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TABLE OF CONTENTS



  1. WELCOME!

We at the Maria Montessori Preschool hope the years you and your child/children spend with us will be both exciting and enriching. Please take a few moments to read through our handbook which contains information about the program and the responsibilities of parents under the Education & Care Preschool National Regulations 2011. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us.



  1. INTRODUCTION

Maria Montessori Preschool was established in 1977 in Mt. Waverley. After 21 years of successful operation, the Preschool relocated to Wheelers Hill in the year 2000. We are a registered private Kindergarten.


The Preschool is committed to the true Montessori approach and adheres to the principles and practices of a Montessori education for preschool children. It is staffed by qualified, experienced and dedicated teachers.
Maria Montessori Preschool runs a 4 year old kindergarten funded program complying with the Universal Access (see attachment) providing 15 hours a week of early childhood education and care.
The preschool year comprises four terms of approximately 10 weeks teaching, in accordance with Victorian Kindergarten Term Dates (refer Term Dates on page 7).
Over a period of a year there will be 4 student-free days.


  1. VISION

MONTESSORI EDUCATION IS THE FOUNDATION FOR LIFE LONG LEARNING


The most important period of life is not the age of university studies but the first one, the period from birth to the age of six. The more fully the needs of one period are met the greater will be the success of the next.”

Dr. Maria Montessori (1870 – 1952)


To attain and maintain best practice in ‘The Montessori Method’ of teaching and learning as well as integrate learning through play and provide high quality education and care to children aged 3 to 6 years.


  1. MISSION

To provide an environment with didactic materials which will enhance and extend each child’s knowledge, and encourage him/her to explore, learn, and develop independence, confidence, identity, concentration, self-discipline and creativity.




  1. PHILOSOPHY

The Maria Montessori Preschool has been offering a unique program to meet the needs of the children and families of the local area since 1977. We offer early childhood education and care for children 3-6 years old in a respectful and responsive child-centered environment where child’s self-confidence, independence, self-identity and wellbeing is valued and fostered in an inclusive and culturally relevant manner. We use the Montessori Method to extend children’s learning as well as incorporating child-led learning through play.


Our practices reflect the key principles of Montessori Method, the National Quality Standard (NQS), the Victorian Early Years Learning and Development Framework (VEYLDF), Early Years Learning Framework for Australia (EYLF), the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989), the Early Childhood Australia Code of Ethics and our knowledge of current research and information.
Our service’s staff and management strive towards best practice focused on what is in the interests of the individual child and their families. We work in partnership with families as we believe that the family is the primary caregiver and they have a wealth of information about their child that assists educators to understand their individual needs. We value the families’ input into decision making and encourage any suggestions that may assist in improving the quality of the preschool.
We believe that each child develops to be an independent person with a strong sense of self who will improvise and use their creativity in working and learning as a healthy, thinking individual and that these traits may remain with them throughout their lives.
We provide a prepared environment with Montessori-designed didactic materials which help children develop concentration and self-discipline. Children work at their own pace with guidance and support from staff. The children’s innate passion for learning is also encouraged by giving them opportunities to engage in spontaneous as well as purposeful activities.
Children engage in the four main areas of the Montessori program - Practical Life, Sensorial, Language and Mathematics. Attention is also paid to the other areas of the Montessori program such as Creative Arts, Music and Movement, Science, Geography and Cultural Studies.
Emphasis is on the literacy skills of listening, speaking, reading and writing through stories; rhymes, chants and songs; discussions and contributions during group times; expressing self through drawing and art; group and individual reading using phonetics and high-frequency words; writing letters of the alphabet, words and sentences. Children are encouraged to perform set tasks in developing their written skills. These activities are individualized at the child's level of 'readiness'.
We promote inclusion of children with additional needs and foster a deep sense of security, basic trust and acceptance for all children regardless of ability, gender or cultural background.
We support and value the diversity which exists within the Australian society and believe that children should learn to respect and celebrate that diversity. We acknowledge and respect our nation’s first people and interweave aspects of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture and practice within our program.
We aim to assist children to reach their full potential as members of the society. We recognize the importance of providing an anti-bias approach to positively support children’s growth of identity, critical thinking, self-esteem, and wellbeing, contribution to their world, learning and communication.

We recognize the importance of listening to the children to better understand their needs, strengths and interests and the contribution they make to their families, the preschool and the community. We provide a secure, safe, stimulating environment both indoors and outdoors that fosters all aspect of their social, physical, cognitive, emotional and aesthetic development at a pace that is developmentally appropriate.



We believe that an effective environment requires respect for the strengths, skills and resources of each staff member. In recognition of the diversity of backgrounds and experience among staff, we acknowledge the importance of working as a team to provide high-quality care and education. We value and support staff input into decision making, continued professional development and their role as advocates for the wider field of early childhood education.


