Thursday, March 27, 2014

Montessori, A Modern Approach. Paula Polk Lillard

Montessori, A Modern Approach
Paula Polk Lillard
ISBN: 080520394X
(1971)
Read March 25, 2014

I finally actually read it!  Bought a lovely 70's style orange and yellow paperback copy from the library book sale, and read it cover to cover in an afternoon.  I'd seen it before, and have had it recommended several times, but never gotten around to it.

I have to say, despite being nearly 45 years old, it holds up pretty well.  That either says a lot for how little we've changed as a culture in 45 years, or speaks to her ability to avoid "modernisms" that become outdated quickly.

Basically this is a polemic, supporting Maria Montessori and her methods of instructing young people.  I find it interesting that in America, the "land of the individual," Montessori has had such a tough time catching on, despite being pretty much designed around respecting and supporting individual interests and development.  I think that is because while adults in America are supposed to be rugged and self-supporting and independent, kids are supposed to be passive and obedient and tractable - I'm never quite sure how or when people are supposed to mature from the one category to the other.

If you're not familiar with Montessori, you will be after reading this book.  What I find interesting personally is that a lot of Montessori's ideas have been corroborated by modern scientific testing and developmental studies of children.  We now KNOW that kids develop in certain stages, that it's good for kids to try and amster new abilities, and that it's normal for them to focus on one ability to the exclusion of others (the early walker who won't talk, or the chatterbox who is still crawling at 16 months).  In fact, other than her didactic  "Sensitive Periods" which are debunked by a better understanding that ideas and experiences are picked up and processed sequentially through infancy and childhood, most of what Montessori learned through observation more than one hundred years ago is holding up pretty darn well to modern scientific discoveries.

Now, what I'd like to see, and haven't been able to find, is an actual "modern" update to this classic, talking about developments in science that back up their ideas.  No luck so far tho.

 

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