Programs
Upper Elementary
Classroom Schedule
TIME | ACTIVITY |
---|---|
7:30 | Early Care / Arrival |
8:30 | Morning Circle |
9:00 | Morning Work Time |
11:45 | Recess |
12:15 | Lunch |
12:45 | Afternoon Activities (Music, Art, French, Projects) |
2:45 | School Day Ends |
5:45 | Aftercare Ends |
Principles
We are concerned with development of independence, concentration and order.
- – Independence requires development of the healthy will
- – Developing a healthy will requires a student be allowed choices in education
- – Concentration develops naturally from interest
- – Order develops naturally from concentration
There are sensitive periods for the acquisition of understanding.
- We watch for the awakening of interest in an area, then introduce the student to work for developing that interest
The curriculum must be presented through a prepared environment.
- – Educational materials are brightly colored and naturally attractive to the children
- – We avoid directly teaching concepts, but using materials which clearly illustrate a concept, the child himself verbalizes the idea
The Theory in Practice
The upper elementary child is…
- … in transition toward abstract learning. (The student needs concrete materials to assist learning abstract ideas, but will more quickly move toward working without them.)
- … more concerned now with the interior, having largely attained control over the physical body.
- … in a sensitive period for the refinement of moral sense, particularly a sense of justice.
- … in a stage with Dr. Montessori called, “The Age of Rudeness.”
GVS Provides:
- – Concrete, physical means to learn all the important concepts
- – Gentle, non-judgmental moral guidance to assist the emergence of conscience.
- – Follow-up discussion on any difficult social interactions that may occur. This may happen individually, in small groups or in a whole class setting, as circumstances dictate.
Field Trips
We seek to involve the student in life outside the classroom walls as part of a well-rounded approach to preparing students for life. Some of the field trips we have enjoyed:
– An overnight hike in the White Mountains of New Hampshire – NH History Museum – Boston Museum of Science – The Freedom Trail – Currier Museum of Art – Christa McAuliffe Planetarium – Multi-day excursion to Montreal – Ferry Beach Ecology School – Boott Cotton Mill (after reading Lyddie by K. Paterson) – Moat Mt on a rock hunting expedition – Montshire Science Museum overnight – Mt. Washington Weather Observatory – Manchester Airport – Ragged Mountain Skiing – Capitol Center for the Arts – Squam Lake Natural Science Center |
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