Family Matters
October 2008 Vol. 13 No. 3a
Dr. Steven Hughes gives a Neuropsychologist's Perspective on Montessori
Montessori education is a brain-based, developmental
method that allows children to make creative choices in
discovering people, places and knowledge of the world. It
is hands-on learning, self-expression, and collaborative
play in a beautifully crafted environment of respect,
peace, and joy. It is also about brain development. A skillful
Montessori teacher knows what stage a child is in their
brain development and they are meeting it, and they are
feeding it. The Montessori method is like education
designed by a pediatric developmental neuropsychologist.
Montessori education is the original and, I think the best
brain-based model of education. The body is rather interestingly
mapped along the surface of the brain. It is not
mapped on the brain in any way that matches the size of
the area. It is not a one-to-one mapping. If you were to
build a human based on what the brain thinks a human
looks like the most striking feature would be the unusually
large hands.
Why do young children, who are still developing the
ability to understand language, spend so much time sitting
and listening to teachers at a conventional school?
Wouldn't it be nice to design an educational model around
hands-on activity, physical manipulation, and engagement
in the world? Maria Montessori did just that.
There is a model of the way the brain is organized and
how it works which I refer to as the nuggets and networks
system. Areas of the brain do not function in isolation,
they communicate with other areas through networks of
active fibers. Brains need healthy nuggets and healthy networks
in order to function.
Nuggets can be defined as small, circumscribed areas of
the brain that perform a specialized function is reading.
Reading is a cognitive function that requires the coordinated
use of more than one nugget. Reading does not happen
in one spot in the brain; it's the coordination of multiple
spots that cover things like letter and word recognition,
phonological processing, and language comprehension.
Somehow, Maria Montessori knew about these
nuggets. The Montessori reading curriculum is astonishingly
dead-on in helping developing brains condense the
nuggets that perform these certain functions.
In the brain of a child with a learning disability, there is a
nugget that is not formed. That nugget is necessary for a
critical component of reading. If we can identify that a
child has a nugget that is not firing correctly, or not at
all, we can help that nugget form. One of the ways you
do that is through a series of very circumscribed, specific,
and repetitive tasks that are about training that little
undeveloped nugget. You can actually do some significant
remediation using that method.
Networks are the fibers underlying the surface of your
brain, or your cortex. When you are confronted with a
novel task, your brain needs help. Your brain then calls
on all quarters to solve the problem. A healthy and
well-developed network system helps bring all hands,
or all neurons, on deck. There is a lot of general processing
happening everywhere in a novel problemsolving
brain.
In a Montessori classroom, a child will learn how to
grip an object using the Bailey's two-point pencil grasp
through doing cylinder work; the little handles attached
to the cylinders require that sort of handling. When the
child then moves on to writing, they know how to hold
a pencil as a result of all the time they spent handling
the cylinders. This is an example of how the networks
in your brain function. The novel task of holding a pencil
is supported by previous activities.
There are some things we know of that can help
brains develop healthy and strong nuggets and networks.
Repetition helps build better brains. Repetition
is a big part of the Montessori environment.
Take, for example, the pink tower. The child's motor
system is developing so that he or she can hold the top
pieces of the tower high and still enough to place them
on top of each other. It feels good to develop this mastery.
We can also build better brains by providing our
children with settings in which they feel secure. A child
can sit in a quiet, beautiful spot in the classroom and
look at a book in peace. Or they can take care of plants.
They have the freedom to check to see if the plants
need watering and the knowledge of how to care for
another living thing.
Hands-on work can also enhance learning. There is
research that directly compares the effects of observational
vs. hands-on learning. You will not be surprised
to hear that hands-on matters. In a Montessori classroom, children learn that tasks have a beginning part, a
doing part, and a completion part. All of these practices
of life activities are supporting the development of networks
that will be utilized in practical daily tasks.
We know we can also build better brains through multisensory
activities or through sensory specific activities.
Maria Montessori observed that children are drawn to
balancing on railings or tightrope walking on lines. She
noticed that children are drawn to these sorts of things,
so she understood there must be a sort of developmental
need for them.
Maria Montessori wrote late in her career about characteristics
that emerged everywhere in the world in children
that come out of these Montessori environments.
They had a love of order, of work, of silence, and of
being alone. They had profound concentration abilities.
They demonstrated appropriate obedience not obsequiousness.
They showed independence and initiative,
and they had spontaneous self-discipline. They were
well-attached to reality, and they were joyful.
I think we are starting to realize, at national and international
organizational levels that we need to analyze
and harness the forces that control what happens in
schools, and we need to work to change society for the
benefit of children.
In fall 2006, Angeline Lillard published a study in
Science, one of the most prestigious journals in the
world which examined academic, social, and intellectual
outcomes of children who were educated in a
Montessori environment. She used a student sample
from Milwaukee, where there is fantastic public
Montessori involvement. Many people want to send
their children to Milwaukee's Craig Montessori School.
You have to enter a lottery to be accepted. Lillard was
able to compare the children who won the lottery and
went to the Montessori school with the children who
applied but did not win the lottery, and ended up at other
schools. This provided Lillard with a largely urban,
lower-income, diverse study sample. It also gave her
random assignment participants.
In her study, Lillard found that Montessori children
demonstrated significantly stronger social cognition
skills. They performed better in academics and were better
able to put themselves into the shoes of somebody
else in the understanding of what had gone on in a situation.
The general summary from Lillard's work is that in a
real-world, public, inner-city Montessori school with an
excellent implementation of the Montessori model, there
were differences favoring the Montessori kids in executive
functioning, decoding and early math, understanding
of the mind, and appeals to social justice and social
behavior by the end of kindergarten. Those advantages
were present early on, and remained at grade 6.
People do not doubt that the Montessori method works
for children of privilege. They are delighted to hear it
works in inner-city public school systems, because most
kids to conventional public school systems. There is no
reason that schools in our culture have to be the way
they are. It is about industrialization. It is about tradition.
It is about inertia. Nobody who is a developmental
psychologist, nobody who is a neuropsychologist would
design a school today that would look like a conventional
school does today. It is just habit.
At this point, in the history of the world, in the history
of our civilization, what happens next will depend on
how the earth and it inhabitants are regarded by those
who stand to inherit it. I believe that if our children and
grandchildren are to see the 22nd century, those who are
running things now need the 21st century to value a civilization
that holds peace and kindness, and justice and
respect for the needs and welfare of others as core values.
These values lay at the heart of Montessori education
and I believe these values will support the value of
our planet and our species.
Ed Note:
This special edition of Family Matters gives an outsiders
view of Montessori education. While not associated with
Montessori, Dr. Hughes is uniquely positioned to have an
opinion on it. If you are intrigued by his discription of a
Montessori classroom, we invite you to visit and see for
yourself.
Article reprinted from AMI-USA News. Dr. Steven Hughes,
PhD, , L.P., is a pediatric neuropsychologist and Assistant
Professor of Pediatrics and Neurology at the University of
Minnesota Medical School, and a diplomate of the
American Board of Pediatric Neuropsychology.
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