Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know anyone successful that stays anywhere for more than a couple of years, that is how you move up. Duh.
And she does have a Montessori certificate - from Mexico, that is what makes her qualified at a dual-immersion school.
Have you seen it? Notice the bio doesn't say anything about completed her training or earned her Montessori certification. "Received her Montessori education" is a fairly passive statement, no?
She might talk a good game, but $15K is a lot of money, and a look under the surface is warranted here before you give up on Basis, Latin, etc. Proceed with caution.
New poster here. I went to look at that school because I was interested in their bilingual summer camp. A quick look at their facilities and the way they were interacting with the kids made me changed my mind. But that's just my opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know anyone successful that stays anywhere for more than a couple of years, that is how you move up. Duh.
And she does have a Montessori certificate - from Mexico, that is what makes her qualified at a dual-immersion school.
Have you seen it? Notice the bio doesn't say anything about completed her training or earned her Montessori certification. "Received her Montessori education" is a fairly passive statement, no?
She might talk a good game, but $15K is a lot of money, and a look under the surface is warranted here before you give up on Basis, Latin, etc. Proceed with caution.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know anyone successful that stays anywhere for more than a couple of years, that is how you move up. Duh.
And she does have a Montessori certificate - from Mexico, that is what makes her qualified at a dual-immersion school.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know anyone successful that stays anywhere for more than a couple of years, that is how you move up. Duh.
And she does have a Montessori certificate - from Mexico, that is what makes her qualified at a dual-immersion school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not DCPS, but Waterfront Academy in SW (near stadium) is opening a middle school portion next year. Grades 5-8, I believe. Sounds like a great option for a kid who needs more attention and a smaller environment. According to the principal, Montessori middle school is very project-based, lots of individual and group projects. I am very intrigued at this option for my own child.
I have no beef with waterfront academy. However the head of school was an educational aide 4 years ago in DCPS. Not sure if that's the kind of instructional leadership I'd trust my kid and 15k to.
You are crazy! If you check the website you'd she has years of teaching experience. She was most likely an aide while she was in college (clearly more than 4 years ago as well), which is pretty typical. Check your facts before you say something like that! http://www.waterfrontacademy.org/the-team.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not DCPS, but Waterfront Academy in SW (near stadium) is opening a middle school portion next year. Grades 5-8, I believe. Sounds like a great option for a kid who needs more attention and a smaller environment. According to the principal, Montessori middle school is very project-based, lots of individual and group projects. I am very intrigued at this option for my own child.
I have no beef with waterfront academy. However the head of school was an educational aide 4 years ago in DCPS. Not sure if that's the kind of instructional leadership I'd trust my kid and 15k to.
Anonymous wrote:Why don't schools let kids into Montessori schools at higher grade levels?
Anonymous wrote:I have to disagree. The best fit after Montessori depends on the child. I'm a parent of two former CHML (my oldest went when the program was at Watkins) and I've seen many kids graduate and go to many different schools. I"m thinking of some past and current high schoolers that have gone through the program with my older kid and off the top of my head I know Montessori grads at SWW, Banneker, McKinley, Wilson, Basis, Latin, Eastern, Duke, Dematha and other privates I can't recall - all doing well and thriving and enjoying the traditional high school experience.Anonymous wrote:Capitol Hill goes to the 8th grade...and the best fit after that is School Without Walls a natural progression.
I have to disagree. The best fit after Montessori depends on the child. I'm a parent of two former CHML (my oldest went when the program was at Watkins) and I've seen many kids graduate and go to many different schools. I"m thinking of some past and current high schoolers that have gone through the program with my older kid and off the top of my head I know Montessori grads at SWW, Banneker, McKinley, Wilson, Basis, Latin, Eastern, Duke, Dematha and other privates I can't recall - all doing well and thriving and enjoying the traditional high school experience.Anonymous wrote:Capitol Hill goes to the 8th grade...and the best fit after that is School Without Walls a natural progression.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Not uncommon for 3-5 year old montessori students to be multiplying a 4 digit number by another 4 digit number, really? For example, 5289 x 4178 = 22,097,442?
That's not what I've observed at LAMB or Shining Stars. I saw kids playing with blocks and such. Which is just fine for that age, BTW. I guess I was there on the playing with blocks day. Need to return on the multiplying 4 digit numbers day.
No, it's more like 2,476 x 3 = 7,428 and it's the Montessori early childhood curriculum.