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MONTESSORI vs REGGIO EMILIA // Key Similarities & Differences 

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MONTESSORI vs REGGIO EMILIA // Key Similarities & Differences
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//REGGIO EMILIA RESOURCES:
○ "Working in the Reggio Way" (book) - amzn.to/3OdThyK
○ About the Reggio Emilia Approach (article) - www.reggiochil...
○ "100 Languages of Children" (article) - nido.edu.au/ne...
○ "100 Languages" (poem by Loris Malaguzzi) - www.reggiochil...
○ "What is a Provocation?" (article) - www.rootsandwi...
○ Reggio Emilia in a Nutshell (video) - • Reggio Emilia: in a nu...
○ Getting Started with the Reggio Emilia Approach (video) - • Getting Started With T...
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○ KiwiCo - bit.ly/3o0nI0q
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#montessori #reggioinspired #reggioemilia

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28 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 234   
@jenaparsons
@jenaparsons 3 года назад
Former teacher in a Reggio-Emilia inspired school here and you did a great job representing the basic differences! My one add would be that because of the emergent curriculum, it is common for all subjects to be woven together around whatever topic is being learned. So math, science, history, language arts, art, etc aren’t taught separately. For example, if students are interested in kites then they may use the scientific method to predict which will be most successful as they experiment with different fabrics and structures in making their own kites. They’ll read stories about various cultures who have celebrations or a unique culture around kite flying to gain inspiration for designing their kite. They’ll incorporate mathematics through measurement, geometry, data collection and analysis. It won’t always happen that every subject is covered or touched upon but it’s common for them to all be incorporated in some way.
@adriannavanoyen
@adriannavanoyen 3 года назад
I absolutely love that interdisciplinary approach!
@teocola2652
@teocola2652 2 года назад
Wow! I think that's great!!
@susanspianostudio7057
@susanspianostudio7057 2 года назад
I think today homeschoolers call this approach unit studies.
@jenaparsons
@jenaparsons 2 года назад
@@susanspianostudio7057 Yes. I’m familiar with the unit study homeschooling approach and the integrated nature is similar. I’d say the main difference is the constructivist pedagogy that drives Reggio-Emilia instruction. What is being studied and the length of the study is very student-directed. I would say it’s somewhere between unit studies and unschooling in that way.
@susanspianostudio7057
@susanspianostudio7057 2 года назад
@@jenaparsons Thank you!
@nicolebest8193
@nicolebest8193 Год назад
My youngest son attended a Reggio Emilia inspired preschool. They had mixed age classrooms. Not only did they have an atelier, they also has a dedicated atelierista or a dedicated art teacher. Each morning they would have a morning meeting with the children and the teacher and the meeting could be 20 minutes or sometimes up to 40 minutes. It was out of these meetings that the topics for the curriculum was born. At the end of the year they would usually have the children write, prepare, and perform a play. However, the first year my son was at the school they instead did an art show. It was amazing to see such talented preschoolers. I'd highly recommend a Reggio Emilia inspired preschool, if you have a choice.
@sakisgirl1
@sakisgirl1 6 месяцев назад
I’m interested in the mixed ages. I work at a preschool that has tried mixing some ages, and parents aren’t happy with that approach.
@rowantree1197
@rowantree1197 Год назад
OMG! I am an adult, but I wanted to LIVE in these Reggio-Emilia rooms with countless art supplies. Looks like heaven!
@veronicafensel926
@veronicafensel926 2 года назад
If I were a child, the Reggio-Emilia approach would definitely seem more appealing to me! Also the classrooms do seem more inviting. I think maybe a blend of the two might be ideal for my plans to homeschool
@tvbot1984
@tvbot1984 Год назад
That’s what my entire classroom is and I live it
@Ash-gj2lf
@Ash-gj2lf Год назад
Exactly what I’m thinking!
@Mercedes4633
@Mercedes4633 Год назад
Same!
@mensanfoli9005
@mensanfoli9005 Год назад
Same here, can't wait to be a Dad
@d0ttiej
@d0ttiej Год назад
I always thought montesorri was too bland so yeah mixing the two would be ideal.
