Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a just turned 3 yr old daughter in Montessori right now. She's been watching her 3 older siblings head off to school her entire life, and always wanted to go to school with her big sister last year. She CRIES AND CRIES every morning, and gets her "very scary" face that comes up only when she's really scared. It's terrible. I'm trying to give it a little more time, but frankly, I think the Montessori environment might not be good for all kids. My youngest loves to talk to herself while she plays or sing while she plays. I think the Montessori shroud of silence is hard. I am also concerned about it squashing the creativity right out of my two girls and instead teaching them that Item A can only be used for Purpose A, not for interesting and creating purpose A-Q-Hybrid. My 5 yr old is completely stressed out that she's not allowed to touch new "work" until the teacher carefully instructs her on how to do it. All this being said - if your kid is an extrovert, I could see Montessori being TOUGH. My oldest, a super extrovert, would have been tossed to the curb in no time as he would never be able to comply with the "wait until I show you how", "work in silence", and "only for its intended purpose" pillars of behavior.
This makes my heart hurt to think that any parent believe that Montessori is a good choice for children =( Probably parents who followed Babywise too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a just turned 3 yr old daughter in Montessori right now. She's been watching her 3 older siblings head off to school her entire life, and always wanted to go to school with her big sister last year. She CRIES AND CRIES every morning, and gets her "very scary" face that comes up only when she's really scared. It's terrible. I'm trying to give it a little more time, but frankly, I think the Montessori environment might not be good for all kids. My youngest loves to talk to herself while she plays or sing while she plays. I think the Montessori shroud of silence is hard. I am also concerned about it squashing the creativity right out of my two girls and instead teaching them that Item A can only be used for Purpose A, not for interesting and creating purpose A-Q-Hybrid. My 5 yr old is completely stressed out that she's not allowed to touch new "work" until the teacher carefully instructs her on how to do it. All this being said - if your kid is an extrovert, I could see Montessori being TOUGH. My oldest, a super extrovert, would have been tossed to the curb in no time as he would never be able to comply with the "wait until I show you how", "work in silence", and "only for its intended purpose" pillars of behavior.
This makes my heart hurt to think that any parent believe that Montessori is a good choice for children =( Probably parents who followed Babywise too.
+1
Then you don't know much about Montessori. It is a wonderful way to foster critical thinking and learning the scientific method. As a scientist, I understand and value that part of the Montessori education. My children loved their Montessori preschool. Again, this bears repeating, the method is only as good as the teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dd had a weird reaction to a camp when she was 2. Went for the first week, no problem. Next week- absolute meltdown. I still made her go 2x and then realized something had really upset her. She told me she didn't like that a counselor squeezed her knees and changed her diaper. I'm still squee'd by it but dunno what else I could have done. That's to say, your options are pretty limited OP. Trust your kid and be glad he's happy now.
Why do parent's call daycare for 2 years "camp" and "school"?
Why do people use apostrophes to form plurals? Life is mysterious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a just turned 3 yr old daughter in Montessori right now. She's been watching her 3 older siblings head off to school her entire life, and always wanted to go to school with her big sister last year. She CRIES AND CRIES every morning, and gets her "very scary" face that comes up only when she's really scared. It's terrible. I'm trying to give it a little more time, but frankly, I think the Montessori environment might not be good for all kids. My youngest loves to talk to herself while she plays or sing while she plays. I think the Montessori shroud of silence is hard. I am also concerned about it squashing the creativity right out of my two girls and instead teaching them that Item A can only be used for Purpose A, not for interesting and creating purpose A-Q-Hybrid. My 5 yr old is completely stressed out that she's not allowed to touch new "work" until the teacher carefully instructs her on how to do it. All this being said - if your kid is an extrovert, I could see Montessori being TOUGH. My oldest, a super extrovert, would have been tossed to the curb in no time as he would never be able to comply with the "wait until I show you how", "work in silence", and "only for its intended purpose" pillars of behavior.
This makes my heart hurt to think that any parent believe that Montessori is a good choice for children =( Probably parents who followed Babywise too.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a just turned 3 yr old daughter in Montessori right now. She's been watching her 3 older siblings head off to school her entire life, and always wanted to go to school with her big sister last year. She CRIES AND CRIES every morning, and gets her "very scary" face that comes up only when she's really scared. It's terrible. I'm trying to give it a little more time, but frankly, I think the Montessori environment might not be good for all kids. My youngest loves to talk to herself while she plays or sing while she plays. I think the Montessori shroud of silence is hard. I am also concerned about it squashing the creativity right out of my two girls and instead teaching them that Item A can only be used for Purpose A, not for interesting and creating purpose A-Q-Hybrid. My 5 yr old is completely stressed out that she's not allowed to touch new "work" until the teacher carefully instructs her on how to do it. All this being said - if your kid is an extrovert, I could see Montessori being TOUGH. My oldest, a super extrovert, would have been tossed to the curb in no time as he would never be able to comply with the "wait until I show you how", "work in silence", and "only for its intended purpose" pillars of behavior.
This makes my heart hurt to think that any parent believe that Montessori is a good choice for children =( Probably parents who followed Babywise too.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a just turned 3 yr old daughter in Montessori right now. She's been watching her 3 older siblings head off to school her entire life, and always wanted to go to school with her big sister last year. She CRIES AND CRIES every morning, and gets her "very scary" face that comes up only when she's really scared. It's terrible. I'm trying to give it a little more time, but frankly, I think the Montessori environment might not be good for all kids. My youngest loves to talk to herself while she plays or sing while she plays. I think the Montessori shroud of silence is hard. I am also concerned about it squashing the creativity right out of my two girls and instead teaching them that Item A can only be used for Purpose A, not for interesting and creating purpose A-Q-Hybrid. My 5 yr old is completely stressed out that she's not allowed to touch new "work" until the teacher carefully instructs her on how to do it. All this being said - if your kid is an extrovert, I could see Montessori being TOUGH. My oldest, a super extrovert, would have been tossed to the curb in no time as he would never be able to comply with the "wait until I show you how", "work in silence", and "only for its intended purpose" pillars of behavior.
