Children playing with colored toys

Our early childhood environment is designed to optimize the child’s desire to work and learn.

During this period, children acquire life long habits and skills through their experiences in a prepared environment. Abilities for independence, responsibility, concentration and collaboration are significant indicators of future school and work success.

The toddler classroom is filled with materials and activities that aid in the development of language, movement and sensorial exploration.

Early Childhood Curriculum

Child playing with fabric

Practical Life

Practical life is based on family experiences and establishes a link to the prepared school environment. These activities help the child develop good work habits, coordination and self-control, and lengthen the attention span. The life long skills are grounded in the practical life work that establish a base for independence, respect and courtesy, and social relations. Activities in the practical life area center around physical skills, care of self, care of the environment, and grace and courtesy.

Children playing with sensory toys

Sensorial

  • Visual dimensions, form and color
  • Tactile discrimination
  • Auditory discrimination
  • Olfactory and gustatory exploration

The sensorial curriculum is unique to Montessori early childhood classrooms. It is designed to help develop the child’s ability to observe, and distinguish between similarities and differences between several sensory areas enabling the child to make more abstract observational distinctions for cognitive functions such as letter and number recognition, sound discrimination and other higher function skills.

Child playing with letters

Language

The Montessori language curriculum focuses on the young child’s developmental journey towards reading and writing with these important language foundations:

  • Oral language activities such as classification, rhyming and vocabulary development
  • Sound and letter recognition
  • Phonetic reading instruction
  • Written expression beginning with proper pincer grip and following through with handwriting
  • Exposure to a variety of reading materials as the child becomes an emergent reader
  • Exposure to a variety of reading materials as the child becomes an emergent reader
Child playing with math toys

Math

Mathematics is an abstract concept, made manageable by the use of the concrete materials of the math curriculum. Children in the early childhood classroom are exposed to increasing complex math concepts as they move through the math curriculum with the following sequence:

  • One-to-one correspondence
  • Linear counting - teen numeral through 1000
  • The decimal system - concepts of units, tens, hundreds and thousands
  • The four operations - addition, multiplication, subtraction, division
  • Memorization - internalization of simple math operations
  • Practical math - fractions, time, money and measurement
Child playing with paints

Cultural Studies

The cultural curriculum encompasses the study of history, physical geography, cultural geography and science. It is through these areas that children learn about the world in which they live.

The Montessori Cultural curriculum provides a foundation for understanding and celebrating the similarities and differences in people, places and the natural world. Themes and topics are designed to be cross-curricular so the children can immerse themselves in the concept being studied.

Peace Education

West End Montessori School employs an extensive peace education curriculum. Respecting ourself, each other, and the environment are the foundation of these lessons presented at a developmentally appropriate level for the young child’s understanding.

The Creative Arts

The arts are integrated into the class routines through movement activities, songs and a wide variety of art media.

Spanish and Music Together

WEMS also offers Spanish and Music Together® as an integral part of the early childhood environment.

Early Childhood Daily Schedule

The class of 2.5 to 6-year olds with its balance of individual and cooperative learning, allows children to follow their interests and progress at their own pace.

According to Montessori's concept of freedom with responsibility, the children are given as much autonomy as they are able to handle. Along with knowledge, they acquire good work habits, social skills and self-esteem, essential for a lifetime of creative living and learning.

8:30 - 8:45

Arrival and outdoor time

8:45 - 11:00

Morning work cycle (snack available throughout as well as individual and small group lessons with teachers)

11:00 - 11:20

Clean-up and group time

11:20 - 11:40

Outside time

11:40 - 12:10

Lunch

12:15 - 12:30

Morning dismissal

Early Childhood Extended Day Schedule

12:30 - 1:30

Children transition to Extended Day Classroom and put belongings in designated cubbies. Children get settled on their mats for rest/nap time.

1:30 - 2:15

Children who are not asleep, get up, put their mats away, and begin work time. Resting children continue to sleep.

2:15 - 2:30

Outdoor time

2:30 - 2:45

Children who are still asleep are woken up and put away their mats.

2:45 - 3:00

Group time

3:00 - 3:30

All the Early Childhood children come together to help serve and eat a community snack and clean up.

3:30 - 4:30

Outdoor time

4:30 - 5:15

PIndoor worktime and classroom clean-up

5:15 - 5:30

Preparation for dismissal

5:30

Dismissal

Early Childhood Afternoon Class Schedule

12:20 - 12:35

Outdoor time

12:40 - 12:50

Chapter book reading

12:50 - 2:15

Work time

2:15 - 2:30

Group lesson

2:30 - 2:45

Classroom jobs

2:45 - 3:00

Silent reading and dismissal

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