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教育王國 討論區 幼教雜談 蒙特梭利數學有效嗎
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蒙特梭利數學有效嗎 [複製鏈接]

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4743
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發表於 14-1-25 11:22 |只看該作者 |倒序瀏覽 |打印
有無人學過分享下?



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141
2#
發表於 14-1-26 12:09 |只看該作者
本帖最後由 Aurorasea 於 14-1-26 12:15 編輯

My girl is attending a pure Montessori school from age 2.
Outside, there are many schools that call themselves 'Montessori" because they purchased the teaching materials, however that alone is not enough.
Montessori is more than just teaching materials, it is very complicated and taught in ways very different from tranditional schools.
It teaches self-care, independence, creativity, concentration, respect, team work and mutual respect in addition to maths / English. That is why I chose montessori over traditional schooling.

There are some features of Montessori school which are very different from common schools and sometimes parents may find this alarming:
1. There is usually no home work, because school thinks all work should be done at school.
2. There is no time table, because the child is presented with a choice of appropriate materials that train their skills. They are allowed to work on each material for as long as they want until they master the skills.
Learning follows the child's interest and vary according to individual, and teacher's there to build their interest and guide them, rather than conducting lectures.
3. The class contains mixed age group: age 3 - 6 are put together. There are no K1 - 3 classes. How that helps is young children learn from older children, and older children learn to teach / help younger children. In the school, the children are very kind and supportive, and it's uncommon to see bullies.
4. There are generally no awards - no grades, no stickers. no stamps, no presents or prizes. They believe that children should love to learn, and interested to learn and there is no need for awards - because awards for young children can distract a child's learning interest and teach the wrong values. Mistakes are corrected and rights are reinforced.
5. There are lots and lots of hands on materials to teach maths, language, science etc to make them understand, rather than just learning from paper. There is lots of focus on writing, phonics and reading.
6. They encourage lots of practical work and self-care.
Instead of playing with toy kitchen, playing with doll house, they are given real brooms, brushes, (safe) knives, real plates and cups, real basins and water taps that they can easily use. There are also real plants in the class for children to water them. 7. The classroom is very neat and well organised even with lots of children. They learn to put away the materials after they've finished with them and not take another child's away. 7. They encourage movement. Instead of making all children sit at desks and do exercise, children are free to move around to choose their materials / work and bring them to the table or floor mats (except meal and assembly times). They are also allowed to communicate with one another about their work (for teaching and learning purposes).

My gir's experience (age 2):
1. She loves school and teachers. The teachers are firm but kind, and very patient.
2. Other childres are nice and they are well behaved. They love going to school and enjoy choosing their work.
3. She learned how to mop the floor, set her table, clean up after eating, wipe places clean, fold away mats, cut up fruit (small ones like strawberry) with a blunt knife, and feed herself. Of course I also taught these at home, her skills are not yet perfect but she's willing to learn.
4. Tidy up toys after playing.
5. Able to focus on what she enjoys for quite some time.
6. She initially was scared of other children, now she likes other children.
7. She loves reading (although at this age she is mainly looking at pictures still)

8. She is an active type (not hyper) who is very curious and loves exploring, therefore I find montessori class suitable for her.

點評

bonmom  Your girl is so fortunate to e   發表於 14-9-11 09:32
HKUBB  Tks  發表於 14-2-1 16:06

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4743
3#
發表於 14-1-28 11:32 |只看該作者
回覆 Aurorasea 的帖子

Thanks for sharing, Aurorasea.

