As I entered the
door of the
Montessori Children’s House for the
first time I was astonished by the work ethic and maturity of each child; and
it only grew as I walked through and saw each age group.
At such an early age, each child had clearly
mastered a variety of tasks such as doing laundry, washing dishes, making pizza
and even cleaning up after themselves. These are tasks that I never would have been
able to do at that age (considering I just learned how to do laundry two years
ago.)
The children at MCH were extremely
self-sufficient for their age.

Not only was the maturity of the children
apparent but their intelligence stood out as well.
My two 12-year old tour guides were extremely
articulate and mature for
6th graders.
They shared with me their love for MCH during
my entire tour.
They had both been at
MCH since a very young age, and because of that they were able to provide me
with great detail about each school and age group.
They showed me the different paintings and
crafts they had done at that age, the tools they used to assist their learning
and even the class garden they were all a part of.
As I walked through the different schools I
saw students interacting with their teachers one-on-one, kids working on their
spelling assignments, preschoolers cutting carrots, and toddlers painting
portraits.
They also showed me the many
different learning mechanisms that they used to assist them with their
spelling, counting, and even object identification.
Some of the tools I had recognized from when
I was their age, but there was one that I had never seen before.

They
first introduced me to the
beaded cube while in the
preschool.
It is a cube made up of singular beads in a
10-by-10 fashion.
The preschoolers would
take the cube to help them learn how to count.
They would touch and feel the cube to understand how each row of 10 made
up the cube of 1000, called the
thousands
cube (See picture above).
As we continued on through the
school they showed me many different variations of the beaded cube that made it
more complex for the older children.
They had different sized cubes, different chains of colored beads, and
even single beads.
The older children
used these to help them with learning their addition, multiplication, and even
division skills.
I was astonished as to
how complex this one beaded cube had become, but at the same time just how
simply helpful it became in their learning process. And it didn’t stop
there.

The upper elementary was the last
stop of the tour and the first thing I spotted was a 2-by-2 foot wooden
cube. I had a feeling this had something
to do with the beaded cube; and it did. This
was the life size cube for the older children to use to continue with their
studies of mathematics. It is amazing
how something as small as a beaded cube that pre-school children played with had
turned into something as large as the wooden cube that the 6th
graders still used to learn their mathematics.
-Annabelle Javellana