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Montessori from the Start

Montessori from the Start

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Authors: Paula Polk Lillard, Lynn Lillard Jessen
Publisher: Schocken Books
Category: Book

List Price: £9.99
Buy New: £4.03
You Save: £5.96 (60%)



New (17) Used (9) from £3.72

Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 50357

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 256
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5.2 x 0.9

ISBN: 0805211128
Dewey Decimal Number: 371.39
EAN: 9780805211122
ASIN: 0805211128

Publication Date: August 1, 2003
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW - ***Delivery usually * 4 - 5 * working days - From Aphrohead of SOUTHPORT, Lancs, uk *** . Priority Airmail used Worldwide on International orders. Thanks from all at Aphrohead.

Similar Items:

  • Teaching Montessori in the Home: Pre-school Years (Teaching Montessori in the Home)
  • Montessori: A Modern Approach
  • Dr. Montessori's Own Handbook: A Short Guide to Her Ideas and Materials
  • Montessori Today
  • Basic Montessori

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Practical ideas to respect the innate development of the child   November 10, 2006
 10 out of 11 found this review helpful

As an AMI trained Montessori teacher, I thought this book was fantastic! It covers the basic principles of Dr Montessori's work and gives excellent advice on helping your child develop to his or her full potential.

I had a friend with a 15 month old boy who had started banging his head on the floor and she could not work out what was wrong with him! I was reading this book at the time and I told her that the child of around this age is trying to challenge himself to use his new-found strength in his arm muscles as well as his new skill in standing steadily.

I asked her what was his favourite thing to do at the moment and she said he kept going over to their fireplace and trying to pick up a heavy, beautifully-carved, stone horse. She kept taking the horse from him and picking him up and moving him away from the fireplace because, quite rightly, she did not want him playing in a fireplace!

I suggested that he had merely found an excellent challenge for himself in the horse and that maybe he was not interested in the fireplace at all. She moved the horse to a different place in the room and her little boy did not go back to the fireplace but to the horse and when she left him to try and pick it up, without interfering, he did it and the happiness and sense of self achievement that shone out of him was wonderful!

It had been very difficult for her not to interrupt his efforts and pick up the horse for him, to 'help' him, but she had held herself back and her son had shown her the fundamental human spirit - that of self development and the innate drive towards challenge and progress and 'work' with a purpose (his work at that time was to develop his muscle strength and balance while carrying a heavy object, now that he could stand of his own accord).

This book focuses on allowing your child to be a valuable member of his family and environment through involving him in practical activities and letting him play or work or whatever we call it, without constant interruption - observing his efforts and respecting them and his natural development.

The parent needs to withdraw and provide only what help is necessary - tiny bits, rather than doing everything for the child - doing 'for' the child is not help - helping the child to do it 'for himself' is the way forward. Show your child then let him repeat it for himself, to make it his own. We cannot walk for the child or eat for the child - why do we try to do practically everything else for the child?

We must respect the child's task of becoming a human being adapted to his or her time, place, culture and country. The child is born with nothing and must create everything within himself. We must respect and help him to achieve this to the best of his abilities, observing to see what he is interested in at any one time and trying to provide useful help and activities for his development.



1 out of 5 stars Stiff writing style and rather sterile philosophy   February 3, 2005
 18 out of 21 found this review helpful

This book is poorly organized, woodenly written, and does not offer easy-to-use guidelines for daily practice of Montessori principles.
Having just started to investigate Montessori, I am put off by the strict and rather uptight quality of some of the ideas herein, e.g. "Have books for the child under six years old that are based on reality, rather than fantasy. The young child needs to explore the real world before he can appreciate a fantasy world created by adults...where rabbits talk and wear clothes and go to school...Never mix books with toys...We teach children from the beginning to handle books with care, turning the pages from the top."

They claim that, in the 1950's, ninety-two percent of babies were toilet trained by the age of 18 months -- a figure they do not back up with any data and which sounds suspiciously like wishful thinking to me. (Afterall, a "good" baby was a toilet-trained baby.)

Some of their ideas for toys and activities rang true to me, but many of the toys they recommend can only be purchased from speciality retailers for quite high prices ($50 and up for a single wooden toy). A few examples of toys you can make are given -- good, for the parent who has the time.

