Montessori educational practice helps children develop creativity, problem solving, critical thinking and time-management skills. The practice is designed to help them contribute to society and the environment, and to become fulfilled persons in their particular time on Earth in mixed age-group classes with individual choices in research and work, and time for uninterrupted concentration ("Montessori," 2012). The adult serves as the helper, or facilitator, but methods, discovery and learning are under the child's control to the extent possible. The idea is to teach children how to think and reason. The practice is designed to help children become independent and follow their passions. It equips them for real life. For example, it prepares them to be able to find information rather than merely be receptacles of information given to them by the teacher. Dr. Montessori believed that children learned best by their own interactions with the things to be learned: "[The child] learns everything without knowing he is learning it" ("Montessori," 2012). There are eight roles of the Montessori teacher. In discussing these, examples are provided that illustrate how the teacher can fulfill his/her role. A study by...
The concepts, like the Montessori education itself, are practical and make intuitive sense.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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