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JennGM Forum Moderator
Joined: Feb 07 2005 Location: Virginia
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Posted: Sept 21 2005 at 4:07pm | IP Logged
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I'm trying to understand the philosophy and concepts of Montessori. I had a discussion with my sister yesterday and am wondering some things. My ds is really into identifying colors right now. I didn't sit down with him for long periods of time to teach him, but just in our daily conversations I would say this is a red jacket, this cup is blue. Now the world is his rainbow.
My sister's son is 2 1/2 years old...and I thought he knew his colors. When I asked when did he learn them, she said he didn't (whoops ), but that she doesn't sit down with him...he'll learn soon enough when he wants to.
So is that a Montessori approach? To just let the child find things out without guidance from the parent? I don't introduce new concepts unless he shows interest? Should I be sitting back more and not pointing out things? I'm not trying to fight here, I'm just trying to understand....
__________________ Jennifer G. Miller
Wife to & ds1 '03 & ds2 '07
Family in Feast and Feria
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Marybeth Forum All-Star
Joined: May 02 2005 Location: Illinois
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Posted: Sept 21 2005 at 7:25pm | IP Logged
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Jenn,
I did exactly what you did in regards to showing and teaching color to my ds. I, too, am curious about the Montessori approach would be for this.
My former neighbor had her children in a Montessori school for several years. The teachers always encouraged her to talk and point things out to her dc during the day. They felt you directed the dc to various objects and then allowed the dc to take lead/interest from that point on.
Something to think about....
Marybeth
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JennGM Forum Moderator
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Posted: Sept 21 2005 at 7:32pm | IP Logged
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Well, I talked to another sister, and she thought that maybe it was just a number-3-child-out-of-4-under-the-age-of-6 not doing all the things you do with your first child. I can understand that....
Thanks, Marybeth. You just helped clarify that I was doing a similar approach. I start to wonder...always questioning myself!
__________________ Jennifer G. Miller
Wife to & ds1 '03 & ds2 '07
Family in Feast and Feria
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MaryM Board Moderator
Joined: Feb 11 2005 Location: Colorado
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Posted: Sept 22 2005 at 1:08am | IP Logged
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jenngm67 wrote:
Well, I talked to another sister, and she thought that maybe it was just a number-3-child-out-of-4-under-the-age-of-6 not doing all the things you do with your first child. I can understand that....
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BINGO - sounds like an astute ovservation. I know I was able to be way more involved one-on-one with my first than with any subsequent.
__________________ Mary M. in Denver
Our Domestic Church
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Erin Forum Moderator
Joined: Feb 23 2005 Location: Australia
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Posted: Sept 22 2005 at 7:30am | IP Logged
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MaryM wrote:
I know I was able to be way more involved one-on-one with my first than with any subsequent. |
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This is so true. After I got over the guilt with my younger ones I realised that they had other compensations. Their siblings bring a richness to their life that is different to what I can offer.
__________________ Erin
Faith Filled Days
Seven Little Australians
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Mary G Forum All-Star
Joined: Feb 07 2005 Location: Virginia
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Posted: Sept 22 2005 at 1:45pm | IP Logged
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Erin wrote:
MaryM wrote:
I know I was able to be way more involved one-on-one with my first than with any subsequent. |
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This is so true. After I got over the guilt with my younger ones I realised that they had other compensations. Their siblings bring a richness to their life that is different to what I can offer.
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Also, never forget how much they pickup "osmotically" (that is, through osmosis) -- my almost 3 yr old is already starting to recognize letters and count because he hears his older one doing it. He'll know so much when he gets to be "school age" he just might teach us a thing or two
__________________ MaryG
3 boys (22, 12, 8)2 girls (20, 11)
my website that combines my schooling, hand-knits work, writing and everything else in one spot!
