“Growth comes from activity, not from intellectual understanding.”

 
  PROGRAM PHILOSOPHY SCRAPBOOK TESTIMONIALS LOCATION FAQ  

 Admissions

 Schedule & Timing

 Parents Corner

 

“The programs over the years have been diverse: cooking, gardening, music and science classes have brought home many interesting stories.”

Jeff &Tanya Peterson

Sonnet Montessori Program

 

 Goals

 

Toddler Program Ages 16 months to 32 months

Sonnet is proud to introduce a Toddler program to its offerings when we open our new facility in August of this year.  We are now accepting applications for children ages 16 months all the way up to 6 years of age.  We will have 2 Toddler classrooms designed specifically for the younger ages.

The toddler classroom is a simpler and slower paced classroom for 16 months to 32 months olds. However this program is neither a watered down version of the three-to-six program nor is it academic preparation for subsequent years of Montessori education. The toddler program offers very young children a unique year of self development in a tender atmosphere of special understanding, respect and support.

Of primary importance is the gradual separation of each child from his/her primary caretaker. Sonnet’s toddler program protects this fragile stage of development by creating a very gentle and slow parting of each child-parent couple. As the toddlers gradually become comfortable in their new environment they learn to trust the teachers and the other children around them.

 

Simple sensorial activities in the classroom encourages toddlers to use their senses—indeed their whole bodies—to explore everything around them. The toddler program also appropriately accommodates the very young child’s “sensitive period for language” by offering creative and intriguing concepts to expand their growing vocabularies. Joining conversations, listening to stories, classifying objects and learning songs and poems all nurture their budding language skills.  To help smooth their initial social interactions, the toddlers also learn to use words for the feelings they experience in themselves and others.

Many of the activities in the toddler program highlight the self-help skills that lead to independence. Children are gently urged to hang up their own coats and put away their shoes and to problem-solve rather than say “I can’t.” Since this is an age of very strong imitation, the teachers constantly model appropriate social skills, good manners and consideration for others.

 

Through song, dance and freedom of choice, the toddlers have access to a variety of large muscle activities that offer them opportunities to jump, balance, crawl or skip. These exercises and creative art activities, are offered for each child to choose. This freedom in a safe space is crucial to the toddler program. However it is always tempered by two important limits that will be beneficial for a lifetime – respect for others and respect for the environment.

For ages 3 to 6

Preschool Program

When you walk into a Montessori classroom, the first thing you will notice is that everyone is busy and interested in what they are doing. One child is counting beads, others are working together on a puzzle map, and in the corner of the room a teacher is introducing a small group of children to a new language activity.

Each Children’s House is multi-aged grouping of approximately 20 children ages 3-6. Within a mixed age community, the oldest children become the models and the inspiration for the youngest, while building their own knowledge, concepts and self-confidence. Since a child builds on their previous years' experiences and mastery of the materials, the three-four year program allows for growth toward  independence and prepares the child for their next level of education.

Children under six have what Maria Montessori called “the absorbent mind”. They have a once-in-a- lifetime ability to absorb knowledge from their surroundings just by living. They take in their environment - the physical space, the language and movement of adults and children- with what Montessori called the “absorbent mind”. The absorbent mind is at its peak receptivity during the preschool years.

In order to be calm and happy, children under six need to explore and discover. They see the world through “new” eyes and are therefore curious about everything. And since they learn by touching and manipulating objects, they want to touch everything! They are keenly attuned to everything that stimulates their senses: shape, sounds, smells, textures, and tastes. They also respond to order because of their innate need to know where things belong and how pieces fit together. They want to master the movements of their bodies by learning to balance, run skip, and jump.

 

Because of the absorbent mind, preschool-age children do not need direct teaching in order to learn. The Montessori preschool classroom therefore allows them to move, touch, manipulate and explore. It gives them the freedom to choose their own work without the interference from an adult. In this environment, they learn to work independently, based on their own initiative, which builds concentration and self-discipline.

Before Montessori made these discoveries, it was generally taken for granted that many subjects- geometry, botany, zoology, grammar, geography were limited to older children. But Montessori education reveals the extraordinarily high level of learning- both conscious and unconscious- that can come with ease to children under the age of six.

 

Furthermore, Montessori early childhood education not only enhances young children’s knowledge in the present; it also establishes the foundation for true comprehension on a more abstract level later in life.

The Montessori preschool classroom is made up of children of mixed ages. Three- four- and five-year-olds all share the same classroom, and each child usually has the same teacher for three years. The mixed-age grouping of children corresponds to Maria Montessori’s theory of child development, which is based on three-year cycles. In the multi-age setting the children learn from each other, and they learn to accept each other. Younger children get a chance to look ahead and see what is coming next by watching the older children. Older children have the opportunity to reinforce their knowledge by sharing it with younger children.

Because of their constant interaction, the children learn to take responsibility for themselves and to help each other. They also learn to get along with children of different ages and abilities, to respect each other’s work and workspace, and to treat each other with courtesy. They learn talking in a group, greeting each other, and to phrase requests politely. They also take an active role in maintaining their classroom by, among other things, putting materials away in their proper place, ready for the next child to use. In short, the classroom becomes a living community where children are treated with respect and dignity and want to treat others in the same way.