I might be missing something about the Montessori philosophy, but the way this book describes it, it sounds very regimented and as if quiet obedience and self-sufficiency are the primary qualities to be taught and valued in a child. If anyone can recommend a book that better explains Montessori, I welcome your suggestion.

Also: I caught one obvious error in the forward: the "popular song from the 60s" was called "Mr. Big Stuff (Who Do You Think You Are)" -- NOT "Mr. Mixed Up." An ironic mistake...?


2 out of 5 stars Very disappointing   December 31, 2004
 28 out of 31 found this review helpful

I worked as a Montessori teaching assistant many years ago and was already familiar with her ideas, so when my own daughter was born I was eager to put them into practice. I read a review of this book and bought it but although it has a few good suggestions, overall it was of very little use. Though the book is intended for use from birth to age 3, the focus is overwhelmingly on babyhood. If your child is already walking and you didn't use the Montessori child-bed, weaning chair, weaning table, etc, much of this book will be pointless. If you do not have the resources to buy the equipment suggested, this book will also not be of much use, because it rarely suggests inexpensive or homemade alternatives.

I also strongly object to some of the authors' suggestions in the chapter entitled "Personal Care". They recommend intensive toilet training beginning at 12-15 months, and weaning from breastfeeding at 9 months, arguing that this will foster the child's feelings of independence. Both of these suggestions are contrary to the latest advice given by childcare experts. Few children show any signs of being ready for toilet training at such a young age -- most are still learning to walk, or have recently learned to do so, and for the parent to begin intensive toilet training at this time interferes with the child's natural instincts to be on the move. Furthermore it is much easier and faster to toilet train when the child is actually ready to do so, which in the vast majority of cases is not before the age of two.

The authors' advice to wean from the breast at 9 months is contrary to that of the American Association of Pediatrics, which recommends that breastmilk be the primary source of nutrition for all of the first year. This advice can also be dangerous. On the advice of a (misguided) health professional, I limited my own child's breastfeeds when he was 9 months old to 3 times per day for a period of several weeks, which resulted in a rapid and frightening weight loss, and frequent night wakings due to hunger. The authors actually state that if your child is showing no signs of being ready for weaning, you should go ahead and wean him anyway, because you know best! This is completely contrary to the Montessori principles of respecting the child's natural intelligence.

Furthermore, I think there is too much emphasis in the book on the child learning to do things at an early age. They state that if you follow their principles, the child should be crawling by six months, walking by 10 or 11 months, talking by 14 months -- this seems to imply that Montessori education results in children who are superior simply because they can do things at an earlier age than other children.

There were only a few good suggestions for activities for toddlers, which do not merit buying the book. I am still looking for a better book which will enable me to put Montessori principles into practice in my home.


5 out of 5 stars Helping babies to calmness and inner strength   August 11, 2003
 43 out of 46 found this review helpful

This is the first Montessori book I read after hearing about it years ago. I expected to learn about the method, which I did, thanks to the book's clear writing and pragmatic choice of content. But quite unexpectedly, and more importantly so, it opens up a new horizon in my personal relation with children that is at once profound and practicable.

The Montessori method begins with acknowledging a child as a developing but incomplete individual. Being developing but incomplete, she needs help in facilitation rather than education in the conventional sense, which tends to be pre-packaged and indoctrinating. Being an individual, she is on a journey to adulthood that is her own, with an inner self to emerge and a will to grow. Her goal is a reflective person who knows her way and summons her will to walk in it. There is a properly spiritual dimension that appeals immediately to me. According to the authors who founded their own Montessori school over twenty years ago, "Montessori children" are known for their calmness and inner strength.

While the method normally applies to school-aged children, this book claims to be the first attempt to extend it to babies below three in the home context. I think the authors have succeeded in piecing together a coherent and convincing picture, from years of experience in the field, as well as their own families. (The second author is in fact daughter of the first who raised her in the Montessori manner.) The theory is well formulated and clearly presented, with detailed advice on practical matters such as helping babies to sleep, food, clothings, toilet, etc. that are derived from it. It therefore reads coherent and whole, unlike many other baby care books that tend to appear piecemeal and ad hoc.

This book is especially challenging to parents in modern societies, who tend to distract their children from their individual missions with many toys and activities. It may not be far-fetched to speculate that it has helped cause the increasing problem of attention deficiency among children today. Whether it is or not, the Montessori method for babies and up should be its direct prevention.