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March-April 2009 Selected
Content A Montessori
Homeschool Story - Susan
Mayclin Stephenson
It was June 1988, the first official day of our new homeschool.
Homeschooling was Michaels choice and we were all a bit nervous.
I had been teaching in Montessori schools, children from age 2
to 13, since 1971 and had plenty of lessons and materials ready
for our 5-year-old to choose from. I started explaining the
exciting and interesting lessons in several areas; then I felt
his body stiffen next to mine and saw that he was staring at me
with a look of horror on his face! He said, and I shall never
forget it, If I had wanted to do all these things I would have
stayed in school!
I backed off. Thank goodness I already had a full-time job at
home, reviewing and selecting products, and creating the
catalogue, for our family business, an educational toy and
bookstore.
Michael had attended a Montessori school from ages 2 to 5.5.
For the last year or so, we had been talking about the
homeschoolers who came into our store. We appreciated the way
they talked with their parents about what to buy, what they were
interested in, what they wanted to explore. It was so nice to
see the respectful communication between parents and the
children. Michael had enjoyed a lot about his Montessori
preschool, but he thought homeschooling sounded even better. He
talked us into it.
This was new ground. As parents we constantly wavered back and
forth over the years, from This is the best thing we could ever
do for our child to Oh dear, are we ruining our childs life? For
17 years we experimented, studying how others were doing it, and
in the beginning received a lot of personal encouragement from
Helen Hegener of Home Education Magazine, and from speakers at
the few homeschooling conferences we attended. But we found that
there was no recipe and in the end, every family has to create
its own homeschooling life.
Here are some examples of various subjects we discussed with
other homeschoolers over the years.
Schedule
We kept no homeschool hours. Even though I had loved my years of
teaching Montessori, there was something pretty wonderful about
waking up naturally, without the rush of eating and getting
ready to leave the house. With no TV in the house (and no
internet back then), plenty of good books and educational
materials, and by including Michael in the family work,
everything was considered valuable education. Officially
homeschooling occurred any time, day or night, seven days a
week. It was just living.
Once a week for about an hour, Michael and I talked about what
the state required at his particular grade level. This is
exactly what I had done with each student, individually, in
Montessori 6-12 classes. Together we studied the list from the
previous week, and made a new list for the following week. The
purpose was to keep academic areas balanced. There were,
however, no rewards or punishments connected to doing everything
on the list, no tests or grades, just respectful dialogue. As I
look back, I think this was one of the best preparations for
real life, time management and planning, that we gave Michael.
Study Subjects and Methods
There are two Montessori sayings that are relevant here. The first
is The teacher is in charge of the minimum and the student the
maximum. That means that in our planning, I helped Michael be
aware of a very small number of things he should learn in order
to keep up with his peers in school, but he was free then to go
to the limit in researching anything that he became interested
in. His father and I watched carefully to determine these
interests and to help him find library books, or guides and
teachers, public lectures or performances, and so forth, to
learn as much as possible in the passion of the moment. The
subject wasnt important, but the feeding curiosity, looking for
answers to his questions, learning the research tools, the
search for primary sources, interviewing people as witnesses,
personal experience, the joy of sharing the information with
others, the pleasure taken in the hard workthese were the
valuable elements.
The second saying is Children remember what they enjoy
learning. We learned early on that anything a child is forced to
learn, or manipulated into learning by means of threats or
rewards, is usually soon forgotten. But things learned in an
enjoyable way, study that provides answers to a childs
questions, instead of being required or imposed by someone else,
are remembered; they are truly learned.
I will never forget one day when Michael said, a bit grumpily,
that he had not learned anything about animals in a long time
and there were no animals around to study. I suggested he go out
in to the yard and place his face a few inches from the grassy
earth and see if he could find anything. Later I looked out the
window and saw that he was lying face down, his face almost
touching the earth, motionless. He did this for a long time, and
then came running in with a long and exciting monologue about
the interplay he had observed between two different communities
of tiny insects living on a few square inched of his own yard!
Neither of us has forgotten what he learned that day.
Math
There is a large group of homeschoolers in this area and an
unofficial school for homeschoolers, called Mistwood where
Michael went one day a week. He learned much of his math there
or from his father. We had no daily-required math work. During
the high school years, he took two math classes with his dad at
the university. Of course there was practical math. He developed
an intricate and involved budgeting system for the money he
earned as a music teacher. He even earned enough to build a
music studio with his dad. Neither of them had ever built
anything, so it was a wonderful project. They read books,
watched videos, consulted experts, hired help for the
foundation, wiring, and sheet rocking, but did almost everything
else themselves.
Language
Family reading before bed was such an important part of our lives
that it was the subject of the what do you miss most about home
paper required during Michaels freshman year at college. Often
we would begin a book, something by Charles Dickens for example,
and Michael just couldnt wait till the next nights reading so he
would continue on his own. Then we would have to start a new
book since his parents were behind in the book we had started
the night before. We read fiction, great literature, but also
history and other non-fiction.
