FAQ’s

We hope you find these helpful and don’t forget to check out our Interactive Map and the descriptions of our Programs and Admissions Process

For a pdf version of our Parent Information Sheet, click here.

Morningside has compiled a list of Tour Info FAQ and you can view below:

Why is it necessary to put your child in nursery school?

It isn’t. Although most children are ready at age three for some sort of program with other children, not every child is.

The point is to know your child and what works for your child and for you and your family. One of the main reasons that parents do put their children in nursery school, however, is simply for the social experience. It’s a very easy and regular way to get them together with other children.

Why do you recommend sending a child to a Montessori nursery school rather than a non-Montessori nursery school?

We don’t necessarily.

We recommend sending a child to a school that has a lot of great material of various kinds, that has teachers who love and understand kids, and that encourages both socialization and the ability to get satisfaction out of the work that they do. That might or might not be a Montessori school.

What do you want children to get out of school?

We want them to find friends that they love and we also want them to find activities and work that they love and take satisfaction in.

So, what is Montessori anyway?

Some of the aspects of Montessori education are:

  • Structure the environment, not the child.
  • Teachers are observer first, then teachers.
  • Early learning is sensorial, a literal hands-on experience.
  • All Montessori classrooms have five work areas: sensorial, practical life, language, math and cultural. The sensorial area is a preparatory area for math concepts, such as comparing and ordering. It is called the sensorial area because each ‘sense’ is isolated with a particular material. The practical life area is overall fine motor development and includes self care skills, such as learning to blow your nose. The language area is where verbal concepts along with letters and words are learned.  Becoming literate is but one aspect of this learning. The math area is where kids learn one to one correspondence or numerical order. The cultural area includes topics such as science and geography. This is where kids begin to see themselves as part of the world.

 

Click here for further explanation on The Montessori Method.

What is the difference between a Montessori & a non-Montessori nursery school?

Montessori schools vary in a few distinct ways from traditional play-based schools. Montessori schools have multi-age classrooms.  Children are typically with their teachers for two or three years.  This gives both the teaches and the students develop long term relationships embedded in trust.  Following the Montessori premise of an inherent trust in children, children are free to pursue their own interests for long, uninterrupted work blocks.

Some of the concrete differences that one can “see” immediately in Montessori classrooms are materials that appear to be specifically “learning” materials, e.g. science concepts, math, reading or pre-reading materials.

However, schools can vary widely within the categories of “Montessori” & “non-Montessori.” We are a modified Montessori as well.  So you might well find our school in between those categories and are similar to play-based and Montessori programs.

What is the difference between this Montessori school & West Side or Metropolitan?

One of the basic tenets of a Montessori education is to structure the environment, not the child. We blend structuring the environment, with scaffolding the child. In specific, we often extend a Montessori lesson with a more typical early childhood material.

Morningside did not make a decision to become deliberately different from West Side & Metropolitan. We just did what we were happy and comfortable with and so evolved into the kind of school we are now.