Curriculum Quick Links
Language Arts
Our Language Arts curriculum is organized into the categories of receptive language (first listening, then reading) and expressive language (first speaking, then writing), with materials and activities designed for each.
Our Language Arts curriculum include the following topics and more:
- Listening and "ear training" activities
- Precise modeling of proper spoken language
- Visual discrimination activities
- Phonemic awareness
- Encoding and decoding words and sentences
- Recognizing Dolch sight words
- Library of leveled phonetic books
- Comprehension skills, including main idea, making predictions, and critical thinking
- Handwriting skills
- Vocabulary development
- Grammar
For more detailed
information on our Language Arts curriculum, please continue
reading below!
Receptive Language:
Before one learns to
read, one must learn to listen. Listening activities, like
rhyming, syllable counting, listening to books read aloud, and
"I Spy" games, are incorporated into circle
time. Our students enjoy these fun "ear training"
activities, without being aware that they are having a
lesson.
The eyes of a small
child must be prepared for reading through visual
discrimination activities. Along with the Sensorial curriculum, puzzles, matching, sequencing, and sorting
activities train the eyes to distinguish the subtle difference
between letters, say between "m" and "n".
Our students learn the
relationship between a sound and its symbol using various
Montessori materials, such as the Sandpaper Letters, the Sand
Tray, the Phonogram Object Boxes, and Letter-to-Object
Matching. Through these activities, our students
discover that blending sounds together make
words. The child's phonemic skills are further
developed using the classroom materials such as the Movable
Alphabet, the Word Card Drawers, and Word Families activities.
Our students continue
the journey toward reading with fluency and accuracy by
learning digraphs (2-letter blends), reading leveled books
(such as Bob Books) to a teacher or mentor, and learning sight
words.
The child develops
comprehension skills through activities like the Sentence and
Object Cards ("Put the bat next to the racket."), and the Verb
Command Cards ("Crawl to the rug."). Our teachers
foster a life-long love of reading by encouraging each child
to read books from the classroom library that are of interest
to him/her, whether they are about trucks, horses, planets, or
butterflies.
Expressive Language:
The second part of our
Language Arts curriculum is expressive: first speaking, then
writing. Our teachers model the precise usage of
the English language throughout each day and encourage our
students to speak in complete sentences. Public
speaking is developed during circle time as our students
present Show and Tell items, and inform the class of the day's
weather.
Many of the Practical Life and Sensorial activities
completed by the young preschooler were designed to foster the
motor coordination and digital dexterity needed to hold a
pencil. Other prewriting activities, like tracing,
hole punching, and cutting further strengthen the hand for the
skill of handwriting.
Materials such as the
Sand Tray and the Metal Insets help our students learn the
flow of shapes that lead to drawing letters. Later,
actual letters are written on paper, then in a confined box,
and finally on lined paper.