Then he looked up
to heaven and groaned, and said to him,"Ephphatha!"--
that is, "Be opened!" -- And immediately the man's ears were opened,
his speech impediment was removed, and he spoke plainly.
Mark 7:34 - 35
For a Catholic in the pre-Vatican II
church, miracles were part of the stuff of life, as were novenas, mysteries of
the rosary, stations of the cross, miraculous medals, holy cards, scapulas,
daily Mass, fasting. As a pious young boy I prayed for miracles from Marcellin
Champagnat, Peter Chanel, Bernadette Soubirous, Gemma Galgani, Maria Goretti,
Martin de Porres, Therese Martin, Francis Xavier, Ignatius Loyola, Francis Bernadone.
With sufficient faith and devotion a miracle could be wrought and attributed to
the intercession of Our Lady or one of saints.
The miracles of the New Testament are
divided into the miracles that witness to Jesus (e.g., the Incarnation);
healing miracles, nature miracles, exorcisms and resurrections. The miracle
stories have a purpose in scripture, most often they are a response in faith –
itself the transformative moment for the audience, the person seeking healing.
There is an enormous amount of scholarship that investigates the historicity of
the miracle stories, but I suspect that much energy is wasted in seeking
objective proof as to whether or not they happened. Of more significant
interest is the subjective proof. What happened to the audience? What happened
to the person healed? What does the story say to you and me?
You and I know that gazing into the face
of your newborn child is nothing short of a miracle, walking into the sunset
with your loved one hand in hand, entering St Peter’s Basilica for the first
time. The miracle happens to you. There is a gentle but beautiful moment when we
recognize the preciousness of life, the fragility of who we are, the brilliance
of the world in which we live.
The scriptures use a rich variety of words
that we translate as ‘miracle’, but which are somewhat nuanced. For example
signs, wonders, great deeds, works (of God), amazement – and this makes sense
of the small and great miracles that surround us. Seeing these everyday miracles
is a perceptive, subjective experience. On the other hand the church has an
elaborate bureaucracy and procedures for establishing whether a miracle has
taken place – and whether or not it is attributable to the intercession of a
saint.
In healing the deaf man with a speech impediment,
Jesus orders those who witnessed the miracle to tell no one. But quite
contrarily, The more he ordered them not
to, the more they proclaimed it (Mark 7:36). Because miracles transform
those who have faith, as in the church today, they must be acclaimed. If we
cannot see them, then Jesus’ message to us is: "Ephphatha!"-- "Be opened!"
Peter Douglas
Montessori schools are exceptionally successful. So why aren’t there
more of them?
Paschal Emmanuel
Gobry
The otherworldly quiet. This is how you
recognize a true Montessori preschool. For over a century now, it is usually
the thing that strikes people first, and anybody who knows what children ages 3
to 6 are usually like can see why. In a school where the Montessori Method is
faithfully applied, the decibel levels will typically be eerily, monkishly low.
The second thing that strikes a visitor is
the orderliness. Children go about their tasks in quiet. They clean up after
themselves. When they talk, it is politely and at a whisper—even when there is
conflict, which is quickly and calmly resolved. Then there is the focus. The
children apply themselves to activities with the sort of concentration most
adults find hard to muster. It can be a transformative experience. It should
be.
For as long as I can remember, I have been
obsessed with education. I have read about it widely and deeply, thought
about it, investigated it, practiced it in many settings. My research and
experience have convinced me that what is improperly called the Montessori Method(more on “improperly” below) is not only
superior to all alternatives but categorically so—not in the way that Mozart
can be said to be superior to Salieri but in the way that vaccines can be said
to be superior to homeopathy. I realize that this is a bold claim, but I
hope not only to defend it but also to show why it is crucial to frame the
claim in this way.
We all care and fret about education. We realize
how important the issue is—indeed, we often gravely intone, it is perhaps the
most important there is. So there is something deeply wrong about the fact that
Montessori is still a niche movement in education over a century after its
birth. This is a catastrophe for the obvious reasons—all the human potential
wasted by subpar education when better alternatives have been available—but
also because our collective blindness reveals something deeply rotten at the
heart of our collective culture.
What’s more, this should be doubly shameful
for us Catholics. Dr. Maria Montessori, the inventor of the Method, was a
devout Catholic, but it is not just that. The Method is Catholicism as applied
to education, in the way that you might say that the spirit of St. Francis is
Catholicism as applied to the Beatitudes. It would have been a disaster if St.