@whossoul
@whossoul 3 года назад
Thank you for talking about the Reggio Emilia approach! So few people know about it, I didn't even learn about it till I went to college for childhood education and development. Personally it's my favorite because I feel like it takes the best things from Montessori and Waldorf and combines them with other great concepts. It was also the favorite of all my professors who were quick to bring up how ahead of his time Malaguzzi was because essentially all his ideas have now been proven accurate by modern psychology. Some of my favorite moments from teaching was going down rabbit holes with kids when something sparked their interest. Us teachers would be tearing our classroom apart, rearranging furniture, running to other classrooms to find what we needed, or making a quick run to Target during nap time just to make an expirement they wanted to try happen. Seeing that spark of wonder in their eyes though, seeing how validated they felt that we would derail everything to let them explore their ideas, and seeing that love of learning grow were always the moments that made me remember why I love kids and why I went into teaching! I think there's only one thing you didn't represent completely accurately. While sometimes we do ask questions it's all about knowing when to. If they have that in the zone lazer focus then that's not the time to ask a question or even involve yourself. Independent play without teacher involvement is still stressed. After graduating I went on to work at my colleges lab school where new students would get to work with kids under guidance with us teachers. One of the first things we had to teach new teachers to do was to not always step in, don't immediately run to help when they're struggling, don't insert yourself into their play when they are in the zone.
@emmastoelk2132
@emmastoelk2132 Год назад
@whossoul, Im in college and just learned about the Reggio approach last year and I really love the balance that is has. The only issue I have is that find Reggio schools are harder to find and their less Reggio Jobs available .
@linspacem2060
@linspacem2060 3 года назад
Need to show this video to the mainstream childcare educators in Australia. Since Montessori is not widely available in Australia until recent years, lots of mainstream childcare adopts Reggio Emilia and promotes themselves as equivalents (just as good and almost the same) to Montessori childcare. This creates lots of confusion and misleads parents. It'd be great to hear from you about why Montessori is so widely available in some countries and not the others.
@bonniejames9496
@bonniejames9496 3 года назад
I am in Australia too! Yes, very true. Not so widely available in Australia. Especially passed preschool age.
@brigettemary7640
@brigettemary7640 3 года назад
We’ve found a Waldorf Steiner daycare in Melbourne 💕 If Montessori was available we for sure would have considered that too. Likely mainstream Primary School though as there just isn’t enough options available.
@vanuamontessori6672
@vanuamontessori6672 2 года назад
@@bonniejames9496 In Auckland, Aotearoa (NZ), we are seeing an emergence of primary level and high school level Montessori schools. Some mainstream primary schools have a Montessori class. In Australia, do you guys have Montessori classes within mainstream schools? Across the majority of Aotearoa (except for Wā Ora Montessori in Wellington which caters up to age 18), most Montessori schools are at the preschool level. I also believe Christchurch in the South Island are initiating a Montessori high school.
@kikijewell2967
@kikijewell2967 2 года назад
@@brigettemary7640 I have a friend who teaches Upper Elementary (9yo-12yo) in Melbourne. Reply and I'll dig up the name of the school for you. He's a truly fantastic teacher, and an occasional mentor. He's been teaching, I believe, over 20 years now!
@brigettemary7640
@brigettemary7640 2 года назад
@@kikijewell2967 funnily enough we’ve since moved to an area with a local Montessori school by chance. I wonder if he teaches there!
@elisagherpelli2372
@elisagherpelli2372 3 года назад
I live in Reggio Emilia so I'm really familiar with Malaguzzi's work, which is the father of the "method" used in Reggio Emilia's schools. I also attended those school as a child :)
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
That’s so interesting! Was this is a decent overview of your experience in the schools? 🤣
Год назад
I would love to hear about the expected (maybe proved) outcomes of both methods. Would you recommend sunshiny related? Thanks
@FuschiEnterprises
@FuschiEnterprises Год назад
@elisagherpelli2372 What's your profession?! What are your hobbies now?! Are they in direct correlation to your upbringing
@benstagg4544
@benstagg4544 3 года назад
I fit more with Reggio because it aligns with our bicultural curriculum here to include our native children (Māori) as working with nature such as flax and New Zealand Jade stone (pounamu) and also the arts with dancing, clothing, carvings etc is a part of their culture.
@vanuamontessori6672
@vanuamontessori6672 2 года назад
True. Even in the Montessori centres that I worked in there were definitely elements of Reggio Emilia and I think it was due to our curriculum Te Whāriki 😊
@bonniepaora8664
@bonniepaora8664 Год назад
Im thinking similar fir ny future children, but i want to explore a few different methods and take the best parts of all of them and mix them in with traditional Māori methods of learning. I'm calling it "Whanau ako"
@FuschiEnterprises
@FuschiEnterprises Год назад
😮😮 I want to come!
