Showing posts with label montessori school teacher training. Show all posts
Showing posts with label montessori school teacher training. Show all posts

Saturday, 20 September 2014

FIGURING OUT HOW TO READ AND WRITE



Children have a curiosity about words and letters and a drive to imitate what they see going on around them, so it is important to capitalise on that in a relaxed way when thinking about learning to read and write. Children are learning about reading and writing all the time by watching how the people that matter to them use written language. When you go into the street, notice how much writing there is on road signs, posters, shops, buses, as well as clothes. Context helps us recognise words and children come to connect and remember them. Pointing out familiar words in context will help children understand their meaning and make connections between the written symbols and what they stand for. Children come to recognise familiar words and captions on screen too and reading these together will help when they come to read in a more conventional sense.
There is evidence to show that understanding when and why we read and write is as important for young children’s literacy development as knowing how to do it. They will want to join in when they see important people in their lives read and write as part of everyday experience. For example, they will be curious if they see you writing a shopping list, sending a text message or sitting at the computer, and they will want to join in, so it’s important to talk about it. Showing them how to read to find out when Charlie and Lola is on TV next or how to get information about a recipe from a magazine or the internet will help them understand the value and purposes of reading and writing so they learn to use them for themselves in this way.
Writing down a story or message that children dictate will help them understand the link between what they say and the words on the page and will help them when they become more independent writers. Some parents write their children’s stories into folded paper books that can be illustrated and then read back as a story at bedtime.
Young children’s first marks and scribbles are an important part of their development. Giving praise and taking an interest in what they are doing will encourage them. Children as young as two can draw letter-like shapes which show that they are already taking in lots of information about written language. Children often show pride in ‘their’ name or letter. With encouragement, they often want to point out familiar words or letters. Magnetic alphabet letters or bricks can be a fun way of getting to know the letters of the alphabet and how they fit together to make familiar words, or there are numerous games and activities to be found online. Whatever you choose, it’s the talk that surrounds it that’s important, taking the lead from the child in a relaxed atmosphere.
Writing and talking about their own name and those of family members and friends is often a source of interest to children once they begin to see the link between the letters on the page and people and things that matter to them. Names also help them build on this understanding of the patterns of written language and understand that writing is consistent – the letters in their name will always be the same and appear in the same order. Names also demonstrate the symbolic nature of written language. They show that those letters, in that order, stand for and conjure up that person and everything about them, the way they look and sound, what they do and who they are.


Friday, 14 December 2012

Montessori Training

Montessori education is an educational approach developed by Italian physician and educator Maria Montessori. Montessori education is practiced in an estimated 20,000 schools worldwide, serving children from birth to eighteen years old.

Montessori education is characterized by an emphasis on independence, freedom within limits, and respect for a child’s natural psychological development. Although a range of practices exists under the name "Montessori", the Association Montessori Internationale (AMI) and the American Montessori Society (AMS) cite these elements as essential:
  • Mixed age classrooms, with classrooms for children aged 2½ or 3 to 6 years old by far the most common
  • Student choice of activity from within a prescribed range of options
  • Uninterrupted blocks of work time
  • A Constructivism (learning theory) or "discovery" model, where students learn
  • concepts from working with materials, rather than by direct instruction
  • Specialized educational materials developed by Montessori and her collaborators
In addition, many Montessori schools design their programs with reference to Montessori’s model of human development from her published works, and use pedagogy, lessons, and materials introduced in teacher training derived from courses presented by Montessori during her lifetime.

Montessori began to develop her philosophy and methods in 1897, attending courses in pedagogy at the University of Rome and reading the educational theory of the previous two hundred years. In 1907, she opened her first classroom, the Casa dei Bambini, or Children’s House, in a tenement building in Rome. From the beginning, Montessori based her work on her observations of children and experimentation with the environment, materials, and lessons available to them. She frequently referred to her work as "scientific pedagogy". Montessori education spread to the United States in 1911 and became widely known in education and popular publications. However, conflict between Montessori and the American educational establishment, and especially the publication in 1914 of a critical booklet.

The Montessori System Examined by influential education teacher William Heard Kilpatrick, limited the spread of her ideas, and they languished after 1914. Montessori education returned to the United States in 1960 and has since spread to thousands of schools there. Montessori continued to extend her work during her lifetime, developing a comprehensive model of psychological development from birth to age 24, as well as educational approaches for children ages 0–3, 3–6, and 6–12. She wrote and lectured about ages 12 to 18 and beyond, but these programs were not developed during her lifetime. The term "Montessori" is in the public domain, so anyone can use the term with or without reference to her work.

Montessori education is fundamentally a model of human development, and an educational approach based on that model. The model has two basic elements. First, children and developing adults engage in psychological self-construction by means of interaction with their environments. Second, children, especially under the age of six, have an innate path of psychological development. Based on her observations, Montessori believed that children at liberty to choose and act freely within an environment prepared according to her model would act spontaneously for optimal development.

Montessori saw universal, innate characteristics in human psychology which her son and collaborator Mario Montessori identified as "human tendencies" in 1957. In the Montessori approach, these human tendencies are seen as driving behaviour in every stage of development, and education should respond to and facilitate their expression.