Anonymous wrote:One thing to keep in mind is that if you plan to apply to private schools before 1st grade, You many struggle to get references from Franklin. They very much want to keep kids all the way through Kindergarten - and discourage leaving early. (If you plan to go public, this will not matter.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:+1 Aidan Montessori. Franklin is more of a daycare.
Absolutely agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, yes Franklin is a true Montessori program. Both of my kids went there. It’s expensive, but our family was happy with it.
AMS certification is the American version, so no, it definitely is not “true” Montessori.
And this is definitely a good thing, IMO. The places that tout the "trueness" are the ones that give Montessori a creepy, bad reputation.
Please name those places, Liar. Anyone can look up how AMS got started. It’s a nasty story. I just wish we had learned sooner. There’s a huge difference.
They literally stole the Montessori name from Maria Montessori and her son, who was also a physician. The Montessori family lost their legal battle in the US to copyright their own name because the Americans were more successful at “working” the American legal system.
It was really very tragic.
Anonymous wrote:+1 Aidan Montessori. Franklin is more of a daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, yes Franklin is a true Montessori program. Both of my kids went there. It’s expensive, but our family was happy with it.
AMS certification is the American version, so no, it definitely is not “true” Montessori.
And this is definitely a good thing, IMO. The places that tout the "trueness" are the ones that give Montessori a creepy, bad reputation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, yes Franklin is a true Montessori program. Both of my kids went there. It’s expensive, but our family was happy with it.
AMS certification is the American version, so no, it definitely is not “true” Montessori.