Page 2 of 2   <      

Montessori, Now 100, Goes Mainstream

There are 250 to 300 public Montessori schools nationwide. American Montessori Society President Michael J. Dorer, an education professor at the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul, Minn., said creating more public schools would be the best way to break out of the upper-income niche that in some ways still limits the Montessori movement's growth.

Dorer said his college and several others train Montessori teachers, but there are not enough instructors with credentials to meet demand from the expanding number of Montessori schools. Some schools with the Montessori name don't have many, or any, Montessori-trained teachers. "Anyone can open a school and call it a Montessori school. There is no trademark on the name," Dorer said. "It's a real problem."

The Montessori approach, often found in private preschools and primary grade schools that serve predominantly white, affluent students, is having long-term success in several local public schools that attract low-income students.
Photos
Embracing Montessori
The Montessori approach, often found in private preschools and primary grade schools that serve predominantly white, affluent students, is having long-term success in several local public schools that attract low-income students.

Maria Montessori, who lived from 1870 to 1952, was a pioneering doctor in Italy. She gained international notice when the severely learning-disabled students she worked with passed educational tests designed for non-disabled children.

In her 2005 book "Montessori: The Science Behind the Genius," University of Virginia psychologist Angeline Stoll Lillard described how Montessori viewed the learning-disabled. Such children were often locked up in bare rooms, Lillard wrote, their food thrown at them. Montessori saw "their grasping at crumbs of food on the floor as starvation not for food, but for stimulation," she wrote.

Montessori developed a system of learning for all students, disabled and otherwise, in large open classrooms with low shelves, with tables of different sizes that fit one to four children and with chairs sized for children of different ages. Montessori classes often group children in three levels: ages 3 to 6, 6 to 9, and 9 to 12. The older students help the younger.

Various materials, mostly made of wood, are set out in a typical classroom. Children choose what they want to do. A child may decide to focus on learning to tie his shoes rather than recognize letters -- while his mother grits her teeth. But eventually, according to the Montessori way, he will get around to the materials that help teach reading and math because all the activities are meant to be inviting. Children move around rather than sit still and watch the teacher.

And it is appealing to some African American professionals. The private Henson Valley Montessori School in Temple Hills has grown 50 percent over the past decade and plans to move to larger quarters in Upper Marlboro in the fall.

On a recent day at Henson Valley, children were putting together map puzzles, blowing seeds in the air to demonstrate plant dispersion and planning the construction of a space station. "They are learning how to learn," said Stephanie Carr, a federal government manager who has three children at the school. Despite the free-form nature of lessons, "they get very good test scores," Carr said. "My children are testing above grade level."

Pamela Hayes, an accountant in Fort Washington, has three children at the school. "There was a feeling that we were part of a family," she said. The school serves 260 students from preschool through eighth grade; tuition is $9,190 through sixth grade and $12,160 for seventh and eighth.

Classrooms in the one-story building are arranged like a series of living rooms connected by short halls. Hayes's 9-year-old daughter worked outside with other children on a model of an international space station built with plastic pipe joints and soda bottles.

Valaida L. Wise, head of the Henson Valley school, graduated from what is now the Nora School. The small, private secondary school in Silver Spring shares some of the Montessori emphasis on putting students rather than teachers in charge of learning. That's what theorists generally mean by progressive education. Wise calls Montessori "progressive education on steroids."

The key to the method, she said, "is the individualized attention that we give to each child. We look for the children's brilliance. Each child's brilliance is different."

Experts say some research shows that children of middle-class, college-educated parents generally do well no matter what elementary schools they attend. For many of these children, the Montessori method works, even if their parents prefer a more rigorous teaching style in high school to get kids ready for the SAT and Advanced Placement classes.

The psychologist Lillard was at first skeptical of Montessori's ideas when she started her research 20 years ago. But she found that a strong body of evidence in developmental psychology supports Montessori's major conclusions -- among them, that there is a close relationship between movement and cognition, that the best learning is active and that order is beneficial for children.

Montessori's only major idea unsupported by evidence was her view that pretend play was a waste of time, Lillard wrote.

Above all, Montessori was practical. She looked for what worked rather than what fit a theory. "If schooling were evidence-based," Lillard wrote, "I think all schools would look a lot more like Montessori schools."


<       2

© 2007 The Washington Post Company
ad_icon