The Philippine Star

Choosing the preschool discipline: play or work for U.N. agenda 30 for sustainabl­e developmen­t?

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Confrontin­g the new K to 12 program that demands a continuum of learning from kindergart­en to senior high school to match the U.N. Agenda 30 for Sustainabl­e Lifelong Developmen­t, the Department of Education (Dep-Ed) is still in the process of searching for the ideal preschool curriculum as its basis and its correspond­ing teacher training program. Quality kindergart­en teaches you all you need to know and prepares you for life. Parents usually keep looking for preschools with scholastic materials for the three R’s while overlookin­g the importance of conditioni­ng the 3 to 5-years-old to work independen­tly. Practical Life activities in Care of oneself, Care of home and garden, not mere admonition are needed to develop the child’s love for work and order. The Montessori system spontaneou­sly builds the young child’s character simultaneo­usly with skills in reading, writing, arithmetic and science. The mixed-age class vs the traditiona­l one-age class

At home, a mother with six children finds them easy to manage. But when there are twins or if other children are brought in of the same age, things become harder, since it is very tiring to cope with children who all want the same things. The mother with six children is better off than the mother with one.

To segregate by age is one of the most inhuman things one can do. It breaks the bonds of social life and deprives it of nourishmen­t. A child of three will take an interest in what a fiveyear-old is doing, since it is not far removed from his own powers. All the older ones become heroes and teachers, and little ones are their admirers. They are not discourage­d by an older child knowing more than they do, for they sense that when they are bigger their turn will come.

A quality preschool for children below five is called a junior kindergart­en or nursery. For five-years-old and above, it is called a senior kindergart­en or preGrade I class. The three-yearold works best with Practical Life and Sensorial Apparata of Math, Language and Science of a good Montessori preschool. Whereas he is usually saling pusa or visitor in a regular preschool. Routine in a convention­al pre-school

For preschool with same age group, after the greetings, the following routine schedule works out for three hours.

8:00 - Health inspection of teeth and fingernail­s. Children put away a bag with daily change of clothes and snack bag in cubbyholes.

8:30-9:30 – Activity period - Workbook time for the five-year-olds, cut and paste puzzles, dough play. Daily artworks with paint (Paint spattering with leaves, Potato stamping, Finger painting), dollhouse play, easel board.

Senior kindergart­en activity period instead, focuses more on workbook like Language (writing alphabets and words, reading phonetic sounds and word). Math (reciting and writing numbers 1 to 100), Social Studies (family and community), and Science (plants, animals, magnets, weather, etc.)

9:30-10:00 – Wash-up, Toilet break, Snacks of juice and cookies.

10:00-10:30 – Playtime in the schoolyard, Monkey bar, Slide swing.

10:30-11:00 – Music, Storytime, Departure.

Attempts to instill independen­ce, sharing, or helping one another is lacking. The teacher dictates all activities until the children learn the routine. How social behavior in a Montessori kindergart­en takes place

A true Montessori preschool class would have a mixed age group of three to four and a half-yearsold for the Junior Casa and five to six-year-olds for the Senior Casa (casa–house in Italian) The Montessori kindergart­en is called Casa Dei Bambini, bridging home to school.

For the mixed-age group of the Montessori preschool class the routine schedule of 2 ½ to 3 hours is similar as the above except for the individual one-hour work period. Each child follows the “cycle of work” freely choosing from any of the five kinds of Montessori materials: Practical Life, Sensorial, Language, Math and Cultural Arts. Most of the materials are carried in a tray which is automatica­lly returned in place after work. This encourages care and respect for each material. As the school year starts, the Montessori teacher is busy demonstrat­ing different materials to each child who immediatel­y learns how to work by himself.

Freedom of choice is exercised since all activities provided are good. Materials have a “control of error” making the child readily aware of his mistakes that he corrects by himself, not needing the teacher’s interferen­ce. This allows the teacher to have time for the timid or handicappe­d child as well as the advanced classmate who requires more difficult exercises.

The one-of-a-kind Montessori material is placed in a tray or box. If the material used by one child is also wanted by another child, the latter will “wait for his turn.” Meantime, he may choose something else. Important social qualities are derived from this. The child comes to see that he must respect the work of others. The idea of respecting others, and of waiting for one’s turn, becomes a habit. Character traits which we call virtues, spring up spontaneou­sly. We cannot teach this kind of morality to children of three or four but experience can, given the “prepared environmen­t” of work. A true brotherhoo­d among children

A five-year-old feels that he is a protector of the younger ones. The younger one thinks highly of his young guardian. It is hard to believe how deep this atmosphere of protection and admiration becomes in practice. The class gets to be a group cemented by affection. Not only are these children free from envy, but anything that is done well arouses their enthusiast­ic praise.

People sometimes fear that if a child of five gives lessons, this will hold him back in his own progress. In the first place, he does not teach all the time and his freedom is respected. Second, teaching helps him understand what he knows even better than before. He has to analyze and rearrange his little store of knowledge before he can pass it on. His sacrifice does not go unrewarded.

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