Francis had been condemned by the church as a heretic. But in a way, it would
have been even worse if he said everything he did—and nobody cared. That, I
want to argue, is what is going on.
What is it about Montessori? In my
experience, even most experts miss the crucial thing. Montessori schools
feature mixed-age classrooms that look the same everywhere in the world because
everything in the environment has been thought out for very specific reasons.
Students can choose whatever activities they like from a prescribed list of
options—the famous “materials” developed by Dr. Montessori—and can work on them
for however long they want. Those materials enable students to learn by using
their hands rather than from direct instruction, a process that education
theorists describe as the “constructivist theory of education.”
People often focus on the materials because
they are what is most obviously distinctive about the Method, and it is true
that they are clever in countless ways. Each activity is intended to be
self-correcting and hands-on. They are (very) cleverly designed so that the
child will discover step by step what she is supposed to learn. Each activity
is a building block to the next. So when children learn to trace shapes inside
metal insets that have various geometric shapes, they unwittingly practice the
fine-motor skills that will enable them to pick up writing, which they
typically do much faster than the average child. Equally well-conceived are the
mathematics activities, which work with concrete materials like beads and
demonstrate that anyone is able to become comfortable with math.
Then there is Dr. Montessori’s theory of the
child. She pointed out that all infants learn how to walk and learn a language,
but because it happens to all of us, we forget how incredibly difficult it is
to do. Children expend tremendous effort to do it, with amazing stubbornness,
trying over and over until they get it right, eagerly, and they do so of their
own accord. This natural drive to learn goes on—unless it is snuffed out. Once
a child is taught that she must learn only because of the threat of punishment
or, as is more popular these days, the prospect of reward and encouragement,
her most powerful engine of motivation is essentially wiped out, as if a new
program overwrote another in a computer.
Once a child is ready to walk, she will
expend tremendous effort to do so, but only when it is the right time in her
development. So it is with other skills. Trying to teach, say, writing, on a
rigid schedule will only convince a child that she is unable to do so, sapping
not only that endeavour but her self-confidence and willingness to learn more
generally. We can all attest from our personal experience that we easily become
frustrated and despondent whenever we have to do things that are either far too
easy or far too hard; but when our work is right at the edge of our comfort
zone, challenging but doable, not only are we better at tasks, but we often
find them positively thrilling.
This natural drive is largely hard-wired
within us; and because of the freedom in a Montessori classroom, children will
naturally pursue those activities that are right at that pleasurable edge of
the comfort zone, where we have the most focus and energy. It is not just that
they will learn, say, math much faster. The system is designed so that
learning, effort and initiative are all associated with pleasure and success
during the most formative years of life.
Montessori is often thought of as
“progressive”—no grades, all that stuff about freedom—but other aspects of the
method can seem rigid. There are rules; they are just very different from the
rules in a typical classroom. The children have to clean up after themselves,
whether by putting away activity tools once they are done with them, wiping up
spilled juice or sweeping the classroom at the end of the day. But unlike a
typical American preschool, the rules do not coerce “sharing,” since they are
not an attempt to manage children according to the desires of adults. If Alice
will not share with Bob, Bob will just have to learn to wait. Everybody loves
the idea of children “learning through play,” and Montessori is sometimes
described as encouraging this, but serious Montessorians react to such a
formulation with horror.
The activities, it is emphasized, are work. Children
have play time, of course, but classroom work is work. “Learning through play”
is seen as an admission of defeat, an implicit statement that learning is
intrinsically unpleasant and can only be made pleasant artificially. The Method
is designed for the opposite goal, to teach that work is intrinsically
rewarding; therefore it must protect children from external influences that
might replace internal motivation for work. Hard core Montessori parents will
even—heresy of heresies!—refrain from praising their children for a job well
done, since the idea of doing well to make Mom and Dad happy is already toxic.
(So they say, “Wow! You must be so glad you drew that beautiful unicorn!”
rather than “Wow! I’m so happy you drew that beautiful unicorn!”)