This makes my heart hurt to think that any parent believe that Montessori is a good choice for children =( Probably parents who followed Babywise too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dd had a weird reaction to a camp when she was 2. Went for the first week, no problem. Next week- absolute meltdown. I still made her go 2x and then realized something had really upset her. She told me she didn't like that a counselor squeezed her knees and changed her diaper. I'm still squee'd by it but dunno what else I could have done. That's to say, your options are pretty limited OP. Trust your kid and be glad he's happy now.
Why do parent's call daycare for 2 years "camp" and "school"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a just turned 3 yr old daughter in Montessori right now. She's been watching her 3 older siblings head off to school her entire life, and always wanted to go to school with her big sister last year. She CRIES AND CRIES every morning, and gets her "very scary" face that comes up only when she's really scared. It's terrible. I'm trying to give it a little more time, but frankly, I think the Montessori environment might not be good for all kids. My youngest loves to talk to herself while she plays or sing while she plays. I think the Montessori shroud of silence is hard. I am also concerned about it squashing the creativity right out of my two girls and instead teaching them that Item A can only be used for Purpose A, not for interesting and creating purpose A-Q-Hybrid. My 5 yr old is completely stressed out that she's not allowed to touch new "work" until the teacher carefully instructs her on how to do it. All this being said - if your kid is an extrovert, I could see Montessori being TOUGH. My oldest, a super extrovert, would have been tossed to the curb in no time as he would never be able to comply with the "wait until I show you how", "work in silence", and "only for its intended purpose" pillars of behavior.
This makes my heart hurt to think that any parent believe that Montessori is a good choice for children =( Probably parents who followed Babywise too.
Anonymous wrote:My dd had a weird reaction to a camp when she was 2. Went for the first week, no problem. Next week- absolute meltdown. I still made her go 2x and then realized something had really upset her. She told me she didn't like that a counselor squeezed her knees and changed her diaper. I'm still squee'd by it but dunno what else I could have done. That's to say, your options are pretty limited OP. Trust your kid and be glad he's happy now.
Anonymous wrote:I have a just turned 3 yr old daughter in Montessori right now. She's been watching her 3 older siblings head off to school her entire life, and always wanted to go to school with her big sister last year. She CRIES AND CRIES every morning, and gets her "very scary" face that comes up only when she's really scared. It's terrible. I'm trying to give it a little more time, but frankly, I think the Montessori environment might not be good for all kids. My youngest loves to talk to herself while she plays or sing while she plays. I think the Montessori shroud of silence is hard. I am also concerned about it squashing the creativity right out of my two girls and instead teaching them that Item A can only be used for Purpose A, not for interesting and creating purpose A-Q-Hybrid. My 5 yr old is completely stressed out that she's not allowed to touch new "work" until the teacher carefully instructs her on how to do it. All this being said - if your kid is an extrovert, I could see Montessori being TOUGH. My oldest, a super extrovert, would have been tossed to the curb in no time as he would never be able to comply with the "wait until I show you how", "work in silence", and "only for its intended purpose" pillars of behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had the same experience with a verbal kid who turned out to have Asperger's. We never really got to the bottom of it either, and couldn't figure it out because our neighbor's children seemed to have fun at the same school. So it probably wasn't the teacher or the method specifically -- just a really poor fit with our child. My sense now is that he often didn't understand what the expectations were for the activities for kids there -- He actually could produce a lot more language than he could comprehend, if that makes sense, and I think honestly he didn't understand a lot of what was going on.
Montessori is a terrible method for any child with an ASD. The method depends on a teacher providing guidance and social cues to lead a child to the materials and to guide the child through the materials. Kids with an ASD do not pick up on those social cues or guidance and they tend to flounder in a Montessori setting.
Montessori is also a terrible method for really creative kids. There is one right way to use the materials. If you use them creatively, you will be told that you are "wrong" and guided to doing it "right." That's a very difficult thing for creative kids -- they spend every day of their lives in Montessori being told that they are doing it wrong.
I'm glad that Montessori works for some families, but if your kid is outside the box, it's not the place of them.
Anonymous wrote:I know this will lead to idle speculation, but it's driving me crazy ....
My son went to a Montessori school (not in D.C. area) last year, when he was 2. He's a very verbal kid, and doesn't really struggle to tell you what he's feeling or what he's experienced.
Anyway, for the entire year, he cried every single day at drop-off, and appeared dejected and isolated every single day at pick-up.
The teachers always insisted he had a great day and was probably just still shaking off his nap. He would never tell us about his day, and the school doesn't allow parents to be in the classroom or observe in any way.
For unrelated reasons, he started at a different school this year. He's like a different kid now. He wakes up early, he's excited to go to school, he talks about his day, and he is NOT eager to leave when I pick him up.
He frequently makes a point of telling us he doesn't want to go back to his old school, although he claims he liked everybody there.
Here's the most disturbing part, though: We just happened to run into one of his teachers around town the other day. As soon as he saw her, he crumpled to the ground in tears, and curled into a fetal position on the floor. I've never even seen him do this before, as a temper tantrum or otherwise. I am beside myself, and have no idea what to think. I also don't know whether this is important to pursue, either for his healing or in order to figure out whether there's something that other parents at that school need to know.
But honestly, most kids there seem very happy, and the teachers seem incredibly gentle and kind. I wonder whether there's something about the Montessori method that just doesn't go over well with some kids???