Montessori Kindergarten: Reports from the Field

Once upon a time, I worked at a Montessori kindergarten in southeast Melbourne for over 6 months. I finally found time to put my impressions down on paper. I had read many books by Maria Montessori herself, monographs about the method, as well as textbooks during my studies at Monash University. I’d also encountered Montessori as a parent. When my son was a year and a half old, some friends and I enrolled in a “parent and toddler” group in Moscow. Misha loved it, but “parent and toddler” is more of an entertainment reallyโ€”you can’t fully understand the system that way. A child needs complete immersion, ideally attending a Montessori kindergarten for half a day to a full day, at least three days a week.

So, my first impressions. To make this review more interesting, I decided to add sections: “How It Should Be” (that is, what a Montessori classroom should ideally be likeโ€”the principles, ideas, and my expectations) and “How It Actually Is” (what I saw in our Montessori kindergarten)! Out of respect for the children’s and their parents’ privacy, I’ll only publish photos of children at work if their faces aren’t visible.

SPACE

How It Should Be

Order is the fundamental principle of Maria Montessori’s approach. Therefore, the space should be clean, bright, and beautiful. Furniture and equipment should be child-friendly, chairs light enough for children to move, shelves accessible and convenient.

How It Actually Was

The Montessori kindergarten where I worked fully complied with Montessori “laws” and principles. It was a beautiful mansion, a real palace for children. Very bright, with natural sunlight rather than artificial light, thanks largely to enormous windows and glass doors. Wooden shelves, chairs, and tables created an atmosphere of naturalness. Add to this the magnificent pines and eucalyptus trees outside and a handcrafted playground covered with special wood chips.

EQUIPMENT

How It Should Be

A prepared environment filled with Montessori-created materials, arranged by zones: sensory, practical life, mathematics, language, geography and world, biology, art.

In such a prepared environment, children learn independently; the teacher’s role is to create the appropriate learning environment. When working with materials, the child returns them to their place on the shelf. Each child has their own workspaceโ€”a mat for floor work or a table.

How It Actually Was

All the materials were absolutely new, high-quality, and pleasant to study and work with. However, children didn’t always put them back in placeโ€”they often scattered materials and lost “parts.” We teachers had to intervene in the process and “give presentations.” It was very heartening that children threw napkins in the trash, cleaned up sand after themselves, swept the room, dusted, poured water into pitchers, and watered plants.

You could say that the environment was indeed incredibly effective for developing independence.
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THE CHILD

How It Should Be

Montessori believed children have an innate inclination toward learning, thanks to their absorbent minds.

Additionally, there are certain sensitive periods in a child’s life when they are most receptive to absorbing particular information or mastering certain skills.

Montessori education is child-centred, not curriculum-centred. In a Montessori classroom, each child develops at their own pace.

How It Actually Was

Although some special group lessons for everyone existed, children were generally free to choose what to do.

While three-year-old Evie poured water from one small pitcher to another, four-year-old Alex wrote in his notebook in capital letters “I love my mum,” and Harper worked on addition.

Most of the time, children were busy with activities, but I noticed that Montessori’s philosophy often needed Vygotsky’s added to it, with his zone of proximal development. Suggesting a child do something together (because it’s social and communicative), offering new materials or a new approach, or providing help.

What I Didn’t Like

I didn’t like that sometimes we had to raise our voices at the children. They wouldn’t listen. The impression from Montessori’s books is that directresses (as Maria called teachers) are role models for children and, consequently, speak quietly and calmly.

We often had to “bark” at the children to stop bad behaviour.

What I Really Liked

Personally, as a fan of Vygotsky and the sociocultural approach, I wasn’t thrilled that Montessori lessons are supposed to happen in complete silence. Children love to talk, and through communication with adults, they acquire language. Moreover, following Vygotsky, I believe that language and consciousness are closely connected.

Montessori undoubtedly develops self-regulation and self-control. Children learn to move carefully around the room, to listen for the bell as a signal that the teacher has a special message. They learn to take things and return them to their places. And neatness too. Of course, we can’t overlook that Maria Montessori developed amazing mathematics materials. These materialsโ€”the “red rods,” “spindles,” “geometric cabinet,” “golden material”โ€”make it possible to give preschool-age children fundamental knowledge of mathematics

Other articles about Montessori

https://storykate.com.au/tag/maria-montessori-philosophy

The Montessori Approach: my experience as a non-montessori teacher

The Montessori method, developed by Italian educator Maria Montessori, has stood the test of time. Despite criticism and shifts in educational fashion, Montessori schools and preschools now exist worldwide. In fact, in the US, noting โ€œMontessoriโ€ in a school history can be seen as a plus on a resume.

What drew me in were several key ideas at the heart of the Montessori approach:

1. Respect for the Child

Many education philosophies speak of โ€œrespecting the child,โ€ but Montessori truly puts this into practice. In this approach, both teachers and parents are observersโ€”active and attentive, but ultimately observing. Each child is a unique individual, and our role is to support their unfolding development.

Thatโ€™s why youโ€™ll often see parents on the floor alongside their toddlersโ€”thereโ€™s no teacherโ€™s desk, no authoritarian tone. The core message of Montessori is: โ€œHelp me do it myself.โ€

Have you noticed how toddlers try to grab a fork, sweep the floor, or brush their own hair? My son loved these kinds of tasks. He’d load the washing machine. He would carry around the vacuum cleaner pipe. He also tried to feed me with a spoon. He learned all these through observation and hands-on experience. I let him explore, even when it made grandparents nervous.

