Openings for children 3 to 14 years old
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Montessori Habitat
This fall marks the beginning of our 25th year of providing outstanding Montessori education to the children of families in Champaign-Urbana, Savoy, and surrounding communities. We are deeply grateful to have shared in the lives of so many remarkable children and their families. It has been quite a fantastic 24 years – including the pandemic months of last spring and this year. To serve our students exceptionally well during this unique year, we created both in-person and remote learning opportunities which supported student achievement and growth through lessons designed for joyful discoveries and powerful connections. We look to our 25th year with excitement, and are delighted to serve children and their families for the next 25 years and beyond!
Children learn and achieve the most when they advance through subjects at their own pace, in ways that suit their learning style, without being limited by the progress of the group.
The beauty of Montessori education is that the curriculum provides for the addition of new learning opportunities to come into the classroom. What discoveries will the children make during their school-break adventures or in a simple evening at home? What discoveries will the teachers make as they try new things? It is very important for teachers to be eager and enthusiastic learners, too! All those discoveries and adventures bring inspiration in the classroom! There is always new materials to research, greater understandings to develop, so much to share and learn with one another!
“Imagine a school where children want to go, and want to be. Warm greetings welcome them into a comfortable home-like setting where their curiosity and learning is nurtured, supported, and guided. A school where you can clearly see that your child has fallen in love with the excitement of learning, where rigorous academics, a caring school climate, and a deep sense of community fully envelopes your child.”
Our Mission & Vision
Our mission at Montessori Habitat is to educate children from ages three to fourteen by providing kind, eager, highly capable, lifelong learners as teachers committed to meeting each student’s individual learning needs in beautiful, supportive classroom environments filled with high quality materials and curriculum which enhance the learning process and foster curiosity, self-direction, self-pacing, focus, and collaboration in order to nurture compassionate, confident, and capable leaders that value justice, education, and kindness.
Our vision at Montessori Habitat is to provide an educational foundation which propels our students to embrace and excel as empowered lifelong learners resulting in the enrichment of their local, national, and world communities through their contributions of positive leadership.
These locations are adjacent to one another, on the south side of Kirby Avenue, just east of the Prospect Avenue and Kirby Avenue intersection.
A Brief Overview About Our Campus and Classes
Gardens, trees, and open spaces on two beautiful acres welcome you at Montessori Habitat near the intersection of Kirby and Prospect Avenues in Champaign. Our large classroom windows are designed to provide perpetual opportunities to observe the calming – and thrilling – beauty of the natural world.
As we begin the school year with gardens full of flowers, butterflies delight as they flit from flower to flower, and hummingbirds enchant with their acrobatics. Caterpillars, dazzling in color and design, are collaboratively identified. Careful searches for chrysalises are spontaneously conducted, “finds” are honored, and often create thoughtful conversations about “Why there?” along with plans to monitor as the metamorphosis happens within.
During autumn, against a backdrop of bird songs, leaves change colors, then fall, creating squeals as children develop traditions and games to celebrate them. Squirrels, busy storing acorns, entertain as they rush up and down tree trunks, jumping from branch to branch to branch. Colder weather brings fading flowers, long journeys south as migration begins with assurances of springtime return, and patience before finally preparing the gardens for winter.
The first snowfall – every snowfall – is joyfully welcomed! Wildlife on our campus dwindles, but that which remains continues to inspire awe and wonder. Cardinals, Blue Jays, Mourning Doves, and Dark Eyed Juncos are just a few of the birds that brave the cold, joining the squirrels and bunnies, in creating gleeful classroom experiences from conversations to research to poetry.
Snow Drops are the harbingers of spring on our campus. When those little flowers are spotted, often with blossoms poking through the snow, excitement builds for the return of other plants and animals. Eyes so attuned to observation seek the first hues of spring as deciduous trees and bushes burst forward in bloom. Peonies amaze with their rapid growth and eventual huge flowers. Often their growth is measured day by day, by standing beside and seeing where the shoots reach on this day, or by using a ruler, striving for precision as a graph is created.
Our campus lends itself to many nature based discoveries, learning opportunities, practical life work, and delight.
Preschool Program (3 years through Kindergarten)
In Montessori, the preschool class is typically referred to as the primary class. Two unique features of all Montessori classrooms are the multi-aged classrooms and the use of the word “work” to describe what the children are doing. The plural “works” is used to refer to the various activities in the classroom.
In the primary classroom, children from the age of 3 through kindergarten form the learning community. Primary classrooms have two main areas – the practical life area and the rug area. Typically, the practical life area has some sort of solid flooring to support work with water along with tables and chairs for works which also benefit from an easy to dry or sweep floor. The rug area supports sensorial, math, language, and cultural works with most work done on the floor using a small rug as a child’s individually defined work space.
The practical life area of the classroom is very important and is the foundation for all Montessori learning. It’s through practical life work that children learn to make work choices and complete the work cycle. The development of concentration and independence are the two main goals of practical life work, although such work can also help develop fine motor control and impulse control.
Elementary Program (Grade1-6)
Our elementary classroom is comfortable and homey, filled with Montessori materials designed to help concretely explain abstract ideas and allow exploration. It’s a light-filled space with large windows to bring the beauty of the out-of-doors inside.
