• +91-96860-69883
  • info@adionamontessori.com
  • adionamontessori@gmail.com

Curriculum

Exercises of Practical Life

Practical Life Skills are essential abilities for children to learn, and are taught through concrete exercises that they are familiar with seeing adults perform in their daily routines, such as pouring water or threading beads. These exercises provide children with real-life experience and indirectly prepare them for other areas of learning by helping to develop order, concentration, coordination, and independence. By mastering these skills, children develop self-respect and self-esteem, as well as fine motor skills and self-control. Additionally, they learn social awareness and how to effectively cooperate and interact with others in the classroom.

Sensorial

The Sensorial materials and activities used in Montessori education are designed to develop and refine a child's senses, such as colour, form, texture, size, weight, sound, smell, and dimension, which helps them learn about and understand the world around them. Through sensory experiences, children can better grasp abstract concepts and develop the ability to isolate and distinguish quantities.

The Sensorial materials used in Montessori education enhance a child's ability to differentiate, make independent judgments, estimate, and perceive similarities and differences. These skills are crucial for laying a strong foundation for mathematics education.

Language

Our language curriculum is based on extensive research and offers a Language Development, Analysis, and Mapping program that is tailored to each child's developmental progress. The period from birth to six years old is considered vital for language development, which plays a vital role in a child's cognitive, social, and literacy development. Language skills help children communicate, understand feelings, think critically, and maintain relationships. Our language program lays a solid foundation for academic, social, emotional, and reading and writing skills as children progress through the House of Children.

Mathematics

The Montessori approach to Mathematics involves the use of tangible equipment, such as the Montessori Number Rods and Golden Beads, to teach children mathematical concepts in a concrete manner. By physically working with these apparatus, children are able to better understand mathematical ideas and principles. This approach helps to cultivate a love for mathematics, while also laying a strong foundation for their future academic success.

Culture

Cultural Studies serve as a fundamental basis for children to gain knowledge about the world, encompassing various subjects such as Science, Geography, Botany, History, and General Knowledge. Through classroom discussions and the use of cultural materials, children develop a better understanding of the world around them. Cultural studies offer children a broad exposure to different areas of science, starting with basic concepts like distinguishing living and non-living things, to more in-depth discussions of vertebrates and invertebrates. The children also explore fun facts about plants, spiders, insects, and their relationship to each other in nature. Additionally, they learn about the earth, its continents, countries, oceans, and the solar system.

Art

Art is one of the many ways children express themselves, and it allows them to communicate their feelings while also developing their fine motor skills. In the Montessori approach, open-ended art activities are provided to enable children to explore and use their creativity. Unlike adults who focus on creating a final product, children work on developing themselves through the process of creating art. The child's satisfaction and inner joy come from the creative process, rather than the finished product, which they may not feel the need to keep.