  1. KEY PRINCIPLES OF THE MONTESSORI METHOD




  • Children learn through sensitive periods

  • Children learn through their senses

  • Children thrive through order and structure

  • Children need freedom

  • Multi-aged classrooms

  • The role of a teacher is of a directress who plans and prepares the environment, introducing the materials briefly and systematically

  • Children learn using the didactic materials as they are self-correcting

  • Practical life, sensorial, language and mathematics are the four main areas in the Montessori program

  • Montessori education also includes creative arts, music and movement, science, nature study, geography and cultural studies.

  • Montessori curriculum is child-focused and based on principles of child development.

  • Materials are made easily accessible to children in the classroom

  • The fundamental or 3-period lesson is used with every demonstration



Practical Life: Through Practical Life exercises children learn to pursue order and independence by using various materials and activities which support the development of fine motor as well as other learning skills needed to advance the more intricate Montessori apparatus. Montessori approach links between the child’s home environment and the classroom. Children work with concentration and at their own pace and gain satisfaction and confidence in their achievements when working with practical life materials. Practical life covers four main areas – care of self, care of environment, control of movement and grace and courtesy.
Sensorial: children begin to sort, arrange and classify their many experiences at a very early age. The sensorial materials help the child experience primarily in identifying distinctions between similar and different things. Later the child learns to grade a set of similar objects that differ in colour, size, height, width, texture, dimension, volume, weight and length through the use of their senses. Precise language such as tall/short, thick/thin, light/dark, rough/smooth and so on is attached to these sensorial experiences to make the world even more meaningful to the child.
Language: Montessori approach provides a program where reading, writing, listening and speaking is taught as joint units. Language is elaborated and refined through a variety of activities such as stories, rhymes and songs, games, show and tell and classified language cards. The letters of the alphabet are presented to the child laying emphasis on the phonic sounds of each letter. By tracing the sandpaper letter the children can feel, see and hear the sounds they make. The indirect preparation of writing is achieved by the development and refinement of the senses of touch, sight and sound. When children have learnt all the sounds of the letters of the alphabet and are able to write them independently, they use the wooden movable letters to reproduce his or her words, phrases, sentences and finally short stories. Children also show keen interest in writing the same on a paper or in their writing books. Because children know what they have written, they soon realize they can read back their stories. Slowly they begin reading books both to themselves and others.
Mathematics: Sensorial training is of great importance in learning the basics of math. Montessori has wide variety of concrete materials for this purpose. A child is led to abstract ideas and relationships by dealing with the concrete. Children demonstrate an increasing understanding of measurement and number using vocabulary to describe size, width, length, height, volume and names of numbers through using the Montessori apparatus. Children gain a physical impression of numbers 1-10 by handling number rods, spindle box, sandpaper numbers, numbers and counters etc. The child learns by repetition using the concrete materials before grasping the abstract conceptions and gradually builds up a strong basis for more advanced math. Geometry, algebra and arithmetic are linked in the Montessori Method as they are in life. Through concrete material the child learns to add, subtract, multiply and divide and gradually comes to understand many abstract mathematical concepts with ease and joy.
Music, art and craft: Besides the Montessori equipment the children are encouraged to take part in group/individual singing, creative art, drawing, craft and games according to the interests and talents of the child/teacher. Music sessions include performing, dancing, singing and experimenting with instruments from a variety of cultures.
Cultural Subjects (Geography, Science, and History): Children begin with globes and then study maps using jigsaw. They can trace and colour the shapes of each continent as well as placing them in the right place in the puzzle. The land forms teach geographical features. Science materials give opportunities to experiment with magnets, air, water, plant life and life cycles of insects/frog. Our classroom have a nature table where children can observe, identify, classify and match anything and everything from leaf shapes to different stages of a tadpole’s metamorphosis into a frog.


  1. VICTORIAN KINDERGARTEN TERM DATES


2014

Term 1: 29th January - 4th April

Term 2: 22nd April - 27th June

Term 3: 14th July - 19th September

Term 4: 6th October - 19th December
Note:

The first day (28.01.2014) of Term 1 is when teachers start – this is a student-free day. Please check with our Preschool when other student-free days will occur throughout the preschool year.




  1. STAFF




Frances Tachimoto

Owner & Manager, Approved Provider

Irene Fernades

4 yo Teacher Educational Leader & Nominated Supervisor

Carol McIvor

4 yo Teacher – Certified Supervisor

Lankika Nelson

3 yo Educator – Certified Supervisor

Dharini Yapa

Assistant Educator

Neha Gada

Assistant Educator

Yasmin Vilcassim

Assistant Educator




  1. CLASS SESSIONS

Children will be required to attend, 2 ½ hour sessions per day for 3 year olds and 3 hour sessions per day for 4 year olds, five days a week (Monday – Friday), either morning or afternoon session, and complete Cycle 1. Cycle 1 consists of a minimum of 8 terms, depending on the child’s age.