As if to make well-to-do private school
tuition payers run screaming from the room, and teachers’ union reps clutch
their pearls, Dr. Montessori wrote that the bigger the class size the better,
since it meant more opportunities for students to figure things out on their
own. She also wrote that uneducated people made better teachers than the
educated ones, since they were less likely to try to deviate from the Method;
and that the worst teachers of all were those with education degrees and
previous teaching experience in the traditional system. The Method is sometimes
criticized as too inflexible, and it can inspire comparisons to Steve Jobs, with his imperious obsession with aesthetics, minute
detail and controlled environments. Most of a Montessori teacher’s job is
presenting activities to children, and this is choreographed down to
practically every word and every gesture.
If every activity in the Method must be
presented in exactly that way, if every material must have exactly those
dimensions, be exactly that shade of that colour, it is because Dr. Montessori
proved through countless experiments, over decades, on children from every
background and on every continent, that those specific attributes produced the
same results.
The idea that less-educated teachers are
better because they take less initiative shocks us because we instinctively
feel that teaching is, or ought to be, a creative activity in which teachers
must deploy their spontaneity and innovative skills. But think about what that
means. If you hear that a medical researcher working on an intractable disease
has unleashed his creativity and thought outside the box, you will applaud. If
you hear that your airplane’s safety officer has decided to throw the rulebook
out the window and express her inner creativity, you will demand to get off the
flight. Human civilization advances not when a genius produces new knowledge
but when novel insight gets translated into processes that enable non-geniuses
to disseminate the product of that knowledge throughout society. It is not
glamorous, but it is what actually changes the world. We know we have made
progress not when a genius is able to do something new but when non-geniuses
are able to repeat it.
Maybe the above intrigues, pleases, shocks
the reader. Maybe all at the same time. Maybe we are willing to be sold on the
idea that the Method is interesting and has valuable things to bring to the
table. But that is not the claim I make. My claim is that Montessori is vastly
and unquestionably superior to the alternatives. According to a plethora of
studies, including randomized controlled trials, which have the highest
evidentiary power in social science, Montessori children do better at reading and math but also outperform other
children on a whole host of other indicators, including social skills,
self-regulation, creativity and their sense of “justice and fairness.” The
effect is more pronounced with minority and lower-income children. As far as I
know, no method has been shown in a study to outright erase the income
achievement gap—except Montessori. And the latest developments in neuroscience
are just now catching up to Dr. Montessori’s theory of the child developed a
century ago and confirming it.
Studies are not perfect. We all know that. Science
evolves and one paradigm replaces another.
But I have not yet gotten to the core of my
argument.
People typically introduce the Method by
talking about the materials or about the philosophy behind it. Sometimes they
talk about the life of Dr. Maria Montessori. And it is easy to see why, because
it is such an inspiring story. She was the first woman doctor in Italy; she was
a polymath who studied everything from mathematics to anthropology to
philosophy at advanced levels; she designed her first materials for mentally
disabled children, a starting point whose symbolism a Christian can only see as
providential. But in a sense, this approach is misleading. You cannot hope to
understand the philosophy of, say, Descartes without understanding at least a bit
of his biography, but you do not need to know anything at all about Isaac
Newton’s life to test the validity of his theories. The most important thing
about Maria Montessori is that she never used the term “Montessori Method.” She
always referred to her “method” as “scientific education” or “scientific
pedagogy.”
Why is this important? Every pedagogical
method, whether “alternative” or “mainstream,” “progressive” or “traditional,”
starts with an abstract theory (sometimes only implicit) of what a child is,
how her mind works, how she learns. And it is starting from that theory that it
deduces a practical method. Dr. Montessori, who was a scientist by training and
never claimed to be anything more, worked the other way around. She started
tinkering with materials, first in a hospital setting with patients and then in
her first school, whose original iteration had a rigid class schedule and
almost none of the distinctive attributes of today’s Montessori schools, like
child-size furniture and free access to activities. Those aspects were
introduced over time and tested, and they worked.
The same was true with the activities. From
her findings, Dr. Montessori developed theories, of course, but then put the
implications from her theories to practical tests. That is, in a word, the
scientific method. The Montessori Method is the only pedagogical method that
was completely developed and refined through the scientific method. And here
lies the qualitative difference.
The sum total of what humans could learn
about pedagogy did not end when Maria Montessori died. But unfortunately, her
spirit of rigorous experiment was for the most part not carried on. To take
just one example, in my experience most Montessori advocates are opposed to
children using digital devices. But given the real Maria Montessori’s
enthusiasm for, well, almost anything, there can be no doubt that had she been
alive for the computer revolution, she would have started experimenting with
electronic devices and with software, probably ending up with something for
which we have no equivalent today.
