OakHaven Montessori School

Montessori vs. Traditional Education


A Few Key Differences


Children’s minds are absorbent. They are constantly learning from every experience, every minute. The primary goal of Montessori education is to provide your child with the environment and the experiences that will maximize his/her ability to think and problem solve, to form good work habits, and to develop a sense of self-confidence. Here are a few of the distinctions that enable Montessori children to form healthy attitudes about themselves and the world around them.

Montessori Traditional
Emphasis on whole child development  Emphasis on academic achievement 
Teacher has unobtrusive role in the classroom  Teacher is the center of the classroom 
Environment and method encourage self-discipline  Teacher acts as a primary enforcer of discipline 
Mainly individual and small group instruction  Mainly group instruction  
Mixed age group  Same age grouping 
Mixed age grouping encourages children to help and teach one another  Most teaching is done by the teacher  
Child develops independence through opportunity to exercise choice in school work  Curriculum and times are structured for the child 
Child discovers concepts from self-teaching materials  Child is guided to concepts by the teacher 
Child works as long as he wishes on chosen exercise  Child is generally allotted specific time for the completion of the activity 
Instruction set according to individual child’s learning pace  Instruction pace set by group norm 
Child spots own errors from feedback of material  If work is corrected, errors are pointed out by the teacher 
Child reinforces own learning by repetition of work and internal feelings of success   Learning is reinforced externally by rewards 
Multi-sensory materials for physical development  Fewer materials for sensory development 
Organized program for care of self and environment  Less emphasis on self-care instruction 
Child can work where he chooses, move around, and talk at will, while being respectful of others  Child usually assigned a chair, asked to participate, and sit still  
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