Madam Montessori
Fifty years after her death, innovative Italian educator Maria Montessori still gets high marks
- By Nancy Shute
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2002, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
The Casa dei Bambini, or Children’s House, opened January 6, 1907. At first, Montessori just observed. She noticed that the children came to prefer her teaching materials to toys and would spend hours putting wooden cylinders into holes or arranging cubes to build a tower. As they worked, they became calmer and happier. As the months passed, Montessori modified materials and added new activities, including gardening, gymnastics, making and serving lunch, and caring for pets and plants. Children who misbehaved were given nothing to do.
The children soon started asking Montessori to teach them to read and write. So she devised sandpaper letters that they could touch and trace, pronouncing the sounds as they did so. One day during recess, a 5-year-old boy cried excitedly, “I can write!” and wrote the word mano—hand— with chalk on the pavement. Other children began writing, too, and news of the miraculous 4- and 5-year-olds who taught themselves to write traveled quickly.
Acolytes from around the world flocked to Rome to sit at Montessori’s knee, and soon Montessori schools were popping up in Switzerland, England, the United States, India, China, Mexico, Syria and New Zealand. Alexander Graham Bell, who had started his career as a teacher of the deaf, was fascinated by Montessori and in 1912 established a Montessori class in his Washington, D.C. home for his two grandchildren and a half-dozen neighborhood kids. A Montessori class, taught in a glass-walled classroom, would be one of the most popular exhibitions at the 1915 Panama– Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco. But success proved more than even Montessori could handle. Though she had resigned her university chair to concentrate on the schools, she found herself overwhelmed by the demands for lectures, training and interviews. She complained bitterly about books describing her program and insisted that only she was qualified to train teachers. The fact that she had patented her teaching materials irked more than a few critics, one of whom decried the act as “sordid commercialism.”
Other educators also raised questions. Most prominent among them was William Heard Kilpatrick, a disciple of John Dewey, who dismissed Montessori’s methods as too formal and restrictive, failing to spark children’s imaginations sufficiently. By the 1920s, interest in Montessori had waned in the United States.
A Montessori revival began in the late 1950s, led by Nancy Rambusch, a mother frustrated by the lack of choices for her children’s education. After going to Europe for Montessori training, she started a school in Greenwich, Connecticut. Others followed. Today, there are some 5,000 Montessori schools in the United States, some affiliated with AMI, others with the American Montessori Society, founded by Rambusch. Some schools using Montessori methods are not certified at all, and some that claim to use them do anything but. The little research that exists on the benefits of the method indicates that Montessori students do well in the long term, but more research is needed. “We have to verify that we’re in tune with brain development, and that our kids are prepared at all levels,” says Jonathan Wolff, a Montessori teacher and consultant in Encinitas, California.
Lilian Katz, professor emerita of early childhood education at the University of Illinois, says the criticisms of Montessori’s methods—obsession with the “correct” use of blocks and beads, the lack of emphasis on fantasy and creativity— are valid but don’t compromise the value of the program. “It’s pretty solid,” says Katz. “The strategies the teachers use are very clear. Children seem to respond well.”
With pinched budgets, little time for recess or music, and increased emphasis on standardized tests, these are tough times in education. But Maria Montessori’s legacy has never been more valued, even as it adapts to meet the needs of a new century. For some teachers, says Paul Epstein, head of the Chiaravalle Montessori School in Evanston, Illinois, “the materials have become the method. But you can do Montessori with a bucket of sticks and stones or any set of objects if you know the principles of learning.” Epstein’s middle school students don’t play with blocks. Instead, they’re doing something Maria never imagined, but doubtless would like. Last year, they ran the school’s snack bar, a hands-on task designed to help them with skills they will need as adults: common sense and time management. Says Epstein with a smile: “They’re learning to be entrepreneurs.”
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Comments (8)
Fun fact: The first charter school in America was a Montessori, part of the original point of the charter administrative structure being to allow teachers to teach without dealing with the bureaucracy that had built up over generations (and only gotten worse since). That was, of course, before the conservative movement co-opted charters as a means to weaken the teachers' unions and divert public funds to the for-profit sector.
Posted by yoda on May 31,2012 | 12:09 PM
I am sorry to hear of the one bad experience in a Montessori school. I was born to be a Montessori teacher and I think that some times we get into the ridgid thinking that nothing can happen with a child that is not in the "book" this goes for public shcools as well as private. But it is the teadher that sets the tone. Thanks for commenting and letting us know that we need to be flexibel in our classroom to accomodate the child. So sorry for your bad expereince. May be another school would be better but check the other Montessori schools and see what is up with them too before you write off Montessori altogether.
Posted by Linda Bale on October 1,2011 | 08:23 AM
There are some great short videos online about Montessori education. I can recommend "Superwoman Was Already Here!" and "Montessori Madness." Thank you.
Posted by Sheryl Morris on September 27,2011 | 03:22 PM
So much depends on the teacher in a Montessori School . My son thrived his first year and was miserable his second year due to a teacher that was punitive and non-receptive to his needs. He was also extremely bright and playing chess at 5 years old and there was not one student close to his developmental level.So parents be careful because what sounds good in theory may not be so great for your child. You should check out the breakdown of the classroom (it is supposed to contain MIXED ages)and see the teacher in action. The school pointed their finger at my son not what they could do better. I only wished that I pulled my son out mid-year and switched his school as I do believe they made my son feel badly about himself when he only wanted to play with one other peer that was at his level and they did not provide materials to challenge him. My son thrived the next year in public school and I only wished I would have pulled him out of the Montessori School he attended earlier. I guess I was intimidated by what I believed to be professional people but I should have went with my instincts.
Posted by Alicia Kammerling on September 6,2011 | 02:04 PM
I satrt ami recently and i like it so much.Let me Know how can i join and train
Posted by Piyaseeli Pitumpe on November 27,2010 | 10:27 AM
hi
please let me know about the montessori training & nursery training which has more scope in the mere future where is training centre in bangalore India
thanking you
with regards
mamatha
Posted by mamatha on May 8,2010 | 04:47 AM
I'm Nursery Teacher.....
Until now i always learn about Montessori....
Student feel interesting when they play montessori especially life skills....i hope you will send information about how to be a good teacher....
Posted by Novia Anggarini on July 3,2009 | 09:54 AM
i myself attend montessori school and im in 6th grade!
Posted by billy on March 3,2009 | 07:43 PM