Maria Montessori was a deeply devout Catholic
and a daily communicant. She believed her method was firmly grounded in the
Gospel even as it was based on science, since indeed the two could never
contradict each other, as St. Thomas Aquinas taught. She fostered the
development of the Catechesis of the Good Shepherd, a religious instruction
program using her methods, which has also shown amazing results in bringing
children to know and love the Lord.
And the Method is indeed grounded in the Gospel.
All of Montessori education is geared toward promoting “positive freedom” or
the idea that “freedom” does not mean the power to do whatever you want to do
but rather freedom from the negative tendencies that would lead you to the
wrong choices, giving you the ability to do what you have been called to do. A
Montessori classroom is the living embodiment of the Catholic truism that true
freedom can be exercised only in an ordered framework. Dr. Montessori saw her
goals as moral education, scientific education and artistic education—or
education for the good, the true and the beautiful. The Method is incarnate; it
reaches the soul through the body. And, of course, with those beautiful objects
and precise rituals, it is liturgical.
So, as we must ask of the world, we must ask
of the church: Why did we ignore Maria Montessori? Why isn’t Montessori
education as associated with Catholicism in the public mind as the rosary and
fish on Fridays?
Imagine for a second if the church had
adopted Montessori education as its blueprint early in the 20th century.
Imagine first the countless lives that would have been transformed, the people
who would never have reached their full potential in a traditional school. Then
imagine the greater robustness of the church. (How many have left the church
because of angry teachers or utterly boring catechism lessons?)
Catholics keep wondering what they have to
give the modern world that it does not already have. Imagine what it would have
meant for the church’s witness if, by the 1950s, it was a commonly known fact
that Catholics were those strange people who, for example, did not hit their
children at school (and everyone could see that it was because they simply did
not need to).
Why didn’t we do it? We did not think we
could make a difference.
By the end of the 19th century, the church
had been the biggest educational institution in the world by far, continuously
for centuries. Indeed, it had literally invented the school, as well as the
university. But by that time, modern nation-states had taken over mass public
education. The church could not compete. Modern states had infinitely more
money and resources, and they could make school free for everyone and compel
attendance, which certainly helped turnout. They were just more “modern.”
And suddenly countries were faced with the
question of pedagogy for the first time. Most of them ended up copying the
Prussian model. The vast majority of schools, public and private, across the
West, despite some variations due to history and geography, still follow the
same basic model invented by a militaristic dictatorship in the 19th century.
As Professor Angeline Lillard recounts, what we think of as the “default”
sort of school (tables, students of the same age, whiteboard) is the product of
a very specific historical time frame and of very specific philosophical
assumptions that are either questionable or, from a Catholic perspective,
downright heretical.
This comes from the era of the Industrial
Revolution, when schools were explicitly modelled on factories, with children
as inputs. Bells were introduced to mimic the bells on the factory floor that
signify breaks. Learning was induced through a reward and punishment system.
(Germany and other European nations were also anticipating mass warfare, and
schools needed to produce disciplined future soldiers.)
The approach made practical application of
philosophical assumptions. This form of schooling is based on the Lockean tabula rasa view that we
come into this world as blank slates, as simple receptacles for information,
and on the Cartesian dualism between mind and body. Accordingly, the best way
to learn something is to receive it in a disincarnate way. Those are
assumptions contrary to the wisdom of the Catholic tradition.
Against the Lockean view, Montessori supports
the authentic Christian view that every child has a unique, God-given identity
and gifts and must, by grace, develop them. As opposed to the Cartesian view,
this approach rejects mind-body dualism. So why didn’t the church embrace it
when it came along?
Because we did not—we could not—believe we
could do better. In the late 19th and early 20th century, the pace of
technological change was much faster than it is today, and the overall sense of
the unstoppable nature of technological and organizational progress was
pervasive. There was no sense born of world wars and environmental catastrophes
that technology could also bring forth tragedy. In philosophy and theology,
perhaps, the church was standing athwart history yelling “Stop!” But it was
still impressed by all those engineers and industrialists and organizational experts
who, collectively, embarked on the most ambitious school-building program in
all of human history. They were the scientists. We were amateurs next to them.
Of course the best we could do was copy.
And so here we are.
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