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825
4#
發表於 14-1-28 20:18 |只看該作者

引用:+本帖最後由+Aurorasea+於+14-1-26+12:15+

原帖由 Aurorasea 於 14-01-26 發表
本帖最後由 Aurorasea 於 14-1-26 12:15 編輯

My girl is attending a pure Montessori school from age ...
thanks for detailed sharing!! can u pm me which montessori sch for yr girl?thx^^



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1808
5#
發表於 14-1-30 00:46 |只看該作者

引用:有無人學過分享下? +

原帖由 little_kid 於 14-01-25 發表
有無人學過分享下?
我囝囝由歲半到現在四歲,一直有返Montessori playgroup。由最初認數字(1-10)及數量,到現在可以做個位加數,他半年前也開始上Eye Level Math, 我覺得Montessori教數學比較有用,Eye Level可以幫助他學Logical thinking(即蘋果、橙)及操數,始終Montessori要一個好老師去引導學生。故此師資很重要!



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141
6#
發表於 14-1-30 02:42 |只看該作者
本帖最後由 Aurorasea 於 14-1-30 02:45 編輯

I remember when I was young I always hated maths   and I found maths worksheets and exercises extremely boring and difficult to understand. I always needed to find actual objects to undersatnd additions, substractions, multiplications, divisions (Because they were not available, I just had to use mahjong counters, toys, my fingers, my toes etc. But I was repeatedly told that I was not allowed to use tools). Oh, and I HATED those days when I had to memorise the timetable without understanding it.

If back then I joined a montessori school I would have loved maths.
The classroom is packed full of maths materials - counters, beads, shapes, anyway all sorts of equipments that can teach large numbers, decimals, multiplication subtraction addition etc.These tools make something that's complicated and abstract much easier to understand, and interesting to small children who prefer hands-on activities than sitting down doing paper work.

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1808
7#
發表於 14-1-30 10:58 |只看該作者

回覆:咪臣 的帖子

而且若果是target本地小學,始終要面對操數問題。Montessori比較著重用教具教授學生,因為小朋友可以睇到及摸到如何學數量及認數字,手感對小朋友很重要。數概對小朋友是很抽象的意念。中國人要快、狠、準,所以齋背(如九因歌、珠心算),不求甚解,不過做答案很快。所以我阿囝做題目時,是用手指、點、或珠慢慢count。上小學做數可能太慢!



點評

bonmom  同意你的觀點,又要喜歡數學又要   發表於 14-9-11 09:34

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480
8#
發表於 14-1-31 12:25 |只看該作者

引用:Quote:原帖由+little_kid+於+14-01-25+發表

原帖由 咪臣 於 14-01-30 發表
我囝囝由歲半到現在四歲,一直有返Montessori playgroup。由最初認數字(1-10)及數量,到現在可以做個位加 ...
my son is now 18 months old n now attend a Montessori Playgroup 2 times a week ...every lessons he plays the Montessori toys n find him learn some skills from the lessons. I really want him to study in Mon school but  won't let him to study in international school...so just let him attend Mon Playgroup instead..ur Playgroup seems quite formal,  can u pm me which school ur child is studying?



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141
9#
發表於 14-2-3 12:39 |只看該作者
Found this on the internet:
Montessori Mathematics From American International Montessori
(I think individual schools can vary in their practice, so you have to ask and find out how the teaching is conducted in the school, and speak with parents with kids who graduated from there)

Montessori math alone is worth the price of a Montessori education. That may sound like an outrageous claim, until you consider how many children, how many adults are held back in life by an inability to solve mathematical every-day problems (e.g., evaluating whether they can afford a home), how many students avoid profitable, fulfilling careers in science, technology and engineering because of a fear of numbers.

Montessori math is the best possible foundation your child can get for being comfortable and competent in the world of numbers.

