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A
Montessori Education
As an associate of the the American Montessori Society, Pines
Montessori School seeks to foster competent, responsible, adaptive
citizens who are life-long learners and problem solvers.
Guiding
Concepts
We are committed to promoting quality Montessori education based
on these key concepts:
- Learning
occurs in an inquiring, cooperative, nurturing atmosphere. Students
increase their own knowledge through self- and teacher-initiated
experiences.
- Learning
takes place through the senses. Students learn by manipulating
materials and interacting with others. These meaningful experiences
are precursors to the abstract understanding of ideas.
- The
individual is considered as a whole. The physical, emotional,
social, aesthetic, spiritual, and cognitive needs and interests
of the child are inseparable and equally important.
- Respect
and caring attitudes for oneself, others, the environment, and
all life are necessary.
Pines Montessori School offers Montessori education for children 18 months through
12 years through the following programs:
At
all levels, our programs have these basic characteristics:
- Teachers
educated in the Montessori philosophy and methodology appropriate
to the age level they are teaching, who have the ability and dedication
to put the key concepts into practice.
- A
partnership with the family. The family is considered an integral
part of the individual's total development.
- A
multi-aged, multi-graded, heterogeneous group of students.
- A
diverse set of Montessori materials, activities, and experiences
which are designed to foster physical, intellectual, creative,
and social independence.
- A
schedule that allows large blocks of uninterrupted time to problem
solve, to see the interdisciplinary connections of knowledge,
and to create new ideas.
- A
classroom atmosphere that encourages social interaction for cooperative
learning, peer teaching, and emotional development.
The
Montessori Community
The
Montessori community is noticeably different from classrooms in
conventional schools. Children in a Montessori community learn to
make choices about their school work. Choosing challenging work
or activities from a variety of areas is an important life lesson.
Each room is filled with permanent materials arranged
in sequence from the simple to the complex. The materials are attractive
to a child and invite exploration; each is designed to be self-correcting
while teaching the child mastery of a single concept. Materials
at the elementary level reflect the more abstract concepts and advanced
requirements expected of more mature students.
Community
During the experience of education, children also learn how to move ahead,
how to interact, and how to get along. Children are directed toward the understanding that
their role in this world is one of cooperation. This leads to an
integration of the self with others and with the world.
Learning:
a Limitless Opportunity
Our environment at Pines Montessori School is prepared for the child's
exploration and the teacher responds to the child's interests and
needs as she moves to higher levels of learning. The child responds
to the order within the classroom and to the lack of restraints
on academic pursuits. The child's desire to learn is encouraged
by his freedom of movement as he makes choices among all the materials
and lessons with well-trained Montessori teachers guiding him along
the way. At all levels the child experiences learning as a limitless
opportunity.
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