Morning sessions for 3 year olds are from 9.00 am to 11.30 am, and afternoon sessions are from 12.15 pm. to 2.45 pm.
Morning sessions for 4 year olds are from 9.00 am to 12.00 noon, and afternoon sessions from 12.45 pm to 3.45 pm.
For 3 year old children, the total session time per week is 12.5 hours. From 2013, the Department of Early Childhood and Education (DEECD) requires Preschools/kindergartens to provide 15 hour per week of education to 4 year old children.
Morning/Afternoon Sessions: It is normal practice that children who attend morning sessions in the 1st year will be transferred to afternoon sessions in the 2nd year of preschool.


  1. EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS

Children are required to attend a 2½ hour session per day, five days a week (Monday – Friday), either in the morning or afternoon, and complete Cycle 1 which is a three-year program for 3 – 6 year old children consisting of a minimum of eight (8) terms, depending on the child’s age.


However, as children generally commence primary school at 5 years of age, it is beneficial for them to complete at least two years at Maria Montessori Preschool.
Session times for three (3) year old children (totaling 12.5 hours per week) are:
Morning: 9.00 am to11.30 am

Afternoon: 12.15 pm to 2.45 pm


From 2013, the Department of Early Childhood and Education (DEECD) requires all preschools / kindergartens to provide 15 hours per week of education to four year old children. Therefore, session times for four (4) year old children from 2013 will be:

Morning: 9.00 am to 12.00 noon

Afternoon 12.45 pm to 3.45 pm
Morning/Afternoon Sessions: It is normal practice that children who attend morning sessions in the 1st year will be transferred to afternoon sessions in the 2nd year of preschool.



  1. EXTENDED HOURS PROGRAM

The Extended Hours Program is an extension of the Montessori Program and is in addition to the 12.5 (3 year olds) or 15 hours (4 year olds) per week.


The Extended Hours Program for 3 year olds is from 9.00 am to 2.45 pm and can be any days of the week, e.g. 2 full days and 3 half days, or 3 full days and 2 half days, etc.
The Extended Hours Program for 4 year olds is from 9.00 am to 3.45 pm and can be any days of the week, e.g. 2 full days and 3 half days, or 3 full days and 2 half days, etc.
Please note that the Extended Hours Program is subject to availability.
Children attending the Extended Hours Program will have lunch and relaxing/sleeping time (45 minutes or longer depending on each child’s needs) between the morning and afternoon session.
Parents are required to provide lunch for their children.



  1. FEES

There are four terms per year and term fees are set by Management annually. A discount of 10 % of the term fee will be given for concurrently attending siblings (second and subsequent siblings, but not the first child).


Term fees are to be paid promptly in advance. Invoices are issued in the second week of the preceding term and payment is due in the third week of each term. There will be a late payment fee of $20.00 for every overdue account. Please notify the Preschool if you are experiencing difficulties with the payment of fees and each case will be considered on its own merits.
One term’s written notice is required if your child is to be withdrawn during the year. Failure to do so will incur a term’s fee. No child may be enrolled for any term if fees for the previous period remain unpaid.
We are unable to offer any fee transfer or deductions (e.g. holidays, sick leave or leaving our preschool). All fees are non-refundable.
The Preschool reserves the right to take legal action for the recovery of fees not paid. Any expenses, costs or disbursements incurred by the Preschool in recovering any outstanding monies, including debt collection agency fees and solicitor costs will be charged to the account.
Kindergarten Fee Subsidy

The Kindergarten Fee Subsidy works to support eligible families by contributing towards the cost of 10.75 hours of kindergarten per week. Please note that from 2013 the hours will increase to 15 hours per week for 4 year old children. Eligible families must provide the required documentation to enable the Preschool to claim the Kindergarten Fee Subsidy (refer to Fee Policy, Attachment 1 – Fee information for families).


Eligible families must have one of the following cards, visas or documents:


  • Health care card

  • Pensioner Concession Card

  • Temporary Protection/humanitarian Visa 447,451,785 or 786

  • Bridging Visas A-F and Refugee and Special Humanitarian Visas Holders 200-217

  • Department of Veterans Affairs Gold Card

  • Resolution of status (ROS visa, class CD, Subclass 851)

  • All Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander children are also eligible for the subsidy.

  • If triplets or quadruplets are attending kindergarten in the same year the family is also eligible for the subsidy for each child.

The current policy can be found in the following link: http://www.education.vic.gov.au/ecsmanagement/careankinder/funding/subsidy.htm.



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