Salado Montessori

Newsletter

Busy Bees!

 

Having only one more month of school, staff and students have been busily tending to their work and end of year routines. The second group of spring parent teacher conferences are coming up as well as picture day, spring celebration, Parent's Night, and end of year festivities.

 

We want to say a big thank you to our parents for being involved and supporting not only their student, but the staff during this busy season!

 

Announcements

 

Volunteer Hours are due May 1st. Contact the office for opportunities and parent education worksheets.

 

Re-enrollment due May 6th. Please fill out your child's re-enrollment form and turn it into the office.

 

The 2022 - 2023 school year calendar is now available on our website.

 

Parent Volunteer Hour Worksheet

 

Please click here to access the AMSHQ website for Montessori Parent articles.

 

Choose an article that interests you, read it, then write a short synopsis about what you read and how you can use the information with your child.

 

Each worksheet is worth 1 volunteer hour.

 

Please turn in worksheets via email or in the drop-off/pick-up line by May 1st.

 
Article Synopsis Worksheet

Montessori Materials in the Classroom

The Roman Arch

The Roman Arch is used throughout the Montessori child's education. In the Primary classroom, ages 3 to 6, the arch is found in the Culture section of the classroom.

 

Culture in the Primary classroom encompasses several categories: art, science, geography, history, music, and a few more. The arch falls under the science sub-category of culture by  demonstrating and discussing gravity.

 

In later years, the arch is used as an "introduction to Roman history, ancient architecture, principles of the keystone and the form and function of the arch." 

 

Image and article adapted from How We Montessori Blog

 

Click the button below to read more about the roman arch in the Montessori classroom!

Awesome Architectural Blocks

Please Stay... Here's Why

by P. Donohue Shortridge

Montessori Life Fall 2018

 

So, let’s get real. You’ve loved the first two years of the Montessori Early Childhood program for your young child. Now, as you look ahead, you are facing a decision about the third, and final, year of the EC program—the capstone year, sometimes known as kindergarten.

 

What are your options? Well, your friends’ children attend a private school, and while it’s not Montessori, it does have the attraction of going all the way through high school. Or there is that non-Montessori public school in your neighborhood that your child could walk to, with the banner outside proclaiming its status as a 5-star school. Or the charter school that needs you to enroll now or your child won’t get a first-grade spot the year after next.

 

While tuition-free school is compelling, and maybe you even moved to your neighborhood because of their touted great schools, or you believe that charter when they tell you it’s now or never, please also consider staying with Montessori through the capstone year.

 

Two hallmarks of Montessori education are the mixed-age grouping and the 3-year cycle. Pulling your child out before he has completed the full 3-year cycle will deprive him of the following benefits.

 

• In her first year at Montessori, all those “big kids” seemed so, well, big. They could do amazing things. Your child was in awe of them—in fact, she may have mentioned an older child or children in the classroom, a 5- or 6-year-old she idolized. Just as in real life, children learn from their elders. Now, your child will get to be one of those “big kids.” The capstone year is also known as the leadership or consolidation year, in which your third-year child takes great pride in solidifying all she has learned over the past 2 years and assumes greater responsibilities in the classroom. This happens naturally, because it was modeled for her when she was younger. She will expect to be (and will be looking forward to being) in this new role of “big kid” in the classroom.

 

• Your child will have the same teacher for 3 years. The teacher truly knows your child. And you get to know the teacher over the longer cycle; the relationship between school and family builds on trust and mutual respect.

 

• The 3-year cycle allows your child to acquire skills and academic knowledge at his own pace. Perhaps reading came to him more quickly than math, or fine-motor skills seemed second nature while gross-motor skills took longer. The Montessori Early Childhood environment has no set timetable for mastery but instead offers him 3 full years to acquire capability. Not all 5½-year-olds are expected to be fluent readers or understand multiplication. Would you be comfortable being held accountable for a skill simply because a statistical model or a test stated you “should know this by now”?

 

• The 5- to 6-year-old generally has more command over her body and is able to work longer, with more concentration, on academic subjects. To her delight, a work she may have struggled with last year is now manageable. She says to herself, Well, that was fun— what else can I now do that I couldn’t do last year?

 

• The social-emotional world of the 5- to 6-year-old evolves into more collaboration with peers: solving problems, working out conflicts, and coming to understand the other person. This happens naturally in Montessori because students have been together for all this time and know each other well—and they know this classroom, this environment.

 

• Because the 5- to 6-year-old is more confident in himself, he watches out for the younger children. Acts of benevolence toward the younger child not only endear that younger child to his older classmate, they allow that older child to open his heart to the needs of others. Most of the time, this all happens without the teacher saying a word. It’s inherent in the Montessori culture.

 

Over the years, we Montessorians have observed children who, having completed the full Early Childhood cycle, matriculate confidently into first grade in a non-Montessori program or into Lower Elementary in a Montessori school. There is research to back this up as well.

 

Consider this an appeal to offer the gift of time to your child.

 

Adapted from Montessori Parent

View Full Article

Upcoming Dates

 

May 1st - Volunteer Hours Due

 

May 2nd - No School - Parent Teacher Conference Day

 

May 6th - Re-enrollment Due

 

May 19th - Noon Release - Last Day of School - End of Year Picnic

 
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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