Curriculum
Lower Elementary
Lower Elementary
Reading
A well rounded, print-rich library and media resource center, classroom based libraries, and Montessori materials serve as the platform and supply base to serve all levels of readers. Mastery skills such as phonics, sight words, and decoding are blended with fluency, comprehension, and elements of literature to develop individual learning paths that are challenging, yet personally rewarding to the student. Group reading is also used to further enhance both the individual’s abilities while fostering team communications, awareness, and skills. Continued, personalized assessments are regularly administered to demonstrate growth and continue to refine the instructional structures provided to the student and help realize personal satisfaction in reading and literature. The Reading Program goal is to help all students develop personal strength and confidence in their abilities and skills through reading and literature, while doing so in an environment that is personal, appropriately challenging, and effective. |
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Reading is one of the key educational components at DCS Montessori. Mastery of reading and literature impacts not only every category of standard classroom instruction, but fosters personal growth and expands mental horizons in each student. The impact of such key skills and awareness for each student drives the Reading and Literacy Program to thoroughly and intelligently assess every learner for individual proficiency, capabilities, weaknesses, and strengths.
For example, students can add numbers when they are taught how to add, and after much practice, they feel confident when they add. From there they want to move on to higher levels of work after they master a skill. Writing is taught in this same logical step-by-step process. Students will progress as their mastery permits.
The Montessori method of teaching math to Lower Elementary students is revolutionary. The curriculum takes the children from manipulating the concrete materials, to doing math in the abstract form with pencil and paper. Each work is sequenced so that the child builds upon a concept learned in the previous work. The child is taught division using the stamp game, so the concept of HOW division works is established first—the child can SEE how they are dividing up one number by another number, by manipulating the concrete material. It is only after the concrete materials are introduced and learned that the child moves to the abstract, computing in their head or using pencil and paper only.
These experiences cultivate children’s curiosity with the universe by allowing them to explore areas such as botany, zoology, chemistry, physics, geology, astronomy, mineralogy, and meteorology. Individual classrooms are set up with interest centers that are filled with intriguing science materials such as artifacts, zoological specimens, grow-labs, microscopes, life-cycle models, and other hands-on Montessori materials. A view inside the classroom may include: self-directed experiments on solid, liquid, and gas; children watching seedlings develop into plants and recording data, students using 3-part-cards (science nomenclature) to classify plants and animals, children using models to study the planets, or children researching a topic of interest. These activities will then be extended to our outdoor classroom or on field-trips where the students can gain more knowledge about their discoveries.
Physical and political geography blend together as the teacher presents a lesson on the Fundamental Needs of People. It demonstrates that all people have the same fundamental needs and places an emphasis on the similarities among the human race. Children are taught to respect people from other races, countries, and religions. The geographical factors influence how people live as they adjust to their environment.