Child-centered education promotes independent thinking

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The teacher of a child-centered approach to education attends to each child’s own skill level and pace of learning. An elementary school teacher must consider this aspiration in conjunction with preparing the students to transition to middle school. If you are an elementary school teacher, how would you manage a mixed-age classroom, while ensuring the curriculum truly matches the learning needs of every child?


Teaching & learning: for children to be proactive

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“Going to school is so much fun, like going on holiday!” It is because of this declaration from his daughter that Lee Hsien-wei (Lee) decided to train as a Montessori teacher.  Lee is now a teacher at the Harvard Montessori Elementary School in Tainan. When Lee’s daughter first began kindergarten, she was often reluctant to go, but her resistance went away completely when she moved to a Montessori preschool a year later. Inspired by the change in his daughter, Lee accepted the invitation of Hsieh Fu-chue (then director of the Harvard Montessori Preschool) to co-found a Montessori elementary school.


Montessori elementary school teachers need to have many skills up their sleeve. “Thanks to the grant provided by Y2 Foundation, I was able to attend the 2017 AMI Montessori Elementary Teacher Training program in the US. When combined with my experience of working in the new elementary school project during its first two years, the training is extremely helpful to my teaching. I am truly convinced that if you give children freedom and respect, they will be proactive learners.”


As the AMI elementary training takes three summers to complete, Lee found that the training broadened his horizons even further each year. From the initial focus on teaching aids, the course gradually expanded to a deeper understanding of the Montessori philosophy.

 
“Teachers need to know how to make good use of the teaching aids and understand how these materials can help turn abstract concepts into something concrete,” Lee explained. “But more importantly, it’s about the balance between teaching and learning. Teachers need to give just enough information to stimulate students’ interest but not too much that they get bored. It’s about how to motivate the students to do more research and to dig deeper.”


During the history lesson, for instance, after Lee made a brief introduction to the history of Taiwan, some students became interested in and proactively began to study the names of roads in Tainan before turning their attention to the historical city walls and gates. The students discovered there were remains of old city walls within Tainan Park and about the relocation of the Lesser West Gate. “The children understood how hard our ancestors worked to build the city walls and the love and heritage that have been passed down from generation to generation. While they felt sad about tearing down the old city walls due to practical necessity, the children also had an opportunity to reflect on the trade-off between the preservation of history and culture versus economic development. This kind of appreciation and critical thinking can’t be learned from textbooks or lectures alone.”


Self-directed learning vs. rote memorization


In order to transition to the next level of education, Lee believes Montessori elementary school teachers have the responsibility to help children learn, at a minimum, all the skills conventional elementary schools deliver. To help ensure children can smoothly move from Montessori elementary to secondary school, Lee attended the AMI/NAMTA Orientation to Adolescent Studies program (for ages 12–18) in 2019.


For Lee, guiding children to think critically about What is the purpose of learning? What is meaning of life? is much more important than the mere transmission of knowledge. He has seen many children, whose smiles are stifled by exam pressures, even to the point that some say they no longer know what they’re living for. This is why Lee is more convinced than ever about the importance of Montessori education.


“Artificial intelligence is bound to replace many skills that we teach in traditional education. We have to go back to the basics and foster children’s self-driven interest and motivation for learning,” according to Lee. “More importantly, we have to enable children to appreciate all aspects of what they inherited from nature and all of the love and cultural heritage of our ancestors. This is so that children can begin to think about what it means to be human and the role they each can play. I believe this is the true purpose of education.”


This article is an excerpt from Y2 2019 Annual Report.