Here are four factors that make this Montessori math miracle possible:

An ingenious set of materials that progress gradually from the concrete to the abstract. In contrast to most other programs, which introduce math in a rather abstract way, Montessori math begins with concrete materials, and then slowly progresses toward abstraction. For example, Children’s House students learn about the decimal system with the Golden Bead material, which contains single beads for units, ten-bars of beads for tens, a square of a hundred beads for one hundred, and a cube of a thousand beads for one thousand. Initially, children add or subtract big numbers with these beads, but over time other materials – the Stamp Game, the Dot Game, the Small and Large Bead frame – enable children to progress to abstract, paper-and-pencil math. Other materials concretize fractions, algebraic formulas, and geometric concepts, such as the Pythagorean theorem.
An instructional sequence that recognizes and harnesses the interest by young elementary children in very large numbers and very small numbers. In most math programs, children start with small numbers and slowly work their way up to bigger numbers—up to 30 in Kindergarten, up to 100 in 1st grade, up to 1,000 in 2nd grade and so on. In contrast, in Montessori, we begin by introducing large numbers, all the way to 10,000 by age five or six, and all the way into the millions and beyond in the early elementary years. As Dr. Montessori observed, children are interested in big numbers, big problems—and with the unique materials, we can harness that interest into advanced, early math accomplishments.
Individualization and mastery as a fundamental to the approach, not an after-thought. In a traditional program, a certain time is allocated in the instructional calendar for all students in a class to learn a given math concept—how to add and subtract to 30, how to reduce fractions, how to set up and solve a basic word problem. The teacher usually teaches to the "average" student, with some enrichment for the advanced ones, and remedial help for those struggling. But even with these adjustments, the calendar and government-set standards dictate that a teacher must move on after a certain time—even if several students haven’t mastered a concept. In math, this is deadly: as children move on without understanding foundational concepts or automatizing key skills, they become less and less confident in math, and may ultimately fear the subject. In Montessori, we avoid this "swiss cheese" teaching that leaves holes in students’ math skills by making all of our instruction 100% individualized: we only introduce a student to more advanced math concepts after the earlier ones have truly been mastered. With our mixed-age classrooms, it doesn’t matter how long a child take, or how quick she may be: we will group her with other at the same level, and provide as much additional support as needed to ensure she reaches her full math potential.
An equal emphasis on conceptual understanding of mathematical ideas and hard math facts skills and knowledge. Often, parents face a touch choice: they can opt for a traditional school environment, with an emphasis on hard facts (e.g., learning the multiplication tables, and getting quick at basic arithmetic)—or they can opt for a progressive program, which emphasizes "mathematical thinking", but which, more often than not, shows a disdain for "mere memorization." In Montessori, we recognize the irrefutable fact that you cannot be good at math and comfortable with numbers without both together. That’s why our students have daily math facts practice—and time to thoroughly explore mathematical concepts with the Montessori materials. It’s why we motivate math fact learning—by showing students how they can improve their speed and efficiency with the materials having recall of facts ("7×6 = 42", instead of counting bead bars all the way up to 42.) It’s why we have a multitude of materials that make learning math facts fun, rather than relying on stickers or other extrinsic motivators.
Not surprisingly, Montessori children often are much advanced in their grasp of math. More importantly, however, they usually love it—something that will open doors for them not just in school, but also in life.

How this works in practice: multiplication in Montessori math
Content reproduced with permission from LePort Schools

Children first encounter multiplication in our Montessori primary program. They learn that it is a special form of addition—that is, putting the same quantity together multiple times. They use the Colored Bead Bars for this: these bars are made of different colored beads according to the numerical value of the bar. The 10-bead bars consist of 10 golden beads strung together; the 9-bead bars have 9 dark blue beads; the 8-bead bars are brown, and so on. To do a multiplication problem, let’s say 7 x 4, the student would take four of the white 7 bead bars, and count all the beads to get the result, 28. He would then convert the result into two golden ten bars, and a brown eight bar to symbolize 28.

Gradually, in late primary and into elementary, students are introduced to more advanced multiplication problems and strategies to solve them more quickly. They also move from very concrete presentations to more abstract ones, and finally graduate to solving long multiplication problems with pencil and paper alone. Throughout, our teachers have a wide variety of materials at their disposal—materials which build upon each other, and are integrated by a consistent, systematic use of colors (which helps as a memory aid).

