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| By ROSEMARY BENNETT, SOCIAL AFFAIRS CORRESPONDENT Published: 8 January 2007: The Times The Montessori teaching method, in which children learn at their own pace and testing is banned, has been adopted by a second state primary school in England. Teachers at the Stebbing Primary School, near Great Dunmow in Essex, which has 90 pupils, began to pilot Montessori teaching in September and say that it has already had a dramatic effect on the behaviour of pupils. Teachers removed brightly coloured wall displays and brought in natural wood furniture and equipment. The children now behave more calmly and can work effectively for three hours without a break. Janet Matthews, the head teacher, said that the school would evaluate the success of the move after a year before taking a final decision. "But what is overwhelmingly coming across is the calmness of the school," she said. "Children are working for sustained periods of time on the activities they are choosing, and the maths and literacy levels seem pretty good. The classroom was a typical reception classroom, very bright displays, brightly coloured doors and floors. Over the summer holidays we calmed everything down." The changes have been funded by £20,000 from the Montessori St Nicholas Charity. In Britain, Montessori teaching had a strong following until the 1970s when it was condemned as elitist. While increasingly popular in nursery schools, the current focus on raising standards and testing means that it is still largely rejected at primary and secondary level. That could change. Ministers set out plans last week for changes to state school teaching with greater emphasis on personalised learning and pupils designing their own education. Recent research from the US found that children at Montessori schools were better at basic word recognition and mathematics and were more likely to play co-operatively. By 12, they are more creative and better able to resolve social problems. Gorton Mount became the first state primary to adopt Montessori two years ago. The school, based in inner Manchester and with many disadvantaged pupils, was judged to be failing by Ofsted. The switch had dramatic results. Inspectors praised the calm atmosphere and high concentration. A Department for Education and Skills spokeswoman said: "The conditions attached to maintained schools apply to Montessori, such as providing the national curriculum and participating in national curriculum tests and assessment, as well as staff holding qualified teacher status." Look and learn o The Montessori method is based on observing young children to learn about their characteristics and needs o It puts children of various ages in the same classroom and features special educational materials, student-chosen work, a collaborative environment with mentors, no tests and instruction in social skills o Most British Montessori education is at nursery level; there are a few primaries o There is only one state-funded Montessori school in Britain, the 350-pupil Gorton Mount Primary in Manchester |