In addition to being a child-centered community, the Montessori preschool classroom is also a “prepared environment”. The prepared environment is Maria Montessori’s concept that the environment can be designed to facilitate maximum independent learning and exploration by the child.

The Montessori preschool is a “living room” for children – their special place. All of the furniture is child-sized and all of the materials are scaled to fit the physical dimensions of a preschooler’s body. The space is usually divided into four distinct areas: practical life, sensorial, mathematics, and language. Although these areas represent the parts if the curriculum, it is important to remember that no subject is taught in isolation. The Montessori preschool curriculum is interdisciplinary and interactive.

In the prepared environment there is a variety of activity as well as well as a great deal of movement. A three-year-old, for example, may be spreading a bagel while a four-year-old nearby is composing words and phrases with letters known as the movable alphabet. Although much of the work at this stage of development is done individually, often children enjoy working on an activity with friends. Sometimes the entire class is involved in a group activity, such as storytelling, singing, or movement.

All of the materials for each area are arranged invitingly on low, open shelves. The children have access to the materials. They may choose what they like throughout the entire open-work time, usually about three hours, and they may work for as long as the material holds their interest. When they are finished with the material, they return it to the shelf from which it came.

The materials themselves invite activity. There are bright arrays of solid geometric forms; knobbed puzzle maps metal insets and various specialized rods and blocks. Each material in a Montessori classroom isolates one quality. In this way, the concept that the child is to discover is isolated. For example, the material known as the pink tower is made up of ten pink cubes of varying sizes. The child constructs a tower with the largest cube on the bottom and the smallest on the top. This material isolates the concept of size. The cubes are all the same color and texture; the only difference in their size. Other materials isolate different concepts: color tablets for color, geometry for form etc. Moreover, the materials are self-correcting. When a piece does not fit or is left over, the child easily perceives the error. There is no need for adult “correction”. The child is able to solve the problem by himself, building independence, analytical thinking and the satisfaction that comes from true accomplishment.

As the child’s exploration continues, the materials interrelate and build upon each other. For example, various relationships can be explored between the pink tower and the brown stairs, which are based on precise dimensions. Even later, in the elementary years, new aspects of some of the same materials unfold. The child may, for instance, return to the pink tower and discover that its cubes progress incrementally from one cubic centimeter to one cubic centimeter.

Practical Life

As every parent knows, the preschool child wants to do the essential but simple tasks that we need to do every day. The Montessori practical life materials allow him to do just that. When a child enters the preschool at three years of age, the practical life area provides the link between home and school. In the classroom, with child-sized tools that really work, the young child is able to perform the same activities he has seen adults do; polishing, scrubbing, pouring, sweeping. The pace is unhurried, and an adult is nearby to help if needed but not to interfere.

A thee year old is, of course more interested in the scrubbing motion of washing a table than he is in getting the table clean. The motions help him to gain gross motor control and hand-eye coordination, which will enable him to perform successfully in more precise tasks.

In the Montessori classroom, there are four distinct groups of practical life exercises:

bullet

Care of Self (buttoning, zipping, combing, tying. Etc.)

bullet

Care of Environment (cleaning, sweeping gardening, ironing, polishing, etc.)

bullet

Grace and courtesy: the development of Social Relations such as greeting, serving, accepting, apologizing, thanking

bullet

Control of movement (balancing, “walking on the line”, playing the silence game, Etc)

It is often difficult for adults to appreciate the sense of accomplishment and pride that children take in mastering practical life skills. To the adult, care of the house and body are necessary chores. The young child, however, is attracted to these activities for very different reasons. They are meaningful, creative, filled with intricate movements and achievements that hold the child’s attention. They are easily understood from start to finish; they have visible, easily imitated movements; they appeal to the child’s will; they lead to greater physical skill, perfection of movement and concentration.

The young child Is attracted to the practical life exercises because these activities allow her to function independently in the adult world. After learning how to button her coat, tie her shoes, and wash her hands, she spontaneously repeats the exercises, working on mastery, free from unnecessary adult intervention. These exercises correspond to the child’s sensitive period for refinement of movement and coordination as well as her growing sense of independence. “Help me help myself” is the motto of the young child, and Montessori encourages and fosters this independence.

Sensorial: Exploring the World

The world is color, size, dimension, shape, form, sound, touch, taste, and smell. Children live in a world of senses. In order to continue their creative task of development, children need to classify and express the impressions they have already received, Through sight, touch, sound, taste, and smell, the Montessori materials enable the child to clarify, classify, and comprehend their world.

The concepts of long and short, for example, are perceived in the red rods of varying lengths. Likewise, rough and smooth are experienced by touching rough sandpaper and smooth paper. Later these lessons are repeated with the sandpaper globe, helping the child to distinguish between land (rough) and water (smooth). The child gains tools and knowledge to complete and understand his sensory exploration of the world: leaf and flower shapes, geometric polygons and solids, three-dimensional land and water forms, cutout maps, and painted globe.

