More Than a Method: Honoring the Legacy of Dr. Maria Montessori
September 2, 2025

August 31 marked the birthday of Dr. Maria Montessori. Thus, we want to take time to honor the roots of this movement, the visionary contributions of Dr. Montessori herself, and our shared responsibility to carry her legacy forward.


At the heart of Montessori education is a deep respect for human potential. Unlike traditional models that begin with the adult's idea of what a child should learn, the Montessori approach emerged from deep observation and genuine curiosity. Dr. Montessori did not set out to create a new educational system. Rather, she observed children with scientific curiosity and developed an approach in response to their needs.


It’s important to remember that Dr. Montessori was first and foremost a scientist. She was one of the first female physicians in Italy, graduating in 1896 with a specialization in pediatrics and psychiatry. In her medical practice, she encountered children who were often seen as uneducable. However, rather than accept this assumption, Dr. Montessori looked closer.


A Discovery That Changed Everything


In 1900, Dr. Montessori was appointed director of a university program for children with developmental delays. Observing their sensory-seeking behaviors in bleak institutional settings, she began studying how sensory experiences affect cognitive development. She designed hands-on materials and engaged the children in purposeful activity. The results were stunning: children who had been dismissed by society not only improved, but some went on to pass the same standardized exams given to their peers in traditional schools.


Dr. Montessori’s response was not one of self-congratulation. Instead, she challenged the broader education system, asking: If children with significant delays could thrive when given the right environment and tools, why weren’t typically developing children doing better in school?


This question launched a lifetime of work dedicated to understanding and supporting the natural development of all children.


The Birth of the Montessori Method


In 1907, Dr. Montessori opened her first classroom, the Casa dei Bambini, in the working-class neighborhood of San Lorenzo in Rome. Tasked with overseeing daycare for children too young for public school, she began by introducing simple, practical activities, starting with self-care and environmental care. She also provided an array of materials designed to engage children’s hands and minds.


The transformation was extraordinary. Children who had previously been described as wild and unruly became calm, focused, and joyful. They took pride in their appearance and their surroundings. They concentrated for long stretches of time, developed social awareness, and, unprompted, began asking to learn how to read and write.


Dr. Montessori was fascinated by what she called “spontaneous discipline” and the deep love of work she observed in the children. Through observation and experimentation, she continued to refine the materials, the environment, and the adult's role.


Education Rooted in Development


What emerged was a revolutionary approach: an educational philosophy based on the science of human development. Rather than seeing the adult as the source of knowledge and the child as an empty vessel, Dr. Montessori recognized that children come into the world with innate potential and a deep drive to learn.


Montessori education supports this natural unfolding by honoring what Dr. Montessori called human tendencies, such as exploration, orientation, order, communication, work, and repetition, through carefully prepared environments that meet the specific needs of each developmental stage. The adult's role is not to instruct, but to guide, observe, prepare, and support.


This vision of human development extends beyond the individual to a larger understanding of humans as part of a cosmic web of interrelationships. In this interconnected world, every part plays a role in maintaining balance and harmony. Humans have a unique place in this system, and our role requires conscious awareness, humility, and stewardship.


In addition to fostering rich academic growth, Montessori education cultivates mature, adaptive, and compassionate individuals who are capable of making meaningful contributions to our interconnected world.


The Enduring Impact of Montessori’s Vision


Dr. Montessori eventually left her medical practice and professorship to fully devote her life to this work. She lectured around the world, trained teachers, wrote extensively, and advocated for children’s rights. She also always insisted that the focus remain on the children, not on her.


Through decades of scientific observation, experimentation, and cross-cultural study, Dr. Montessori discovered that children, when provided with the right conditions at the right time, flourish. Her insights have stood the test of time. Today, there are approximately 15,000 Montessori schools worldwide, with over 3,000 located in the United States alone. 


For over a century, Montessori education has empowered children to reach their full potential—academically, socially, and emotionally. Yet Montessori is not just about individual success. It’s about building a better society.


We know that children are not just preparing for the future. They are the future. By focusing on children’s holistic development, we are supporting a generation of individuals who are more connected to themselves, to one another, and to the planet.


Carrying the Legacy Forward


Dr. Montessori’s vision asks us to do more than remember her birthday. We need to believe in children, observe them closely, and prepare environments that honor their needs. This also means that we, as adults, approach our role with humility and a sense of curiosity. Our job is to accompany children as they create the future. 


In this way, Montessori education becomes not just a method, but a movement, one rooted in peace, interdependence, and the full development of the human being.

Thank you for being part of this vision. Together, here in Yorkville, Illinois, we are carrying the Montessori legacy forward, not only by what we teach, but by how we believe in the children before us.


Come visit to learn more!

