Montessori at Home
Creating a Home Environment that Supports Learning
Your home is a completely separate environment to nursery. Let's keep it simple and look at the basics!
Assess your home environment and make adjustments to allow your child to be more hands on in all rooms.
For example: set up a low table / stool / shelf /learning tower in the kitchen; low table and chairs in the living room; accessible chair in the dining room.
Slow everything down. Relax, you have the whole day available. Children imitate our attitudes and behaviours. The calmer you are, the calmer your children will be.
Explain we will do our best to tidy away after every activity. Children are happy to do things when they seem fun! If you view tidying as a lovely collaborative activity, your children will also view it as a positive activity!
Communicate clearly and be consistent with logical limits. Avoid putting too much pressure on yourself. Stick to what is absolutely necessary only. For example: we use gentle hands, we walk indoors, we tidy away when we finish an activity, we wash our hands before we eat and after using the toilet, we use a spoon / fork / knife to eat.
Create a Gentle Daily Routine
Think about what kind of routine will suit your individual family's needs?
We find that a variety of active and passive activities works well. Start with something outdoors or involving large movements to use up some of the children's natural energy! Then they will be more able to sit down and concentrate on passive activities. Switch between active and passive activities as you see your children need them.
Toilet / nappy change
Wash hands
Breakfast
Get washed and dressed
Play outdoors or other large movement activities
Wash hands
Books
Singing
Language
Art and craft
Practical life around the home
Nature
Snack preparation, eating, tidying away and washing up
Large movements
Games
Toilet visits in between
Wash hands
Lunch preparation, eating, tidying away and washing up
Sleep / Quiet time
Outdoor play
Wash hands
Afternoon snack preparation, eating, tidying away and washing up
Art
Language
Nature
Games
Dinner preparation, eating, tidying away and washing up
Bath time - involve your child in preparations
Story time
Bedtime
Useful insight written by an AMI Montessori Elementary Teacher
Children who do real things - in collaboration with others - learn real skills and grow up to be independent humans who know how to cooperate and collaborate and contribute to society.
Think and play and move and work and create and laugh together.
This is a time to connect, not correct.
Have compassion for one another in this new time.
Everyone is generally doing the best they can under the most unusual circumstances.
Be together. There is enough time.
Do real things
The Routines we all Practice at Smiths Children
Here is the basic routine for babies in Nido
You'll see there are a mixture of active and passive activities with lots of hand washing or wiping in between as needed!
breakfast
wash / wipe hands
free play indoors
songs and stories
nappy change
wash / wipe hands
free play indoors
art activities
wash / wipe hands
wash fruit for snack and share together
wash / wipe hands
outdoor activities in the garden
wash / wipe hands
songs and stories indoors
wash / wipe hands
lunch prep and sharing
wash / wipe hands
nappy change
sleep
free play in the garden
wash / wipe hands
prep and share snack (pour milk from small jug to cup)
wash / wipe hands
free play indoors
songs and stories
wash / wipe hands
tea prep and sharing
wash / wipe hands
free play outdoors
wash / wipe hands
free play indoors
art activities
wash / wipe hands
free play
Observation and encouraging focused attention
“It’s from this recognition that so many of the core practices of Montessori emerge. We do not interrupt children when they are at work, not merely because we want them to concentrate.
Sure, concentration is a good thing. But there’s a mystery at work when a child is deeply engaged in their own activity.
There is a development and a sense-making, a wonderment that we are not privy to, that we cannot understand just by observing it, and that is nonetheless essential to the child.
We don’t interrupt children because their concentration reflects their fascination, and their fascination will drive their purpose. “
Helpful Links For Parents
Supporting Natural Development of Children - Aid to Life