Besides enabling a child to clarify and internalize such concepts as size, shape, color, taste and sound, the sensorial materials also provide a basis for the development of other skills, such as music, mathematics, or language. Tracing a sandpaper letter m with his finger, a child not only sounds out the symbol m but also feels it! Later the muscles of his hand will remember the tracing motion as he writes the letter.

Montessori sensorial materials, by appealing directly to the young child’s active e sensory antennae, make learning a natural result of the child’s desire to explore.

Mathematics: From Concrete to Abstract

Preschool-aged children have naturally mathematical minds. They have the capacity to reason, to calculate, and to estimate. They are intensely conscious of quantity, counting pebbles on the beach or cookies for desert. The concrete Montessori mathematical materials allow these sensorial explorers to begin their mathematical journey from the concrete to the abstract through manipulation, experimentation and invention.

Rods, spindles, cards, beads, cubes, and counters are some of the concrete tools used to symbolize mathematical abstractions. The child does not merely learn to count; she understands the concept of “how many” because she holds the amount in her hands. Likewise, she is able to perform the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division using concrete materials. She is also presented with possibilities of fact memorization at a young age when combinations like “3 + 2 = 5” offer a real fascination and can be absorbed readily.

Like all Montessori materials, the mathematics materials build on each other in increasing complexity so that the child using them will experience the thrill of discovery for herself as part of a natural progression.

Language: From Spoken to Written

The Montessori Preschool classroom emphasizes spoken language as the foundation for all linguistic expression. Throughout the entire Montessori environment, the child hears and uses precise vocabulary for all the activities, learning the names of textures, geometric shapes, composers, plants, mathematical expressions, and so on. In addition, certain materials in the language area are particularly supportive of spoken language. The materials for written language first introduce the chills to the marvelous twenty-six letters of the alphabet and their sounds, which make it possible for us to express ourselves in writing. Later, the child may begin composing words, sentences, and whole stories using the moveable alphabet. At this developmental stage, the child is fascinated with the relationships between letters that form words, the order of words in a sentence, and even the grammatical analysis of the parts of a sentence. Writing and eventually reading are often acquired spontaneously, sometimes accompanied by explosions if activity and joyous exclamations: “I can write!” “I can read!”

Art and Music: Integrated into the Prepared Environment

The Arts are not treated as specialty subjects in Montessori. Instead, art and music, activities are viewed as forms of self-expression, and, as such, they compliment and enhance the children’s ongoing explorations, including the enrichment of vocabulary. The materials for art and music are integrated into the prepared environment as part of the day-to-day activities of the children. Various media, such as crayons, chalk, pencils, paint, clay, textiles, and a variety of papers, are available as are the opportunities for singing, humming, dancing, beating time, playing instruments, moving to rhythms, and even songwriting.

Kindergarten Program

Being responsible for the prepared environment, the teachers present these purposeful activities at critical periods using their knowledge of each child's developmental stages. Acting as a link between the child and the material, the teacher assists the children as they progress along the learning path from the concrete to the abstract.

Children are free to choose their own work and can proceed at their own pace. The children enjoy and participate in circle time, the forum for songs, discussion of the current topic, show and tell, and other group activities.

 

The thought of transitioning your child from Sonnet’s Montessori learning environment into mainstream Kindergarten can be challenging for some parents.  We are here to ease any anxiety you have about this transition.  Why not take some stress out of that decision and keep them in the stimulating and exciting environment in which they are currently learning?

Our Montessori Kindergarten program (which is entering its fourth year now) is designed for children 5 - 6 years.   We offer the kindergarten program to students who wish to continue the Montessori schooling throughout kindergarten. 

The program helps children master their interest in math, reading and writing before they move into 1st grade in public and private schools. Over the past three years we have had many students graduate and these children are now excelling in mainstream schools in Math, Writing, Reading, and Spelling Bees and most of these graduates are in accelerated programs in public schools.

 

The Kindergarten years are an exclamation mark at the final part of their essential learning years of 0-6 years. During this stage children become good examples to their classmates and become self-directed individuals as they move on.

Listed below are examples of the lessons that are taught:

bullet

Sounds, letters, moveable alphabet, phonetic words, reading books.

bullet

Numbers with quantities up to 1000, decimal systems, addition, subtraction, multiplication  and division with 1, 2 and 3 digit numbers.

bullet

Writing upper and lower case letters of the alphabet and numbers 1 - 1000

bullet

Spelling, phonograms, puzzle/sight words

bullet

Spanish/Chinese – alphabet, colors, numbers, shapes, animals, conversational Spanish

bullet

Science – human body, animal and plant classifications, etc.

bullet

Geography – countries, land formations, continents, oceans, states and flags.

bullet

People around the world and their habitats including their holiday celebrations.

bullet

Reading time, creative writing

bullet

Art – painting, collage, drawing, printing, molding, etc.

bullet

Music and Dance

bullet

Large Muscle Activities

 Field Trips - Monthly Indoor and Outdoor Field Trips

 
 

© 2006-2010 Sonnet Montessori.  All rights reserved.