Work Centers - The environment is arranged according to subject area, and children are free to move around the room instead of staying at desks. There is no limit to how long a child can work with a piece of material. At any one time in the day all subjects - math, language, science, history, geography, art, music, etc., will be being studied, at all levels.
Basic Lessons - The Montessori teacher is trained to recognize a child's readiness according to age, ability, and interest in a specific lesson, and is prepared to guide individual progress.
Areas of study - All subjects are interwoven, not taught in isolation, the teacher modeling a "Renaissance" person of broad interests for the children.
Learning Styles - All kinds of intelligences and styles of learning are nurtured: musical, bodily-kinesthetic, spatial, interpersonal, intra personal, intuitive, and the traditional linguistic and logical-mathematical (reading, writing, and math). This particular model is supported by Harvard psychologist Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences.
Assessment - Assessment is by portfolio and the teacher's observation and record keeping. Teachers and parents have both formal and informal assessment meetings throughout the year.