Montessori house have Dvds… I find (and Bubby finds) them way too slow. There are some ebay sellers who sell flashcard type things, to do with parts of a flower, the country side (this is a peninsula, an isthmus etc). You can make those yourself. The thing I most noticed about Montessori is it isn’t fully child-proof. little beads and choke-able items are down low, they use real glass to pour with etc.
I havent used it myself but I have checked it out. I prefer Doman to Montessori…she thinks there’s a ripe reading age, I think it’s 18 months…or it might be a later age, but everything is about the right age for optimal learning, which contradicts Domans ideas of when is good for learning. (he thinks babies can learn a lot earlier than she did).
I have a friend whose daughter did Montessori. She’s 18 now but I dont know that it did alot of benefit for her… she had issues as a teen (may still do), didnt want to go outside (didnt feel she looked right), wouldn’t answer the door to people, had issues at school, not great at socialising. In fact Montessori encourages alot of solitary projects, less interaction. An individual chooses an activity, takes it to a mat, does the activity alone, finishes it, puts it away. It isnt like palygroup or kinder or daycare, with lots of playing and interacting, sharing etc.
If I were able, I’d do a combination. To balance out the lack in one or the other, to capitalize on the strengths in one…
It is good for being an individual, and for learning things to the point of obsessively, like typing laces on a rack. The items are self-correcting, as in if you arent doing it the right way, you cant finish it. So it’s good for teaching you what is the right way to solve the puzzle or issue. So it’s educational in ways beyond sing-songs and finger-painting. There is outside play, but it’s mostly indoors. Does teach self-responsibility, cleanliness, orderliness, tidyness, self-discipline. (so is it left or right brained… dont know)