Students learn about the decimal system (place value) with the Golden Bead materials—units of individual beads, bars of ten beads, squares of 100 beads and cubes of 1,000 beads. Our elementary students also get the unique experience of working with the Wooden Hierarchical Material, which demonstrates, in concrete terms, the proportionate difference in size between a single unit and a million!
They learn skip-counting with the Bead Chains that repeat the colors of the smaller bead bars: for example, a short 5-chain has five light blue 5 bead bars hooked together, and will make a square of 25 when folded together.
They use the multiplication board to understand and begin to memorize the times table. On this board, children set up and develop their own multiplication tables, which they often bind into little booklets and use to memorize their multiplication facts.
They are introduced to multiplying larger numbers using the Golden Beads—exchanging units of beads to tens for carrying, and tens to hundreds. (Of course, they have first learned to add, and are now simply adding the same quantity several times.) The photo above shows the quantity of 6,425 set up with the Golden Beads, a set-up that makes it very clear what large numbers the children are dealing with, as there are thousands of beads in this set-up.
They learn to multiply more abstractly with the Stamp Game, where units, tens, hundreds and thousands are represented by color-coded number squares, instead of beads. The photo show 2,321 x 3 set up with the Stamp Game.
They are introduced to long multiplication (where the multiplier has two or more digits) with Montessori’s unique Checkerboard material. Here the place value is indicated by the bead’s position on the board, and partial products are made visible. After setting the problem up with numerical tiles placed around the checker board, the child places the designated number of colored bead bars in the correct spots. For our example, he would take three light blue 5 bead bars, and place them in the unit square; three green 2 bead bars in the tens square, three yellow 4 bead bars in the hundreds square, and three lavender 6 bead bars in the thousands square.
This YouTube Video provides an excellent demonstration of using the checkerboard to solve a single-digit multiplication problem, a point of familiarity for students just being introduced to the Checkerboard: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqlD6P3ogJc

They work with the Small Bead Frame, and then the Large Bead Frame, the Montessori version of an abacus, where place value is indicated by bead position, and where students need to apply math facts to move the right number of units, tens, hundreds and so on.
Throughout, we introduce our students to increasingly more complex multiplication problems and ever larger numbers; we also guide them to apply math facts to work faster:

More complex problems. The multiplicand will grow to two digits, then three. The materials help to visualize what that means. For example, the differently colored squares in the rows of the checkerboard indicate the decimal places for the results.
Larger numbers. Our students are fascinated by and eagerly do problems into the millions and beyond. With the Large Bead Frame, students can do math into the millions—and the Checkerboard can generate results up into the billion range. Not only do these large quantities challenge our students’ skills, they are inherently motivating to youngsters who are enthusiastic about digging into big work.
Using memorized math facts. Instead of counting out multiple bead bars, then exchanging with the checkerboard, we guide our students to do the math facts in their heads. For instance, to solve 6 x 8, instead of putting eight six bead bars on the checkerboard, they arrive at 48 in their heads, and then place an 8-bead bar in the units, and a 4 bead bar in the tens. This shows students how knowing the facts makes them more efficient, and provides motivation to learn the facts. It’s also necessary to solve problems on the Bead Frames—an example of how mastery at one stage in the sequence opens the door to the next stage.
Writing the problem on graph paper. We teach them how to write down the problems on paper using the correct place values, and how to document partial products. This facilitates cross-checking and identifying the source of errors.

點評

bonmom  Thanks for sharing!  發表於 14-9-11 09:35

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47
10#
發表於 14-9-10 21:26 |只看該作者
thanks for sharing~

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1888
11#
發表於 14-9-11 09:59 |只看該作者
蒙特梭利女士本身是一位醫生,所以設計數學的教材真是非常有用,不過前題是教孩子的理念,要具體,循序漸進,依照孩子的發展去教,所以不是只買教具便行,還要指導者運用蒙特梭利教學法配合教具才可以。

相關link:
http://www.infomontessori.com/mathematics/introduction.htm

https://www.montessorird.com/product-category/mathematics-0
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