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  • Children's Laughter Bugs Pre-School's Neighbors

    There are plenty of valid reasons why a pre-school should not be placed in a particular area based on a town's zoning. But this one takes the cake. 

    Neighbors of the Montessori Farmhouse School said it had to go because they didn't want to hear "noise generated by laughter and screaming of young children during outdoor playtime."

    Oh, the horrors.

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  • Preschool Panic in Palo Alto

      I must admit to being somewhat mystified by the preschool anxiety parents in more affluent cities face -- and this is really, really an upper-middle class problem.

    Especially since most kids whose parents who are affluent and involved enough to have their pick of preschools already have a pretty significant leg up in this culture.

    This story from Palo Alto describes some of the hand-wringing parents from there face when choosing a preschool. One local parenting group even developed a “preschool binder” with information and parent reviews of local schools that had a months-long waiting list for parents to even get a good look at it (I work for a website that does the same sort of thing in several cities in the US and Canada, by the by).

    Admittedly I may be a slacker mom, but here was how we chose our daughter’s preschoo

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  • Montessori Takes Boston: Is Your City Next?

    Montessori education, characterized by self-directed learning with individual learning styles guided rather than directed by teachers, is usually a private educational option for the preschool and elementary school years.  Several Boston public schools are now offering Montessori education to all comers.   Will the Montessori method be able to succeed in an age of No Child Left behind? Many in Boston seem to think so...

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  • Academic vs. Play-Based Preschool: Honestly, Who Gives A Shit?

    preschoolI don't know about you, but where I live, the preschool admissions process is way competitive, and I just don't have the intestinal fortitude to deal with that bullshit. San Francisco is one step behind New York City in that we don't require I.Q. tests for our two-year-olds, but type-A assholes that have their priorities out of whack still get on the waiting lists for the "popular preschools" the minute the stick turns blue.

    Navigating the preschool admissions minefield could be a full-time job for most people. First there's deciphering all the jargon: Waldorf, Montessori, Reggio-Emilia, play-based, project-oriented, student-led, blabbity-blah-blah. Then there are the school tours where you try to look well-rested—and like you didn't just have a fight with your husband because he forgot about the tour even though you told him a hundred times and now he has to cancel a meeting and go visit a preschool instead and he's all pissy about it—hoping to make a good impression on the preschool admissions team. You walk around looking at sculptures made out of painted styrofoam cups and pipe cleaners and listening to the spiel about "enrichment activities" while the other parents size you up. (What are you looking, you uptight beeyotch?)

    These tours are always in the mornings and I'm always fascinated by the parents that are obviously on their way to work as soon as the tour is over. The women look so effortlessly put-together and the men are dry-cleaned to perfection. They are the "point" to our "counterpoint," my husband wearing a wrinkled broadcloth shirt that has spent two days in the dryer, and me in yesterday's bra. We're soft. We'd be swallowed up whole if we lived in New York.

    My point is this. When kids go to preschool, they're usually around three. Three. If we're lucky, they have a good 12 to 16 years of schooling ahead of them. Why put the pressure on now? By the time your kid is three, even if you do nothing, chances are there will be a preschool somewhere in your city ready and willing to accept your child. To me the most important thing is that my child is happy and loves school and learning. Three-year-olds don't know their Waldorfs from their Wiggles. My daughter's preschool could be a garbage detail charged with picking up trash from the side of the freeway and she'd love it as long as there were eight other three-year-olds and a quick-to-hug teacher doing it with her.

    Lighten up, parents! It's only preschool. They can't count higher than twenty, they spend half an hour deciding "who is going to be the mommy and who is going to be the daddy" when they play house, and they go to the bathroom with a buddy.

    Just remember, the time will come when you are stressed-out about completing applications, getting academic records in order, writing essays, and securing glowing letters of recommendation from influential people. And that time is kindergarten.



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