Children’s Kiva pursues Montessori expansion

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Children’s Kiva pursues Montessori expansion

Group wants K-8 charter school in Re-1 district
What is Montessori?

The “Montessori Method” of education was devised by Italian physician Maria Montessori in the early 20th century. It gained popularity in the United States in the 1960s.
More than 4,000 Montessori schools now exist nationwide; the majority are privately run. Major tenants include:
Multi-age groupings (three-year spans): Montessori schools don’t separate children into rigid, age-determinate classes. They strive for peer learning, where younger kids learn from older ones, and older ones reinforce their knowledge by teaching concepts they’ve already mastered. The idea is supposed to mimic the professional world, where people of all ages interact.
Uninterrupted blocks of work time: students work on a single project or task over several hours.
Guided choice: Montessori encourages students to be curious and forge their own path, pursuing topics of interest to them. It isn’t completely wide open — they choose from a range of concepts and materials the teacher has introduced.
Creativity: linear desk rows, textbooks, and multiple-choice tests are uncommon, if present at all. The classrooms are free-flowing, and most learning is done by hands-on experimentation at each student’s own pace.
Interdisciplinary: subject areas are interwoven, not studied in isolation. A map of Africa might segue into a discussion of ancient Egypt, for example, where students would learn how hieroglyphs contributed to written language, how the pyramids used basic geometry and how the Nile River enabled agriculture.
Standardized tests: publicly-funded Montessori charter schools are required to administer the same tests as other public schools. Privately run schools have more leeway.

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