Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends how serious the ADHD, whether there's a social skills deficit, and whether you think inattentiveness would fly under the radar and the school would not intervene.
And it depends on your comfort with "child-led" meaning your child is allowed to avoid certain tasks or subjects and miss out on parts of the curriculum.
Some schools are willing to adjust their "progressive" approach by giving very clear instructions and routines to specific students who benefit from that. If the school isn't self-aware about this issue, beware.
Children are NOT allowed to avoid tasks or part of the curriculum. This is a misunderstanding of progressive child led work.
Anonymous wrote:Depends how serious the ADHD, whether there's a social skills deficit, and whether you think inattentiveness would fly under the radar and the school would not intervene.
And it depends on your comfort with "child-led" meaning your child is allowed to avoid certain tasks or subjects and miss out on parts of the curriculum.
Some schools are willing to adjust their "progressive" approach by giving very clear instructions and routines to specific students who benefit from that. If the school isn't self-aware about this issue, beware.
Anonymous wrote:Often a good progressive classroom (modern, I don’t know about 100 year old) has invisible structure. The invisible structures offer routines, discussed rules, and boundaries. Understanding those allows students to develop independence and use their curiosity to find answers. Not all teachers understand how to put those invisible structures in place. It can vary within a school too.
By invisible structures, I don’t mean students have to infer them, I mean it looks like students are functioning completely independently, when they’ve already internalized the structures.
Yes, reminders are part of it. They are allowed to be the age they are.mediocre teachers try to make them older than they are.
It’s not a great environment for a kid whose behavioral issues constantly interfere with their own or others’ work. If they need constant one-on-one teacher support to function, it’s not going to work. If they drift, and can respond to reminders, it can work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those with experiences in progressive-type environments, I guess I assumed that it was child-driven, but within a subject (e.g., there's a math block, a literature block, etc., and within that structured block it's more interest driven). These responses, however, suggest something more Montessori like, where even the subject is up to the child. We're touring schools and trying to figure this out, of course, but I thought I'd ask for clarification for those who have these experiences. I'm clearly a newbie!
DC was in a Montessori school from infant through 4th grade. It is not so “student-led” that “even the subject is up to the child.” They were divided by ability into small groups for math and reading lessons that happened at regular times. During work times - that is, Montessori work - the children have self-agency in what works to choose from the options provided, but they also had weekly work plans with specific subject works and used those as checklists to guide their choices. They could not just choose not to learn any math, for example.
Anonymous wrote:For those with experiences in progressive-type environments, I guess I assumed that it was child-driven, but within a subject (e.g., there's a math block, a literature block, etc., and within that structured block it's more interest driven). These responses, however, suggest something more Montessori like, where even the subject is up to the child. We're touring schools and trying to figure this out, of course, but I thought I'd ask for clarification for those who have these experiences. I'm clearly a newbie!
Anonymous wrote:For those with experiences in progressive-type environments, I guess I assumed that it was child-driven, but within a subject (e.g., there's a math block, a literature block, etc., and within that structured block it's more interest driven). These responses, however, suggest something more Montessori like, where even the subject is up to the child. We're touring schools and trying to figure this out, of course, but I thought I'd ask for clarification for those who have these experiences. I'm clearly a newbie!