Salado Montessori

Newsletter

Happy Fall Ya'll!

 

As we finish up welcoming all of our new students we greet the fall!

 

Our students have been discovering all the new critters roaming the grounds and enjoying the weather cahnge. In the classroom our students are learning new lessons daily and practicing their newfound skills.

 

We also want to say a big THANK YOU to Adam Dials for joining our monthly donor crew!

 

 

Announcements

 

Parent Night will be held today, Friday, October 21st at 6:00 PM. We look forward to seeing you there!

 

Work with your child to create a picture that represents Fall. We will be sharing these in class October 31st!

 

Our first Parent Volunteer Workday is coming up on November 5th! Please be on the look out for an RSVP!

 

 

Parent Volunteer Hour Worksheet

 

This month's PVH worksheet covers how to practice Montessori at home.

Click the button below to access the worksheet.

Each worksheet is worth 2 volunteer hours!

Please turn in worksheets via email or the drop-off/pick-up line.

 
Montessori at Home Worksheet

Montessori Materials in the Classroom

The Number Rods

The Number Rods are a math material that teaches children "the concept of measurement". Children practice "judging and comparing quatities" by not just visually idetifying which rod is longer, but by how much is this rod longer?

 

The Number Rods are typically introduced to a child at around four years of age. The Number Rods "consists of ten colored rods divided into equally-sized red and blue sections. The length of the rods progresses linearly, with the second rod being twice the length of the first, the third rod three times the length of the first, etc."

 

"The Number Rods also help children learn the names of numbers and their sequence and learn to correctly associate between the spoken number and its quantity."

 

For more information on the number rods, check out Guidepost Montessori's Montessori Material Spotlight Blog by clicking the button below!

 

Adapted from Guidepost Montessori's Montessori Material Spotlight Blog.

The Number Rods

Manners, Naturally

By P. Donohue Shortridge - The Montessori Parent

 

“Being considerate of others will take your children further in life than any college degree.”

 

This quote, often attributed to children’s rights activist Marian Wright Edelman, came to mind recently. Walking toward my local market, I could hear the jovial banter between a father and son, who were about ten steps behind me—something about a birthday later that day and their mission to get the cake. Listening to his vocabulary and articulation, I estimated the boy to be 4 years old. Just as I reached the front door, the boy rushed past me, yanked the door open, and was halfway into the store when Dad called him back. “Let’s hold the door open for this lady, son.”

 

I looked at them both as I entered, said “thank you,” and then we were all off, each into our separate worlds—they to the bakery department and I to the produce section.

 

Dad managed the episode with grace because he didn’t react as though his child should know better; he understood that the boy’s rushing was due to 4-year-old exuberance (it would be different if the boy were 10). At the same time, the father did not let the opportunity pass to demonstrate to his son what to do.

 

That is the secret. We teach our children manners in the million moments we have with them. The episodes often come up without warning and can catch us off guard. What should we keep in mind so that when an opportunity presents itself to show our child what to do, we too will handle it with grace?

 

Our children adore us.

They love us with their entire being. Whatever we do, they want to do. They want to be close to us; they want to watch us, hear us, learn from us, and be loved by us. They want to be just like us. So instilling manners, aka “social competence,” is simple and natural in these early years, from the age of 3 or 4 on.

 

Now is the time.

Young children want to know—actually, crave knowing—the right thing to do. Their bodies and minds have grown beyond the toddler stage. Now that they are sturdy on their feet and language can be employed in meaningful communication, they are ready for the next phase of selfconstruction: socialization. They encounter the world as if asking, “What am I to do here? And would someone please show me how?”

 

Correcting is not the same as modeling.

Like the rest of us, children are easily shamed. If the father at the market had said, “Watch out, son, you’re in that lady’s way,” the boy would have felt judgment, rather than learning what he should have done. Thus, even Manners, Naturally if we are annoyed or embarrassed by our young child’s behavior, our exasperation is not the lesson—there is another way. Trust that the conduct is not malicious but likely stems from the child not knowing what to do. Then demonstrate what we want our child to learn. Dad didn’t need to say anything further to his 4-year-old son; the boy absorbed the lesson. And if Dad does the same thing the next time and the next, the lesson will be reinforced.

 

Parents are the most potent teachers of social norms.

What we show our children, they will do. Even so, for our lessons to adhere, we must be consistent and positive. And most important, we must model the behavior we want to instill in our children.

 

As Maria Montessori said, “What is social life if not the solving of social problems, behaving properly, and pursuing aims acceptable to all?”

 

Adapted from Montessori Parent - Montessori Life - Summer 2018

Manners, Naturally - Montessori Parent

Upcoming Dates

 

October 21st -Parent's Night

 

November 5th - Parent Volunteer Workday

 

November 11th - No School - Veteran's Day

 

November 18th - Noon Release

 

November 21st - 25th - Thanksgiving Break

 
Calendar

AmazonSmile

As you browse and shop online, please consider buying your items through our AmazonSmile account!

 

AmazonSmile donates 0.5% to Salado Montessori Inc

when you shop at 

smile.amazon.com/ch/81-4551078

We extend our deepest thanks for all of your support and interest in Salado Montessori throughout the school year!


- The Salado Montessori Team

10880 FM 1670
254-947-4005

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