Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are at a Montessori school this year, and while I love it for our family, it can be scary. The growth in my kid in just 5 weeks has been amazing. He is engaging and inquiring in ways he never did (and HELPING and slowing everything down, but that's another story). I can see how Montessori is intimidating for many, but I'm so glad we made the leap. The more I speak to colleagues and business contacts who were raised as Montessori kids, the better I feel about the learners and participants in life it produces.
How does this answer OPs question?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP - why not CM? Is it bc the teachers are young?
Young teachers. But more than that I did not like the head of school's answers to my questions about cultural competency.
This. And I felt like the very young teachers were enthusiastic but felt like the administration was cold and unengaged
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP - why not CM? Is it bc the teachers are young?
Young teachers. But more than that I did not like the head of school's answers to my questions about cultural competency.
This. And I felt like the very young teachers were enthusiastic but felt like the administration was cold and unengaged
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP - why not CM? Is it bc the teachers are young?
Young teachers. But more than that I did not like the head of school's answers to my questions about cultural competency.
Anonymous wrote:PP - why not CM? Is it bc the teachers are young?
Anonymous wrote:Creative minds.
Anonymous wrote:We are at a Montessori school this year, and while I love it for our family, it can be scary. The growth in my kid in just 5 weeks has been amazing. He is engaging and inquiring in ways he never did (and HELPING and slowing everything down, but that's another story). I can see how Montessori is intimidating for many, but I'm so glad we made the leap. The more I speak to colleagues and business contacts who were raised as Montessori kids, the better I feel about the learners and participants in life it produces.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:IT - too loosey goosey. We did in-depth tours in 2012 and 2014. Thought it was kind of run down and didn't see much progress. Thought many of the classrooms were disorganized to filthy.
Lee - couldn't bring ourselves to do it. Too new. Not enough K children enrolled didn't earn our confidence.
Very happy at Lee but a new school is nerve wracking. There is a lackof experience in dealing with issues no matter how compentent the teachers and admins are - fortunately my chidl has had no issues besides a desperate hatrid of naptime that teh school can't yet address.
Anonymous wrote:IT - too loosey goosey. We did in-depth tours in 2012 and 2014. Thought it was kind of run down and didn't see much progress. Thought many of the classrooms were disorganized to filthy.
Lee - couldn't bring ourselves to do it. Too new. Not enough K children enrolled didn't earn our confidence.