The real beauty of our classroom comes to life when it is filled with children! As is expected of all authentic Montessori classrooms, we have a fully integrated community of multi-aged learners who share their learning through collaborative work, mentoring, and peer exchange during uninterrupted, multi-hour work periods.
The classroom is arranged into three main academic areas – mathematics and geometry, language arts including reading, writing, grammar, word studies, mechanics, and penmanship, and cultural studies which encompasses astronomy, earth science, geography, botany, zoology, and history. Cultural studies also includes peace education, along with conflict resolution skills, science, and the arts.
Children learn with joy by exploring and researching a multitude of topics which spark their interests and passions. Teachers guide and support these interests, facilitate learning opportunities with individual or small group lessons, and organically aid individual students, small groups or the entire class. Much work is collaborative, born out of shared interests, and typically these spontaneous groups include children in a wide range of ages, working and learning together. Teachers differentiate instruction, based on each child’s needs, to support and encourage individual growth.
Our class is one where freedom meets responsibility and where learning in community means social responsibility. We teach, support, and foster concepts such as social justice, kindness, human rights, mindfulness, and resilience.
Student work is assessed through both qualitative and quantitative measures. Expectations and goals are individualized based on the needs of each child. Montessori schools do not grade student work in the traditional way as grades tend not to foster opportunities to learn through multiple attempts, nor do they embrace learning through mistakes. Grades are often limiting – an A+ doesn’t encourage additional refinement or inclusion of new ideas discovered through additional research. Our goal is to open a dialogue between teachers and students in order to cultivate student growth, student reflective assessment, mastery of skill sets, and the learning of perseverance.
Middle School Program (Grade 7 & 8)
The middle year classroom at Montessori Habitat promotes the growth of each student through vigorous academic pursuits and vibrant community activities. While that “formally” defines our middle year classroom, what it looks like each day is a space filled with happy, industrious, messy, striving, confused, inspired adolescents!
Throughout each school year, the students work through five themed cycles. This past year, the cycles were Forces, Structures, Power, Changes, and Balance. Using study guides (syllabi) for science, history, language arts, and personal growth, the students work together, along with their teacher Mrs. Smith, to schedule due dates for both individual and group work. Within this set of assignments, there is some choice and some strict requirements. Thus this balance of internal and external expectations mimics their future schooling and careers. Each student’s math curriculum is individually designed by Mrs. Smith, the student, and the student’s family utilizing multiple resources including University of Chicago textbooks, internet resources, and trade books.
To further illustrate the concept of themed cycles as an interrelated and integrated course of study, we’ll explore more deeply the first cycle of this past year, Forces, and how the theme of “forces” relates to different areas of the curriculum:
In history coursework, the students studied the American Revolution concentrating their attention on the forces that drove the patriots to write the Declaration of Independence and begin the American Revolution. They also explored the causes, leaders, and effects of revolutions in general. This year, the students chose the French Revolution (1789) and the Russian Revolution (1917) to highlight their studies.
In literature, they chose between two novels – Red Scarf Girl by Ji-li Jiang or April Morning by Howard Fast. The students read and wrote about poems, stories, and other readings which examined the forces of power, stereotypes, metaphors, and missing voices in the literature.
In their science studies, the students learned about Newton’s Laws of Motion and the forces of electromagnetism. Through readings and experiments, they came to understand and apply these principles.
In health studies, the focus during the Forces cycle was on stress and coping strategies. This included writing and reflecting on ways that some people and things support us and others deplete us.
At the end of each cycle, the students take an extensive exam in which essay questions predominate, but also includes other types of test questions such as multiple choice. These exhaustive exams help the students recognize their strengths and weaknesses for a particular cycle. Their own reflection, in addition to Mrs. Smith’s feedback, helps them move into the next cycle with a plan in place to shore up any weak spots in their learning strategies and skills and to continue to exploit their learning strengths. The goal is for students to continuously learn about themselves, and through that ever evolving self-knowledge, to deepen their understanding of what they need to grow as learners.
Homework is purposeful and designed to prepare the students to participate in collaborative classroom work the following day. Collaborative classroom work includes discussion groups as well as large and small group project work. As part of the daily homework, the students can expect to continue their math work from earlier in the day. The students have individualized math goals and will be working to achieve their goals based on their completion timeline which was agreed upon by Mrs. Smith, the student, and the parents at the student’s goal setting meeting. Math is a subject that responds well to a steady rate of progress and working at one’s own level in math provides for each student to be working on the edge of their knowledge, growing in their math skills and understanding, each and every day. Other homework includes reading literature (either novels or selections from an anthology) as preparation for group discussions or writing projects.
Hear it from our parents!
“Having an older child who was educated in a non-Montessori setting, we can appreciate the Montessori method that meets the child where his or her curiosity lives. It promotes a love of learning that is based on mutual respect and a hands-on, tactile approach to a wide variety of subjects. We were very impressed with how Montessori Habitat managed to pivot to online learning during the pandemic. Despite all the stress and uncertainty since March 2020, we knew we could count on them to help us keep our child on track.”
Sergio & Susan B.
Parents
“My son loves the school, the teachers and the amount of information he has learned willingly is extremely impressive. He refuses to go to any other school. This is a great school for our son, especially speaking from a parent who transfered new into a area. Great school, amazing team.”
Rose G.
Parent
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