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Mari Forum Rookie
Joined: March 09 2006 Location: France
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Posted: March 18 2006 at 4:32am | IP Logged
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Mary G. wrote:
Also, never forget how much they pickup "osmotically" (that is, through osmosis) |
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Yes they do! That is why their environmnet is so important. Children at this age cannot chose what they want to learn or not. That is why Montessori calls it "the absorbent mind".
Apart from everyday examples of when we can incorporate talking to children, this is how you could give a lesson.
In a montessori class/home lesson, we start with the 3 primary colours (red, blue, yellow). There are 2 examples of each tablet.
We use the 3 part lesson:
Invite the child to take the tray with the colours. Sit to his/her right (or to the left, if left handed).
Show him/her how to pair the two sets together.
Lesson 1: This is yellow. This is red. This is blue.
We don't ask them to repeat or question theM
We ask if they want to try. If so great. If not that's fine. Then we carry the tray back to its place and tell the child that he/she can do it again when they like.
When and only when you feel they are ready.....
Lesson 2: Where is yellow? Where is red? Where is blue?
It is more sure that the child will get it right (and therefore successful) than asking them what is this? straight away.
Then, when you observe readiness
Lesson 3: "What is this colour?" etc...
If ever the child is unsure, just calmly STOP, go back to the previous stage. When they are ready MOVE ON! We never want them to feel as if the can't do it, or leave them feeling unchallenged.
When this is done, there are the 2nd box of colours (primary and secondary - for matching and naming) and the 3rd box (loads more - for helping the child to differentiate between different shades)
Any montessori stockist would have these - take a look at a site to see what they look like. You can make these yourself although it is great to have a boxed version of the 3rd one.
Hope this helps.
__________________ Mari, mother of 2 loving daughters aged 8 and 10
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Jen L. Forum All-Star
Joined: Oct 18 2005 Location: Virginia
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Posted: March 18 2006 at 1:24pm | IP Logged
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jenngm67 wrote:
Well, I talked to another sister, and she thought that maybe it was just a number-3-child-out-of-4-under-the-age-of-6 not doing all the things you do with your first child. I can understand that.... |
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I have to comment on this one too --
When my son (1st born) was about 2 and my nephew (7th born) was around 3, my sister was impressed to hear that my son could identify his colors. She KNEW her son didn't know them and wasn't concerned. The funny thing was that he DID know them, but being the 7th he just hadn't been asked/talked to about it!
__________________ Jen
dh Klete,ds (8/95),dd (12/97), dd (11/00), and ^2^ in heaven
"...the best state in which to glorify God is our actual state; the best grace is that of the moment..." St. Peter Eymard
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Meredith Forum All-Star
Joined: Feb 08 2005 Location: N/A
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Posted: April 28 2006 at 2:56pm | IP Logged
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Mari wrote:
Any montessori stockist would have these - take a look at a site to see what they look like. You can make these yourself although it is great to have a boxed version of the 3rd one.
Hope this helps. |
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Mari would you mind sharing where you pick up your materials for this and maybe email me a picture??
meresfab4@peoplepc.com
Thanks so much, the lesson sounds great!!
__________________ Meredith
Mom of 4 Sweeties
Sweetness and Light
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Genevieve Forum All-Star
Joined: April 02 2005
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Posted: April 28 2006 at 9:57pm | IP Logged
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Meredith, Make your own using paint samples at your local home improvement stores.
__________________ Genevieve
The Good Within
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Donna Marie Forum All-Star
Joined: Feb 07 2005 Location: New Jersey
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Posted: April 28 2006 at 11:12pm | IP Logged
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We made ours with paint samples and the cards that came in a case for embroidery thread....worked like a charm...they even had a hole in the corner of them which I used to place each group of colors on a large binder ring. I kept all of the rings in a tackle box. We later added other things to this box for experiments with light, optics and color...i know it's kinda going off on a tangent, but we had fun!
__________________ God love you!
Donna Marie from NJ
hs momma to 9dc!!
Finding Elegant Simplicity
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