An abiding curiosity: Opportunities are offered for the child to discover
qualities, dimensions and relationships amidst a variety of stimulating
learning situations thereby developing curiosity, an essential element
in creative learning.
Teach
by teaching, not by correcting:
At no level of learning are papers returned to a child with angry red
marks and corrections. Instead, the child's effort and work are respected.
There is neither punishment nor reward because Dr Montessori observed
that small children expect neither. Their reward is in the happy completion
of a job itself and the natural respect that it commands.
Initiative
and persistence: The child is surrounded with materials and activities
geared to her inner needs so that she becomes accustomed to engaging
in activities on her own, resulting in a habit of initiative.
Montessori
pre-primary schools exist all over India but the numbers are small compared
to the demand. Calcutta leads with over 25 schools including Young Learners'
Montessori House and Miranda Hall. Surprisingly, Delhi has just a few.
One of them, Magic Years in Vasant Vihar, is promoted by an educational
trust. The most remarkable thing about the school is the extraordinary
level of disciplined quiet we witnessed on a visit. With so many little
children of various nationalities, one expected a bit of noise and clamor.
Instead, we saw quiet children sitting, moving around, drawing, playing,
doing a variety of things, somehow very absorbed in whatever they were
doing. It strikes you that these children take their 'activities' as
seriously as adults and do not like being disturbed.
Amazingly,
they respect other's need for space and quiet too. Not a single instance
of a teacher demanding silence or obedience, simply because the children
imposed their own form of natural discipline while engaged in activities
they enjoyed!
Shirley Madhavan
Kutty, Principal of Magic Years, explained how even training in sports
was adapted to a child's age and ability. "Children all over the
world develop in the same manner. At a certain age they walk, grow teeth,
learn to eat, absorb language and talk. Whether the child is born in Africa
or Australia, they all share the same developmental needs," she elucidates.
"To me the Montessori method appears the most scientific way of teaching
young children."
Chanda Raisinghani,
who trained Montessori teachers for many years in Calcutta and continues
to do so now in Delhi, admits that she is just beginning to make an
impression about the Montessori system's efficacy in the Capital. She
is the director of Magic Years teacher training program and consultant
with American Montessori Public School in DLF, Gurgaon.
The fact
is that education is treated as a profitable business, especially in
cities, with most pre-primary schools being highly priced places where
children are entertained and 'minded' by young teachers and ayahs for
a few hours a day. Montessori materials are expensive, eating into the
net profit of school owners. But Shirley explains that village Montessori
schools known as Balwadis exist in India, where the original (more expensive)
materials have been adapted to suit smaller budgets. "The cost
is below Rs 2,000 for one unit of 35 children," she says, "and
several companies are now manufacturing the materials locally."
Chanda calculates
that given the steep fees charged by private schools, investors would
still make a 100 per cent profit using the Montessori method and materials
in upmarket schools. Surely dedicated educators would see the benefit
of the investment? Parental intervention and direct involvement in educational
policies would also see a change in perceptions, attitudes and resources
reserved for our children's future.
With the
growing need for preprimary schools, perhaps the more dedicated among
our new generation educators will be less swayed by the profit factor
and more concerned about their contribution to our future generations.
The corporate sector and educational trusts must enter the educational
market aggressively, not only because there is financial profit in it,
but also because the investment will ultimately pay off in future citizens
who are balanced, creative and better adjusted human beings.