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Montessori School Peace Curriculum

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Montessori School Peace Curriculum

Montessori School Peace Curriculum is filled with lessons that form a fundamental part of Montessori education. Guides must work to cultivate a tranquil classroom environment. On a larger scale, we teach peace so that our students may grow up to contribute to world peace. This is the ultimate purpose of the Montessori Method.

 

There are several primary ways that Montessori educators can teach peace. The guide must prepare the environment and give the lessons. Peace lessons cover concepts from basic manners to sophisticated conflict resolution.

 

Something to keep in mind: gentleness must be taught through example and with explicit instruction. Neither is sufficient on its own. An adult must show children how to conduct themselves with the adult’s own actions. However, children also require precise instruction and plenty of time to have fun practicing.

 

Here are some primary components of the Montessori School Peace Curriculum:

 

A Prepared Environment

 

As always, guides must prepare the environment. A classroom should have a tranquil aura. This is achieved by keeping everything very orderly and visually appealing. We do not want any clutter, including in the areas out of the children’s reach. Items on the shelves ought to be displayed in a harmonious way, without ever placing any materials behind others.

 

Proper lighting and the use of plants make a world of difference. Of course, plants provide a perfect opportunity for practical life work watering. Fresh flowers, used for flower arranging lessons, also improve the room’s visual appeal.

 

Set The Tone

 

Adults do not always realize this, but the volume of the guide’s voice sets the room’s volume. When the teacher whispers, children whisper back. Guides ought to speak quietly and slowly. The children will reflect this.

 

Grace & Courtesy Instruction

 

Montessori School Peace Curriculum has instruction on manners and social graces that make up some of the basic practical life lessons. Making grace and courtesy a part of the curriculum emphasizes its value to the students. These types of lessons require direct instruction and plenty of practice time. The teacher models and the children have a chance to imitate the process.

 

When grace and courtesy are taught to children in the first plane of development, they internalize the behaviors. Good manners and automaticity with social conventions become part of their personality for life.

 

The Peace Corner

 

Montessori uses Positive Discipline strategies as the classroom management model. All of Positive Discipline is based on a peaceful and gentle framework. One component of this philosophy is a Peace Corner.

 

The Peace Corner is a specially designated area of the classroom. Students are free to visit the Peace Corner when they need to calm down. They may also use this space to have some alone time or work out a conflict with a peer.

 

The Peace Corner is introduced on the first day of school. It is presented as a positive tool to help children. The guide uses interactive modeling to teach the concept.

 

First, she acts out a scene where she becomes overwhelmed and decides to use The Peace Corner. After, the children discuss how she decided to go there, and what she did once she got there. Students are invited to model the process for each other.

 

Throughout the year, students will have more lessons on self-calming strategies. A teacher might suggest that a student visit the Peace Corner. However, the Peace Corner is always a positive place and never used as a punishment.

 

Peace Rose

 

The Montessori Peace Rose is a tool for peer conflict resolution. When two children have a disagreement, they head to the Peace Corner to work through it. One student holds the Peace Rose at a time. Whoever holds the rose speaks, while the other listens.

 

Montessori’s Goal is Peace

 

Maria Montessori believed that world peace was education’s true goal. There are so many ways that teachers can incorporate this aim into their classrooms. Whether it is reading books about peace and love or simply modeling gentleness in everyday conduct, peaceful acts promote peace.