of
your article on 800+ websites!
Let us do all the

ARTICLE WRITING

Need lots of keyword optimized
quality articles? Search no more.
We recommend our

COMPLETE SERVICE

We write articles. We distribute
them. You get all the gains!
Have any questions?
Feel free to check out the "Frequently Asked Questions" section, or use the email address below to contact our team. You can also register for free and contact our Support Department. Read more
Why choose
Spin Distribute?
boost your traffic and online income and crush your competitors with our great article distribution system
get more than 800 highly relevant backlinks with each article distribution (from $1.60 per distribution)
try out our "Complete Service" that puts everything on auto-pilot (we write & distribute articles for you)
have us write all the articles for you, so you can focus on your business
get detailed HTML and PDF reports for every article distribution
contact our Support Department and Live Support to get answers
get FREE access to our SEO Tips & Tricks Guide (worth $27 alone!)
join our Affiliate Program and make money with our services
 
E-mail: info
   
spindistribute.com
Smile about your Online Business!

> Frequently Asked Questions
> Terms of Use & Privacy Policy
> Affiliate Program
 
I got in online biz more than 2 years ago but I got nowhere - until I found your service a couple of months ago, that is. Now I am getting really strong in the lose-weight niche and I can't wait to see where this online business takes me. Tnx so much!!
Harold Brown