Writing was another story. Michael hated writing and
steadfastly refused to do it. To prepare for the 15-minute essay
on the SAT II test, he had to practice actually moving a pencil
across the paper for 15 whole minutes, writing something like I
hate writing. I hate writing. I hate writing. He studied a few
essays and practiced breaking subjects I selected into the essay
format, but he did not enjoy it. His first real paper was
written in college. But by law school he was editor of the Law
Review, and his student job was helping a professor edit a law
book he was writing. This reinforces the belief that the timing
of learning is vital.
Volunteer Work
Care of others and the environment is an important part of
Montessori curriculum. Michael tried many avenues of volunteer
work, from cleaning up the beaches with friends, or playing
piano at the Alzheimers center, to helping disabled children
learn to ride horses. He went with his dad on his own hospice
volunteer work, and once a week, took dinner to a neighborhood
man who could no longer drive.
Socialization
As we all know, this is often the first question people ask of
homeschoolers. Michaels society was his parents, his grown
sisters and their friends, the babies I worked with, the
children and adults he taught Suzuki piano, guitar, and violin,
the retired music professor he took dinner each Friday evening,
and the members of the various music ensembles, bands, and
orchestras he played with over the years. If this isnt
socialization in the real world, I dont know what is.
High school
At age 15 Michael passed the CHISPE (California High School
Proficiency Exam) officially earning a high school diploma. Then
he was free to take classes at the local university and to earn
his Suzuki piano teachers diploma in Calgary, Canada.
When his high school-attending friends talked about their
biology or American history classes he felt ignorant, even when
we pointed out that he probably knew more about the areas he had
researched than anyone we knew. He knew about WWII, the emperors
of Rome, volcanoes, the Indian epic Mahabharata, the Bible, the
history of the Maya, archeology, and many subjects that were
never covered in such depth in school.
SAT/ACT
Michael had taken a test at the end of sixth grade, given by a
homeschool mother who tutored homeschoolers. Now he had to think
about college entrance tests. He knew he wanted to be able to
choose any kind of a career and that college was a good idea,
but he had not in any way studied to the test.
We got some books with practice tests. The top SAT I and II
scores were still 800, and with the first practice tests, he
scored between 100 and 300 on most of them. So he studied for
just over two months and brought his scores up to around 700.
This was something that we never forgot. When we hear about
children having to begin preparing for SAT tests as early as
third grade, and then see that it is possible, when one loves
learning and can schedule his time and work hard, to catch up in
a couple of months, it boggles our minds.
College
At that time there was a counselor at Stanford University
especially for homeschooled applicants. He has us bring a very
long list taken from the annual work records of what Michael had
done during high school years. He helped us put it into an
application format which was accepted almost everywhere Michael
applied.
In the homeschooling world, Montessori seems to be mostly known
for the materials, the Montessori manipulatives, especially in
math. But in my opinion these things are not at all as important
as respecting and following the childs choice of what to study
and not interrupting his concentration. The Montessori
elementary curriculum is a rough guide, an overview that opens
up the worlds of history, geography, cultures of the world, the
sciences and arts. But then the child is in charge of what to
research and study.
A Few Words About Montessori
Montessori philosophy is based on intense and continuous study of
the child in what is called the four planes of development:
Birth to 6 years, 6-12, 12-18, and 18-24. By the end of the 24th
year we look for these markers of successful development:
The Montessori Promise
the Young Adult - Resilient - Sense of mission - Sense of control
- Self-Confidence - Inner Harmony - A love of study and
achievement in preparation for future work in society.
By age 24, Michael had adjusted to traditional education,
receiving a needs-based scholarship to Brown University where he
was a teaching assistant in the music department his sophomore
year, graduated in ethnomusicology, traveled around the world,
volunteered in a Mother Teresa orphanage and at an environmental
NGO in India, and entered law school where he worked as a public
defender in Oregon. He now works for a law firm in Portland,
Oregon, plays music with several groups, composes music, and
teaches music. Homeschooling helped him achieve a balanced life.
Montessori Resources
www.montessori.edu -
Information on Montessori schools, materials, teacher training,
conferences, and other information of interest to homeschoolers.
www.michaelolaf.net -
The Michael Olaf Montessori Company was started in 1983 by two
teenage girls and named after their new baby brother, Michael
Olaf Stephenson. The Stephenson family has homeschooled since
1988, and included a Montessori overview that was rewritten each
year based on questions from homeschoolers and Montessori
teachers. They carry educational books and materials used by
homeschoolers around the world. The site also contains reprints
of articles on education and other interesting information.
www.montessori-ami.org
- The main site for the Association Montessori Internationale,
founded in 1929 by Dr. Maria Montessori, the first woman in
Italy to receive a degree in medicine.
© 2009, Susan Mayclin Stephenson
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