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Maria Montessori Myth Busting

Photo courtesy of the archives of the Association Montessori Internationale.

This story is the second part of a 3-part series. Check out  and .

Montessori Myths

Founded in the early 20th century by the Italian physician and education iconoclast Maria Montessori, the teaching method that bears her name has taken root all over the United States and around the world. The history of its proliferation and multi-pronged institutional dissemination has fostered a degree of confusion and myths about the founder鈥檚 intentions and how the method is practiced. 鈥淧eople use the word Montessori without knowing what they mean,鈥 says , professor of psychology at the University of Virginia and author of .

Lynne Lawrence, Executive Director of , adds, 鈥淭he reason there are so many myths is that the real answer always lies somewhere in the middle, in the nuance. And because there are so many nuances, it’s very easy for people to go in one direction or another.鈥

Here are six Montessori myths 鈥 and the reality, as set forth by experts.

1. Myth: The Montessori Method Is Rigid (or, alternatively, Montessori is Anarchy). When parents gather on the playground or on a listserv, two of the most common opinions that arise are, curiously, in direct opposition to one another.

First, Montessori is so strict that it will crush young spirits. Yet according to Charlotte Petty, a young educator recently interviewed for , 鈥淭he most effective Montessori classrooms I’ve worked in and observed are those that bustle with language and movement and the exchange of ideas between children.鈥

She adds: “When children know what to expect in their learning environments, they feel safe to explore and make their own choices. The structure and routine in the Montessori classroom is in service of the child’s freedom of choice and movement.”

Second, Montessori classrooms are sheer anarchy, with no structure or guidance. Lawrence explains, 鈥淲e say the child is free to make their way through our framework in the best possible way, but they are limited by what is good for everybody.鈥 This balance鈥攚hat Lawrence calls 鈥渢he nuance between absolute allowance and rigid denial鈥濃 speaks to the most persistent misunderstanding about Montessori: the supposed ban on imagination.

2. Myth: Montessori Forbids Imagination. As with a lot of myths, this one has a grain of truth to it. In , Maria Montessori writes,

The true basis of the imagination is reality, and its perception is related to exactness of observation, it is necessary to prepare children to perceive the things in their environment exactly, in order to secure for them the material required by the imagination鈥 The fancy which exaggerates and invents coarsely does not put the child on the right road.

As Rita Kramer adds in : 鈥淪he does not mean to banish fantasy 鈥 the symbols of poetry, the imaginative flights of the fairy tale鈥攆rom the child鈥檚 life, but only from school, where, as she has defined the function of the school, it has no business.鈥 Lawrence notes, 鈥淐hildren don’t just live in our schools, right? They have homes with laptop computers and phones.鈥

Even in the classroom, however, imagination that feeds creativity is encouraged and valid; it鈥檚 just when children get carried away in fantasy (what Montessori called 鈥榝ancy鈥), they might need to be gently brought back to reality. 鈥淲ould we do it punitively?鈥 asks Lawrence. 鈥淣o, of course not. We would say, 鈥業 can see how this block looks like a train. Can I show you something else that we can do with it?鈥欌 She further clarifies, 鈥淚f a child is taking what they’ve learned and producing their own thoughts and ideas, that’s creative. Essentially, the children’s imaginations take off from having building blocks.鈥

In her research, Lillard has found that most children tend to prefer using real cooking utensils to make real food over make-believe meal preparation, and in that sense, 鈥淢ontessori is kind of the first manifestation of playful learning.鈥 She adds that Montessori-trained educators learn to pay close attention to children鈥檚 fantasy play, saying, 鈥淲hen children are engaging in a lot of fantasy, they may be expressing a need or some unfulfilled desire.鈥

3. Myth: Montessori is too expensive. Even if it does work in some settings, argue some of Montessori鈥檚 detractors, it can鈥檛 work at scale because it costs too much money per pupil. In fact, over 500 public Montessori schools in the United States show that it can be executed with a standard public school budget.

Petty argues, 鈥淚t’s a myth that in order to ‘do Montessori right’ you need branded materials from expensive catalogs or subscription services.鈥 By debunking this myth, she says, the field can better center the core principles of Montessori. The international Montessori efforts implemented by show that these principles can work in even the most inhospitable circumstances.

Ellen Roche, chief media & philanthropy officer with , adds, 鈥淚t’s ironic that most people think of Montessori as something that private school children have access to, when the entire philosophy was guided by observation and work with very poor children in Italy.鈥 At the same time, Petty contends, 鈥淎s it exists today, Montessori is often out of reach for those who cannot afford high tuition costs.鈥 Part III of this series will address efforts to make the method more accessible.

4. Myth: Montessori doesn鈥檛 do sports. While traditional competitive sports are de-emphasized, Lawrence maintains that health and movement have always been vital aspects of the model. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not about winning at all costs or people yelling at you from the sidelines.鈥

The object, she says, should be to develop children鈥檚 talents and to work in teams鈥攏ot to win a game. 鈥淔rom our point of view,鈥 she says, 鈥渋f you’re good with your left foot [in soccer], then just think if you practice with your right. And if you are really a great player, then why don’t you take the role of the referee for a while?鈥

5. Myth: There鈥檚 no evidence that Montessori works. Lillard points to a large and growing body of research that supports the Montessori model for all ages and across populations. 鈥淭he data speak,鈥 she says, 鈥淚 go with whatever the data tell us.

A few studies worth noting:

  • (Frontiers in Psychology) 鈥淢ontessori children fared better on measures of academic achievement, social understanding and mastery orientation, and they also reported relatively more liking of scholastic tasks. They also scored higher on executive function when they were 4.鈥
  • (Journal of Montessori Research) 鈥淲e find that public Montessori education demonstrates strengths in racial diversity, mixed results in student outcomes and promising potential in early childhood, special education and cultural responsiveness.鈥
  • (AMS Research Committee White Paper) 鈥淓vidence of the benefits of mixed aged classrooms can be organized into the following categories: its impact on children鈥檚 cognitive development, its impact on their social development and the pedagogical advantages it affords teachers.鈥
  • (Child Development) 鈥淐ross-sectional analyses in kindergarten and longitudinal analyses over the three years of preschool showed that the adapted Montessori curriculum was associated with outcomes comparable to the conventional curriculum on math, executive functions and social skills. However, disadvantaged kindergarteners from Montessori classrooms outperformed their peers on reading.鈥

The research continues, within and beyond the Montessori universe.

6. Myth: Everything is Montessori now. Given the sheer number of Montessori schools, on top of those that profess to offer a Montessori-inspired curriculum, it鈥檚 tempting to think the Montessori revolution is complete.

Lillard disagrees, saying, 鈥淥ur whole model of education in this country is still based on this Cartesian input output model, which we know now is not how the brain works. There are so many things about education today that don’t correspond to how we know children learn and how we know the brain works. Montessori is an alternative that actually does correspond to brain science.鈥

Unless and until young learners are allowed to and encouraged to direct their own education, experts say, the Montessori revolution remains incomplete.

This story is the second part of a 3-part series. Check out  and .

This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 蜜桃影视. Learn more here.

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