Montessori education and the new world order
Much has been written in recent weeks about the changing face of education and whether traditional schooling in traditional classrooms meets the needs of 21st century learning. The past year has certainly made us all re-evaluate how our children acquire knowledge and experience their learning; I’m sure we’ve all wondered if the schools our children attend really offer what we want for them in this ever-evolving world we live in.
Montessori education has always been an alternative approach to how we help young people prepare for the wider world; Its five principles (respect for the child, absorbing mind, sensitive periods, prepared environment, and the concept of self-education) place the child firmly at the center of the process and, with the help of experienced Montessori guides, the child becomes the main architect of his or her education. Maria Montessori was ahead of her time in the early 20th century and developed the type of 21st century learning skills that are now suggested as the way forward for today’s children.
Throughout the uncertainties of 2020, IMS has had a positive and consistent presence in our community, staying in touch with parents and students through online classes and always available for advice and help. In September we opened the doors once again to our spacious new facility with twice as many children as when we were forced to close in March 2020. Word has spread that this is a truly innovative place for your child to learn and grow in an environment full of love and friendship.

With the prospect of having more and more freedom in what we can do and offer to the community, we have many plans for workshops, visits and day trips for everyone during the next academic year. We love to involve everyone in the child’s education process, thus connecting the home with the school and the community in general. When we are able, parents and other visitors will once again be invited through our doors to see the children and their education in action.
One of the features of the Montessori approach is “The Learning Walk”: each week, children ages 3 and up go out into the community to experience their world. Sometimes it is a trip to the beach to explore what the ocean brings: sometimes a walk through the countryside to discover the beauty of the trees, flowers and birds: other times it can be an excursion to one of the white villages in our hills, or a visit to a museum. All of these day trips will have a theme that extends and develops the ideas that children have been exploring in the classroom.
Traditional education has been turned upside down: come and see for yourself how the Montessori system offers a fully integrated educational approach. We understand that rather than teaching, we guide and facilitate the learning that the child initiates and absorbs through his or her developing interests and skills. This is how the child educates himself. Montessori has been at the forefront all this time.