Showing posts with label Montessori. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Montessori. Show all posts

Friday, March 7, 2014

Literal Mathematics - Montessori

If my children had attended school, it would have been Montessori.  I love the way education is approached in the Montessori tradition, especially mathematics.  Children are literal and Montessori appeals to that part of a child.  One morning after grumbling about not wanting to sit down to do his Singapore Math, I decided we would instead do an inventory of our Gold Bead Materials. This is an expensive investment in Montessori and I wanted to see if I could piece it together through other Montessori math materials I already had on hand.  In the process, I thought I would sneak in a lesson.


First I asked LionHeart to stack up all of the 1,000 cubes.  Sure, he knew that one thousand is a big number, but now he can see a visual representation of just how large that number really is in comparison to 100.  He figured this out after a few karate chops.  I had to explain that Montessori materials are not toys and should be treated respectfully.


Next we counted out our 10-unit bars.  You need about 45 of them to do the Golden Bead Material work.  Check! After we counted them all out, I asked LionHeart which number was larger 52 or 75? He said 75, but when I asked how did he know, he could not answer.  He certainly didn't tell me because 75 has two more 10s than 52.  So I decided to show him why it was larger.  This led to us doing comparisons of several other numbers.


Next we discussed how many 1,000s go into a 10,000 chain.  He held one end and I held the other.  I walked from the living room all the way back to my bedroom.  He was absolutely amazed! We discovered this after I untangled him.  These numbers now have so much more literal meaning for him.


What does 170 really mean? Using Montessori materials, LionHeart is able to figure it out.  Expanded notation takes on a whole new life.  The 100 square is 10 squared and it's actually a square.  Nothing is accidental in Montessori.



In Montessori there is a game called Go Get It. He loved this game.  Give me more, he pleaded.  LionHeart never, ever does that with our book work.


After our inventory was complete, I discovered that all I really need are more of the wooden squares.  I'll use my decimal symbol cards from Shiller Math.  In the meantime, we'll keep working with what we have.  Taking inventory has never been this much fun.

Using Montessori to teach math helps LionHeart understand all of the things I had to memorize as a child without any real meaning or true understanding of what I was doing.  This blog post explains it best: Everyone Should Learn Math the Montessori Way.


Later in the week LionHeart was much more receptive to learning about place value.

This lesson even survived a wardrobe change.  LionHeart will literally be able to see why 7,000 is larger than 700.


Interchanging 3 math programs can become exhausting.  But it comes in handy when there is a stall in understanding or when seat work just won't cut it for the day.  I deliver these programs the Singapore Math Way: Concrete, Pictorial and finally Abstract! Traditional Montessori is my concrete lesson.  Shiller is my pictorial lesson.  Finally, Singapore Math is my concrete lesson.  It takes a little longer, but what's the rush.  True understanding is all that matters.

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Want to Raise An Entrepreneur?



Having entrepreneurial skills is enpowering! My husband infected me with the entrepreneurial spirit when he launched a business with zero experience and taught himself as he went along, driven by pure passion - the ultimate unschooler!  Apparently, these skills can be developed if you start teaching your children some very specific skills:

James A. Merrit is the founder of SpencersFirst.com.


Want to Raise An Entrepreneur?

7 Tips to Remember

1.  Money is a tool not a toy.  Reinforce the value of managing money at every turn.  Every penny counts and business owners realize this every day.

2.  Encourage Passion.  Passion fuels success.  Follow your passion and reap positive benefits.

3.  Teach Critical Thinking.  Entrepreneurs solve problems and fill a void in the marketplace for consumers.  Look for opportunities for problem solving and encourage it often.

4.  Talk Money.  Break the taboo and have conversations about money, goals, and how to make more of it.

5.  Vocabulary.  Teach children to understand that money is a language.  Use it daily and build that muscle.  It removes the fear.

6.  Making money is just as much fun as spending money.  Making money and spending money go hand in hand.  Both are fun.

7.  Model it.  Play money games, start your own business, help your child start a business.  Whatever you do, talk the talk, and walk, the walk.

These tips are from James A. Merritt, author and publisher of Spencer's First Dollar and Spencer's First Bank Account.  He is also the founder of SpencersFirst.com.

The holiday season is a perfect time to launch a business!

Saturday, July 2, 2011

It's Time to Employ the Principle of Kujichagulia In Our Homeschool


 For the past several months I've been going back and forth between the Sonlight curriculum and Moving Beyond the Page curriculum.  As King Man approaches middle school I thought it time to take the leap into literature-based learning.  I really like Core F in Sonlight and I really like the 10-12 unit of Moving Beyond the Page, but neither is exactly what I want.  Core F does not include enough about Africa and Moving Beyond the page starts with slavery.  This has been a big pet peeve of mine about most curriculums.  But I didn't think I had the time to create my own curriculum until yesterday.  I was standing in Sankofa Bookstore with a friend and I saw  Haile Gerima, esteemed professor of film at Howard Universty and filmmaker of such classics as Sankofa and his recent work Teza, about his native homeland Ethiopia.  Who better to pose my question to? So I went up to him and explained that I was a homeschooler and wanted to create my own literature-based history curriculum for my son.  I told him that I did not want to start with the Underground Railroad, but I wanted to start with the glories of Africa.  He smiled knowingly and started leading me all over the bookstore pulling classic works off of the shelves.  I felt so honored.  Many of the books were above King Man's level or they were not narratives, stories in the tradition of Story of the World or the Sonlight booklist choices.  But at least I got a start.  Professor Gerima referred me to his wife who is more familiar with titles for younger children so I plan to return to Sankofa Bookstore to continue work on this project.  Why am I always creating more work for myself?! Why can't I just be satisfied with the packaged curriculums that are already out there? The first thing that comes to mind is the Kwanzaa principle of Kujichagulia:  to define ourselves, name ourselves and create for ourselves.  At that moment in the bookstore God said it was time for me to stop complaining and start doing.  So I'll be spending the rest of the summer contacting every scholar of African and African American history and literature that I can reach to create my own African/African American History based literature curriculum. The first book on our list is Desta and King Solomon's Coin of Magic and Fortune.  It was recommended by Professor Gerima.  It's the story of an Ethiopian Sheperd boy in search of his ancestral family's twin sister Solomonic gold coin.  I'm so excited for my son because we'll be learning together!

Monday, June 6, 2011

Before There Was Mozart



I am so very thankful that we live in a city of ultra-modern libraries filled with wonderful books. I probably check out between 50-100 books each month. Imagine the joy when I stumbled upon the book Before There Was Mozart: The Story of Joseph Boulogne, Chevalier de Saint-George. I have a little violinist in the midst and it gave me great joy to share this inspiring story about Joseph who "overcame prejudices of his peers to become one of the finest classical musicians in all of Europe."  In addition to being an African-American violinist he wrote 14 concertos, 9 symphonies, 18 string quartets and 6 operas! This is my favorite passage from the book:




"During one performance, a young man sat among the crowd, enthralled...Brimming with inspiration, he returned home to Vienna, where he began work on his Sinfonia Concertante in E-flat Major for violin and viola. The young man was Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart."