Every parent dreads when a child gets sick; even worse if said sick kiddo has to stay home on a weekday when work needs to get done! Both of my kids took turns staying home sick recently, and the difference between my non-Montessori older one and my Shadowridge Montessori School (SMS) little one was like day and night. My older one kept herself busy for the first hour or so
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Every parent dreads when a child gets sick; even worse if said sick kiddo has to stay home on a weekday when work needs to get done! Both of my kids took turns staying home sick recently, and the difference between my non-Montessori older one and my Shadowridge Montessori School (SMS) little one was like day and night. My older one kept herself busy for the first hour or so (reading, drawing, playing with Lego)… and then the disruptions in 30 min intervals began as my work day unraveled; between snacks, getting things unstuck, finding a toy item, being bored, needing more ideas on what to do next, etc. All things considered, still within the realm of normal for her age (7). As my older one returned to school, my SMS little one was stuck at home. I expected more disruptions/needs from my little one because she is little; however, the opposite happened! My little one shifted from one activity to the next on her own (puzzles, books, coloring, Lego, dolls, blocks, etc.). She got her own snacks from the same snack cabinet shelf she shares with my older one, tucked her leftover breakfast yogurt bowl into the fridge and pulled it out for a snack. At one point between conference calls, I hollered down the hall to hear what she was up to due to the prolonged silence, and she yelled back that she was tracing her hand on paper in the studio and then heading to the potty. She insisted on making her own sandwich for lunch (I helped pull the ingredients from the fridge per her request for each item), and I watched her very skillfully make a turkey cheese sandwich with mayo, and cut cucumber chips. Who is this little master of the home!? She asked to “observe” me during a call, and even sat through an entire (45 min) call, listening quietly and seemingly fascinated/engaged; and then asked to learn to type so we opened up a blank Word doc to tinker. We ended up having quite a peaceful 2-days together, and I had the opportunity to really see (and greatly appreciate) just how much my little one has learned and grown during her time at SMS! My little one has a fierce streak of independence that is channeled in positive ways in the work she does at SMS, and she is given the time and patience to learn, try, and master many life skills with the encouragement provided by her guides, Ms. Monica and Ms. Giselle. (She even washes her dishes at home after dinner without being prompted, which gives just the right amount of oomph to get our older one to partake as well! lol) We absolutely love the SMS learning environment and community; we only wish we were stationed in the area when my older one was of preschool age! SMS truly is a Montessori learning community from drop off to pick up, and the Montessori intent comes so naturally from the guides and school staff!
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Lynette L.