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Middle School (12 - 14
years)
The Middle School Program is designed to be
responsive to the developmental needs of the adolescent,
holistic in approach, and an experience that empowers as
it prepares. Adolescence is best characterized as a
period of physical and emotional transformation as the
adolescent struggles anew to discover the true nature of
self and society. At Stoneridge Children's Montessori
School, we recognize that the future may seem somewhat
uncertain to many of our 12 to 14 year-old students and
we are familiar with the challenges that they will face
as they seek secondary school placement and move from
childhood to adulthood. The Middle School Program is
designed to support the adolescent as he or she strives
to prove his or her identity and demystify the everyday
world of adult members of society through broad based,
liberal arts curriculum and activities that challenge
the adolescent's character, intellect and courage.
Timelines and charts are replaced with overviews of
subject areas and thematic learning within the context
of an integrated whole. The student accepts
responsibility for this learning and is encouraged to
use self-help strategies that foster independence - what
Maria Montessori described as the principle of "Help me
do it alone!" The academic scope and sequence of the
Middle School Program is ambitious. In Language Arts,
for example, the student develops confidence in
self-expression utilizing the seminar, oral
presentation, debates, drama, video, photography,
essays, play writing, poetry, and short stories and
explores related accounts of historical and scientific
material through literature, utilizing components of
style, genre, characterization, interpretation, and
discussion. In Mathematics, the student solves problems
in relation to a variety of challenges, from practical
money transactions to algebraic relationships; explores
in-depth numbers, properties, simple equations, higher
measurement, computer calculation and graphics,
geometric proofs, and algebraic equations. But, there is
much more.
In addition to physical sciences, life sciences,
cultural studies, Spanish, art, music, Earth education
and physical education, it is a curricular goal of the
Middle School Program to bring the moral and worldview
of the elementary lessons that preceded it to adolescent
consciousness. Great Lessons evolve into big ideas that
derive from a thorough study of the humanities. Lessons
in natural history and cultural studies combine with the
adolescent's own social experiences and lead him or her
to cross-curricular observations about civilizations and
society generally. As a result of the moral
relationships stressed in the Elementary Program, the
adolescent can make great cognitive leaps and experience
penetrating insights while integrating ideas and values
with current events, home life, or community activities
in a way that makes meaning in their lives and their
world. Service programs such as working in a soup
kitchen, farming as a community venture, and
apprenticeships or internships in the workplace enhance
the adolescent's ability to make causal connections and
demonstrate both the responsibilities and the benefits
of community life.
To this end, the Middle School class travels to a
farm school in Vermont twice annually. During the two visits, students learn about civilization through its origins in agriculture,
and become active participants in the care of crops and
farm animals, the repair of simple machines, the
construction of out buildings, sale at market,
bookkeeping, accounting, and so on. And, in this manner,
the Middle School Program honors Maria Montessori's
vision of "Erdkinder" and provides the adolescent with
knowledge of his or her capacities, assists the
adolescent in the development of self-confidence, and
enables the adolescent to meet the challenges of secondary
school and beyond.
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