Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you feel about imaginative/fantasy play?
If a student is using the pink tower as a spaceship for a few moments and I overhear it, so long as he is using the material in a way that supports its purpose, I would never interrupt. When the spaceship crashes and flies out of orbit, however, there's an issue.
9/10, I see students much more compelled to use materials as intended, and do the chores around the classroom that one might do in home. They take ownership of the space!
I've been told I make a good dinosaur... on the playground.
This sums up right here why I turned down my Montessori slot.
Good. If you don't like it, neither of us need to deal with one another, now do we?
That doesn't sound like grace to me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you feel about imaginative/fantasy play?
If a student is using the pink tower as a spaceship for a few moments and I overhear it, so long as he is using the material in a way that supports its purpose, I would never interrupt. When the spaceship crashes and flies out of orbit, however, there's an issue.
9/10, I see students much more compelled to use materials as intended, and do the chores around the classroom that one might do in home. They take ownership of the space!
I've been told I make a good dinosaur... on the playground.
This sums up right here why I turned down my Montessori slot.
Good. If you don't like it, neither of us need to deal with one another, now do we?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child's Montessori classroom has way too many kids, almost 30. I am not persuaded that a large class is somehow the "Montessori way." What do you think?
If the teacher and the assistant are good at what they do, then there should be no issue. It's absolutely the Montessori way- Maria Montessori had an even larger class, on her own, and the national AMI standard is to have around that number.
That all being said, if you sense chaos and disorder in the classroom, well. That's a faulty staff, right there. Is your child's school accredited?
It's Franklin Montessori. I think the classroom is not chaotic but I think with that many kids, the teacher and assistants miss a lot. My child can go days/weeks without getting a "lesson" (let alone from an older child, which I think has never happened).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you feel about imaginative/fantasy play?
If a student is using the pink tower as a spaceship for a few moments and I overhear it, so long as he is using the material in a way that supports its purpose, I would never interrupt. When the spaceship crashes and flies out of orbit, however, there's an issue.
9/10, I see students much more compelled to use materials as intended, and do the chores around the classroom that one might do in home. They take ownership of the space!
I've been told I make a good dinosaur... on the playground.
This sums up right here why I turned down my Montessori slot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you feel about imaginative/fantasy play?
If a student is using the pink tower as a spaceship for a few moments and I overhear it, so long as he is using the material in a way that supports its purpose, I would never interrupt. When the spaceship crashes and flies out of orbit, however, there's an issue.
9/10, I see students much more compelled to use materials as intended, and do the chores around the classroom that one might do in home. They take ownership of the space!
I've been told I make a good dinosaur... on the playground.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child's Montessori classroom has way too many kids, almost 30. I am not persuaded that a large class is somehow the "Montessori way." What do you think?
If the teacher and the assistant are good at what they do, then there should be no issue. It's absolutely the Montessori way- Maria Montessori had an even larger class, on her own, and the national AMI standard is to have around that number.
That all being said, if you sense chaos and disorder in the classroom, well. That's a faulty staff, right there. Is your child's school accredited?
Anonymous wrote:How do you feel about imaginative/fantasy play?

Anonymous wrote:What do you think about Lee Montessori? Does it seem promising? What is some advice you would have for a Montessori school starting out? What should families expect in the first year?
Also, how would a public Montessori school reconcile meeting the criteria for BOTH AMI Montessori (getting certification) and the public school system in DC? What about testing?
Anonymous wrote:My child's Montessori classroom has way too many kids, almost 30. I am not persuaded that a large class is somehow the "Montessori way." What do you think?