
Common Misconceptions
- Montessori is just
for preschool children.
While the majority of Montessori schools in the United States are preschools,
Montessori programs exist at age levels from birth to eighteen.
- Montessori is just
for special learners -- the gifted or the learning disabled.
The methods used in Montessori schools are highly effective with both learning
disabled and gifted learners. The reason for their effectiveness, however, is
that the learning environments have been designed to ensure success for all
children.
- Montessori schools
are religious.
Many private American Montessori schools do have a religious orientation
because it is such a common practice in America for private schools to have
religious support. But Montessori itself is not religiously oriented and finds
itself quite at home in public settings where religious instruction is
inappropriate.
- Montessori is only
for the rich.
This misconception is due to the fact that the American Montessori movement
that began in the 1950s was primarily a private preschool movement, supported
by tuition. Now, however, Montessori education is available at approximately
200 public schools in the U.S. in addition to over 3,000 private schools.
- Children in
Montessori classrooms are relatively unsupervised and can "do whatever they
want."
Montessori is based on the principle of free choice of purposeful activity. If
the child is being destructive or is using materials in an aimless way, the
teacher will intervene and gently re-direct the child either to more
appropriate materials or to a more appropriate use of the material.
- Montessori is a cult.
Montessori is part of the educational mainstream, as evidenced by growing
numbers of graduate-level programs in Montessori education and the increasing
popularity of Montessori in the public schools.
- Montessori classrooms
are too structured.
Although the teacher is careful to make clear the specific purpose of each
material and to present activities in a clear, step-by-step order, the child
is free to choose from a vast array of activities and to discover new
possibilities.
- Montessori is against
fantasy; therefore it stifles creativity.
The fact is that the freedom of the prepared environment encourages creative
approaches to problem-solving. And while teacher-directed fantasy is
discouraged, fantasy play initiated by the child is viewed as healthy and
purposeful. In addition, art and music activities are integral parts of the
Montessori classroom.
- Montessori classrooms
push children too far too fast.
Central to the Montessori philosophy is the idea of allowing each child to
develop at his or her own, individual pace. The "miracle" stories of
Montessori children far ahead of traditional expectations for their age level
reflect not artificial acceleration but the possibilities open when children
are allowed to learn at their own pace in a scientifically prepared
environment.
- Montessori is out of date.
While appropriate changes have been made to the original Montessori curriculum
(including the introduction of computers and modifications to the Practical
Life exercises to keep them culturally relevant), the basic pedagogy has not
changed much since Dr. Montessori's lifetime. Contemporary research and
evaluation seem to be confirming Montessori's insights.
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