Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We didn’t pick Montessori partially for this reason. Our kid does great with following directions, but sings all the time and her favorite thing to do is pretend play. We were worried Montessori would turn her into a little “working” robot.
Well, you were wrong, but then, now you'll never know, which is fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes! Find a play based where he can be himself, have fun, make friends and develop a love of learning.
Agree with this. Montessori would likely crush his spirit.
Anonymous wrote:We didn’t pick Montessori partially for this reason. Our kid does great with following directions, but sings all the time and her favorite thing to do is pretend play. We were worried Montessori would turn her into a little “working” robot.
Anonymous wrote:Yes! Find a play based where he can be himself, have fun, make friends and develop a love of learning.
Anonymous wrote:Why not ask the potential school how kids like yours adapt?
Our Montessori has morning recess where the kids run amok, songs every morning to start the day, and aftercare is filled with pretend play opportunities. The “work” period is only really 2 hours, which is filled with opportunities for art and play dough and word games with partners and all sorts of things that can be creative outlets. My son’s BFF was just as you describe your daughter, and he thrived in the environment. It’s such a small period of the child’s day—there is plenty of time for pretend play outside of the “work” block.