Anonymous wrote:Dumb question: If my kid goes for K will she be in a class with 3 and 4 year olds, or 6 and 7 year olds?
Anonymous wrote:To be honest this thread is pretty off putting. Not because of anything about the school but because of some of the families that are apparently attending.
Hopefully it's not reflected by the actual composition at the school.
Anonymous wrote:To be honest this thread is pretty off putting. Not because of anything about the school but because of some of the families that are apparently attending.
Hopefully it's not reflected by the actual composition at the school.
Anonymous wrote:I remember early IT events in the first year location feeling like this a bit. Chaotic and loud with kids playing, nervous parents, excited (and new, yet professional) administrators. My advice for those starting at Lee: jump in with two feet and make it the community and school you need it to be.
- IT founding family
Anonymous wrote:So I hadn't thought of this before, but with one of the advantages of Montessori being that kids learn from their older peers, how will this work in a brand new school where the older peers are still learning things too?
Anonymous wrote:At the open house I attended a few months ago, they said 20/grade in the first year, 25/grade in the second year, and 30/grade thereafter, in line with what Montessori does (large class sizes).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other things that make me confident (besides the founders) - the classes are smaller than I thought. Just 20 per grade and two teachers per grade. The assistant teachers are in Montesouri training, so they have a built in pipeline of future teachers. And wednesday afternoon, every wednesday afternoon, is reserved for professional development.
I also like that there will be variety of programming on those wednesday afternoons and during aftercare (which you can pop into for a small fee if you like the programming planned - imagine yoga class or music play for 4 dollars an hour when the going rate for that kind of kid stuff is 30 dollars an hour!)
Are you sure they said 20 per grade? I asked recently and was told that there were only 15 for kindergarten. Did they same something different last night?
Also, does anyone have a feel for whether the group last night were primarily for PS3? Were there many kindergarten parents there? Anyone know if any of them were declining?
You do understand that montessori is mixed age classrooms and there are no PS3 and "kindergarten" designations? These designations are only used for purposes of the lottery and admissions. Please read up on this if you are on the WL and contemplating montessori. So there are 15 spaces for K--five year olds-- spread out over three classes with five in each class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other things that make me confident (besides the founders) - the classes are smaller than I thought. Just 20 per grade and two teachers per grade. The assistant teachers are in Montesouri training, so they have a built in pipeline of future teachers. And wednesday afternoon, every wednesday afternoon, is reserved for professional development.
I also like that there will be variety of programming on those wednesday afternoons and during aftercare (which you can pop into for a small fee if you like the programming planned - imagine yoga class or music play for 4 dollars an hour when the going rate for that kind of kid stuff is 30 dollars an hour!)
Are you sure they said 20 per grade? I asked recently and was told that there were only 15 for kindergarten. Did they same something different last night?
Also, does anyone have a feel for whether the group last night were primarily for PS3? Were there many kindergarten parents there? Anyone know if any of them were declining?