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Summer opens a door that the school year can only partially prop open. Suddenly, there is time (unhurried, generous time!) to kneel beside a flower and really look at it. To follow a beetle across a garden path. To press a leaf between the pages of a book and wonder later what kind of tree it came from. To ask questions that don't have quick answers and feel good about the not-knowing. This is exactly the spirit of Montessori biology. And summer is perhaps the most natural season to live it. What Montessori Biology Is Really About In a Montessori Children's House, biology is woven into daily life through care of classroom plants, observation of animals, and walks outside where we can pause and say: Look at this. Our goal is not to produce children who can recite facts. We are focused on guiding children’s natural exploration through mystery, revelation, and wonder. The wonder that is caught rather than taught is as important as any information or structure we provide. The adult's role in Montessori biology is less about knowing everything and more about modeling the joy of not knowing. When a child holds out a leaf or an insect and asks what it is, the most Montessori response in the world is: I'm not sure. Let’s find out together! A good field guide, a magnifying glass, and genuine curiosity are all the materials needed. The Two Worlds: Botany and Zoology Montessori biology in the early childhood years focuses on two interconnected worlds: the world of plants and the world of animals. Both are available everywhere this summer: in backyards, on neighborhood walks, at parks, along streams, in gardens, and even on window ledges. The World of Plants Daily life in summer naturally brings children into contact with plants in ways the school year rarely allows. The foundation of botanical awareness can come from a garden to tend, a flower to examine, and a walk where the trees change as you move from sun to shade. For families wanting to bring more intentionality to this exploration, here are some Montessori-inspired ideas. Begin with naming. Provide the real names of plants in your yard or neighborhood. Rather than commenting on the "flower" or the “tree," spend time learning the names of specific plants. It’s worth visiting the library to pick up a simple field guide. Children love to hear descriptive names, like black-eyed Susan or red maple, connected to living things they can see and touch. Explore the parts of plants. Pick a flower together and examine its parts: the petals that make up the corolla, the green sepals of the calyx beneath them, the stamen and pistil at the center. A magnifying glass makes this even more extraordinary. Use the real vocabulary: corolla, calyx, stamen, pistil. Young children absorb precise language with remarkable ease when we share it alongside the actual thing. Examine leaves. Collect leaves of different shapes on a walk and look at them together. Notice the veins running through the blade, the petiole connecting leaf to stem, and the varying shapes of the apex and margin. Press a few between the pages of a heavy book, and return to them in a week, when they are dry, flat, and perfect. Sketch and label. Older children who are reading and writing might enjoy keeping a simple nature journal this summer. They might draw what they observe and add labels to their illustrations. Rather than a formal exercise, think of it as an invitation to look closely enough to draw what they see. The World of Animals Summer brings the animal world into vivid focus. Birds at the feeder. Insects on the milkweed. Frogs at the edge of the pond. Earthworms surfacing after rain. Each of these gives a chance to observe, name, and wonder. Here are a few Montessori-inspired approaches for summer zoology: Set up an observation station. Having a bird feeder or bird bath in the yard or on a balcony is a simple invitation to at-home animal observation. Keep a bird book nearby and together practice using the guide to identify birds you see. Children who learn to identify the specific birds that visit their yard are building a foundation for scientific observation that will serve them throughout their lives. Explore classification together. In Montessori zoology, children learn about the five classes of chordates (mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish), as well as the broader world of invertebrates. Summer is full of concrete examples of every category! If you come across a frog, share that an amphibian is an animal that hatches in water, breathes through gills as a tadpole, and transforms into an adult that breathes through lungs and lives on land. When you spot a snake, point out that reptiles are cold-blooded and covered in scales. These simple descriptions provide a structure to help children organize what they are observing. Follow a life cycle. Summer is a perfect time to observe metamorphosis in real time. Caterpillars becoming butterflies. Tadpoles becoming frogs. If possible, collect a few tadpoles in a jar of pond water and observe them over several weeks, returning them when the transformation is complete. Few experiences are more powerful for a young child than watching something change so completely and so slowly that they can follow every stage. Look for invertebrates. Lift a rock in the garden and see what lives beneath it. Examine the underside of a leaf for insect eggs or larvae. Observe a spider's web in the early morning when it is covered in dew. Collect a few interesting insects and look at them with a magnifying glass before releasing them. This world of arthropods and annelids and mollusks is underfoot and all around, and children who learn to notice it are rarely bored outdoors again. The Most Important Thing In all of this, the spirit matters more than any specific activity. Montessori biology in the early childhood years is not about accumulating knowledge. Instead, it is about developing the habit of noticing. We want children to develop the disposition to stop, look, and ask. We also want children to understand, in the most concrete and living way possible, the interconnectedness of the world: how the flower and bee rely upon each other, how the earthworm nourishes the soil that provides nutrients for the plant. Each living thing has its place in a fascinating web of interconnections. As adults, we don’t need to know everything. What we need to do is show our care about what is alive and growing and moving in the world around us. Children who grow up beside adults who pause to look at things become adults who pause to look at things. We'd love to hear what your family discovers this summer. If you want to learn more about the gift of Montessori biology, schedule a time to visit our school.