Montessori Education

Montessori Education in Kolathur

Experience Montessori education at its best in Kolathur. Explore our innovative approach to learning, fostering creativity and independent thinking.

What is Montessori Education ?

In Montessori classrooms children make creative choices in their learning, while the classroom and the highly trained teacher offer age-appropriate activities to guide the process.

  • Montessori environments support the learning of children from birth to middle school
  • Montessori education encourages children to explore their world, and to understand and respect the life forms, systems and forces of which it consists.
  • It all starts with a trained teacher.
  • Mostly the competitive exams will have Hindi as an answering medium.
  • Our comprehensive diploma programs will prepare you for a life-changing career in Montessori education.


It’s no secret:

Learning a language can really help your child get ahead in life. It strengthens CVs and bolsters college applications, improves their communication skills and equips them for travels and a career abroad. It can even boost their brain power and protect them from dementia later on in life.

Once you’ve helped them decide which language they’re interested in, there are several things that you can do to help your child master a new language faster.


Speak it too

  • If you’re already bilingual or multilingual, speak to your child in the languages you already speak as soon as you can. Continuous exposure introduces the concept of multilingualism to children early on in life and in a very natural way.
  • An early start to language learning is also helpful because it makes it easier for kids to pick up new language skills later in life – they will think of multilingualism as natural, have a basis in the sounds and flow of the new language, and even give them a basic foundation for learning a new language from scratch.
  • In addition to the passive learning they are exposed to if you speak the language at home, a little active learning can go a long way – and can set the stage for a positive relationship with language learning for life.
  • Try incorporating new languages into your daily life with your child by doing fun vocab exercises with them in the evening with child-friendly flashcards or language learning apps.

Help them keep a schedule

  • With older children, more conscious practice is essential and as a parent you can do a lot to support the development of healthy learning habits.
  • Practice really does make perfect, so making sure your child sits down to practice writing, improve their comprehension and review class notes regularly is key. Memory is aided by repetition and children’s learning habits are proven to respond well to structure.
  • If you can plan an hour or so into every day, it’ll sink in far faster than if they only connect with the language once or twice a week.

Bury their nose in a book

  • Children’s books are filled with varied but simple vocabulary and the basics of language structure and grammar – in other words, they offer the perfect foundation for learning a new language.
  • As small children have a natural love of reading – and love it when their parents read to them – reading books in the language they are learning is an incredibly powerful way to make progress every day.
  • Older children may need more encouragement, but ensuring they complement their learning with active reading in the target language is essential to making the new language stick. As their reading skills in the foreign language improve, ensure they have access to foreign copies of books they already love, like Harry Potter.

Find a new TV series

Try turning screen time into another channel for language exposure (it won’t be a hard sell, we promise).

  • If you’re a parent of small kids, try changing the language settings on their favorite show on Netflix. Most shows are available in multiple languages and kids who are already exposed to that language won’t find it as difficult to follow their favorite show in a foreign language as you think – children are more patient and open than adults tend to be to that kind of ‘discomfort’.
  • For teenagers, research popular shows or sitcoms in the language you’re learning (here are our suggestions for superhero shows to learn English with, for example). Sitting down regularly to watch a 20-minute program of normal conversation in a foreign language can help them learn to follow spoken dialogue and introduce them to colloquialisms or slang.