2. Independence

Montessori is built on the idea that children need independence to develop. Theyโ€™re not forced to follow someone elseโ€™s pace. They’re offered carefully prepared materials and invited to engage, but the choice is always theirs. Maria Montessori wrote: โ€œMy school prepares children for life, not for school.โ€

My sonโ€™s first word after โ€œgrandmaโ€ was โ€œMine!โ€ Independence, it seems, comes naturally.

So what gets in the way of this principle? Fear and convenience. Itโ€™s quicker to clean up ourselves than let a toddler handle breakables. But by doing so, we deny children real experiences that build responsibility.

Montessori environments are child-sized: lightweight chairs, small tables, tools they can use safely. Children set up their own work areas in places that feel right to them. In Montessori groups, children are expected to participateโ€”tying laces, pouring water, washing hands, sweeping, and even gardening.

Practical life skills are a core part of the Montessori day. And each child develops these skills at their own pace.

3. A Prepared Environment

In our group, around seventy children came through daily. Not once did a toddler swallow a bead or acornโ€”items we often ban at home. Why? Children who are trusted learn to treat materials with care. They take joy in placing a bead carefully on a tray. The adultโ€™s job is to demonstrateโ€”not scold.

Thereโ€™s no rote learning or pushing abstract knowledge like Shakespeare or algebra. Everything starts from the childโ€”their interest, readiness, and motivation to touch, explore, toss, sort, or tidy up.

I initially pictured Montessori as chaotic: wild kids running around, eating beads and hitting each other with toy screwdrivers. In reality, every room we visitedโ€”whether for infants or preschoolersโ€”was calm and orderly.

Surprisingly, creating this sense of order was easy. Children crave structure. They thrive on consistency. Maria Montessori identified three key kinds of order children seek:

  • Order in space: children want familiar surroundingsโ€”recognisable beds, regular places for toys, and routines that donโ€™t shift constantly.
  • Order in time: itโ€™s not rigid schedules they need, but a dependable sequence of daily eventsโ€”wake up, eat, play, clean, rest.
  • Order in expectations: they need clarity. If a parent frequently says โ€œjust kiddingโ€ or fails to follow through, children learn not to take them seriously.

A Montessori educator once shared this story:
After a class, a boy started kicking off his shoes. The mother, flustered, warned him: โ€œIf you donโ€™t stop right now, Iโ€™ll throw your shoes out the window!โ€
The teacher calmly asked, โ€œShall I open the window?โ€
The mother replied, โ€œOh no, I didnโ€™t mean itโ€ฆโ€

Children understand everything. Theyโ€™re watching us to learn what we truly valueโ€”not just what we say.


The Role of the Senses

Many early learning philosophies involve sensory play. Todayโ€™s toy stores and websites are full of ideasโ€”wooden blocks, first books, etc. But no one developed a more comprehensive set of sensory materials than Montessori.

When we first visited a Montessori classroom, I was amazed. There was a water table, a gym corner, math materials, and endless sensory trays. My child was in heavenโ€”touching, pressing, climbing, exploring. I was fascinated, too.

Montessori educators built these spaces based on what children enjoy most. The materials help develop every senseโ€”touch, sound, sight, even the concept of space. Before creating her method, Maria Montessori studied child development deeply. She identified โ€œsensitive periods.โ€ These are stages when children are especially open to learning certain skills.

For example, one-year-olds love to touch and throw; three-year-olds often start breaking words into syllables. While children can learn at any age, Montessori uses these windows of heightened sensitivity to support development.

Another key feature: mixed-age groups. Montessori classes are not split rigidly by age. Younger children learn from older ones. Older children reinforce their knowledge by helping the younger ones. This peer dynamic is central to Montessori and differs from the age-homogenous model used in many preschools.


Montessori in the 21st Century

What appealed to me most, as a parent, is how Montessori prepares children for the real world. Unlike rigid schools where I was once forced to eat food I hated (I still remember the cold beetroot soup), Montessori respects children’s preferences and encourages decision-making.

When a child spills something in a Montessori room, she grabs a broom and cleans up herself. Thatโ€™s not wishful thinkingโ€”itโ€™s everyday reality. Children in Montessori settings grow up confident, flexible, and able to work with others. Best of all, they donโ€™t miss out on childhood. Learning is playful and engaging.


Freedom and Discipline

Montessori defines freedom as the ability to choose whatโ€™s best for yourself and othersโ€”not doing whatever you want. Thereโ€™s a strong Kantian undertone here: freedom comes with responsibility. Thereโ€™s only one of each material in the classroom. Even if itโ€™s the most exciting activity, a child must wait their turn. This teaches patience, turn-taking, and community-mindedness [โœ”๏ธ Confirmed].

Conflict resolution is handled gently. There are no punishments. Instead, educators model empathyโ€”encouraging children to consider othersโ€™ feelings. Rules arenโ€™t barked; they’re demonstrated.


Want to Explore Montessori?

Before enrolling your child, it helps to read up. Iโ€™d recommend The Absorbent Mind by Maria Montessori and the guide Help Me Do It Myself. You might also explore books like How to Help Your Child Build Themselves. Make sure to verify the exact author if referencing publicly.

What is your experience with Montessori?