@adriannavanoyen
@adriannavanoyen 3 года назад
I wish there were more readily available resources for supporting parents in implementing Reggio-inspried practices at home. I learned about both approaches during my undergrad, and Reggio-Emilia is actually a better fit for my personal philosophy and preferences as an educator, but I've found so much more info available on implementing Montessori that that's what I've used with just a much more flexible and open approach.
@pumpkins1984
@pumpkins1984 3 года назад
My daughter attends a beautiful Reggio Inspired preschool. She attended a Waldorf playgroup as a toddler, and we have quite a few Montessori materials at home. I like the eclectic approach we are taking. But at the end of the day I just try an include her in the things I am doing as well as a good healthy dose of outdoor unstructured play. I miss that fresh mountain air Ashley. Enjoy your little slice of heaven 🏔
@whossoul
@whossoul 3 года назад
That's the best way to do it! My college program I worked at had a lab preschool that was spoiled in we had funding from the college and all these professors with PHDs in childhood development and education running the program. Every one of them would say the best approach is a combination of them all. We were mainly Reggio inspired but drew elements from Montessori and Waldorf. One of their biggest pet peeves was that teachers/schools would get so caught up in being one label that kids end up missing out on great things other approaches can bring in!
@BeatrixFrancia
@BeatrixFrancia 3 года назад
The total accuracy in everything you do makes you more than just a RU-vidr or influencer. I'm impressed at how flawless your contents are, so informative and enjoyable at the same time. I can't imagine the amount of time it takes to create videos like yours. Your italian pronunciation is just amazing (and so is Keily's when she says "prosciutto" 😍) I live in Bologna, one hour away from Reggio Emilia so it made my heart leap to see the images of the old town, so timeless and resilient.. Grazie!
@FuschiEnterprises
@FuschiEnterprises Год назад
❤❤
@virginiagiannotti4817
@virginiagiannotti4817 3 года назад
I am from Reggio Emilia! My baby is 11months old and just started kindergarten. We are very lucky here because all the state kindergartens use Loris Malaguzzi’s approach (the private ones in fact are always left as last choice in case your kids don’t get in the state ones). It is exactly how you explained it and it was very interesting! I find a lot of similarities between the two approaches. Also about the age difference it really depends on the class. We do separate kids more in comparison with Montessori but for instance in our class there are from 5 months old up till 16mo… which is a big span at that age. And the difference continues in the following classes. Thank you for sharing about our approach! 🌸
@stephmontvein8328
@stephmontvein8328 2 года назад
I really like the creative side of Reggio- Emilia
@kerryfoose3116
@kerryfoose3116 3 года назад
I'm so happy that you are sharing this information. My 4 year old had her first experience last year in a Reggio Emilia /Montessori hybrid academy. It was an absolutely fantastic experience for her. She started in her Montessori school this year well prepared.
@Ldawg42069
@Ldawg42069 3 года назад
i work at a daycare w a Reggio-Emilia approach and it’s honestly so nice being able to do different arts and crafts w the kids as much as possible. doing art with them really makes me happy. i also really love the environment because i’m a maximalist and i love having things hung from the walls. I even made a tree on the wall/ceiling in our classroom. i like the Montessori approach with practical life and all the activities in general. Independence is an especially important skill in group settings. it would be a dream to have a class full of kids as self sufficient as kylie. i feel that montessori really helps with building confidence in themselves. that’s my two cents ;) thanks for reading
@whossoul
@whossoul 3 года назад
When I first started working in a Reggio inspired classroom I didn't like that it could feel "cluttered" at times. That didn't last long though, because everything on the walls and hanging from the ceiling was all made by the kids and it gave them such a sense of pride and accomplishment to be able to point a decoration out and say "I made that!"
@Ldawg42069
@Ldawg42069 3 года назад
@@whossoul i absolutely agree! one child drew a crow to sit on one of the branches, and then a few of the others wanted to put their own animals on it as well
@balesshippolova
@balesshippolova 3 года назад
Really like that you state the facts, and not much opinions. When I was searching Montessori versus Waldorf I definitely came across a few opinionated videos.
@whatheavensaid
@whatheavensaid 3 года назад
I attended a Montessori school as a child and I taught in a Reggio Emilia school as an adult. I have profound love and respect for both approaches!
@AndreiFantastic
@AndreiFantastic 2 года назад
I find Montessori people to be cultish and kind of scary haha so I was also grateful for the neutral stance of this video
@Setyourhandle8080
@Setyourhandle8080 2 года назад
Whoa - I’m a homeschool mom and group teacher and I’ve been doing so many of these elements on my own. Really looking forward to looking into this more !
@Kaibigan39
@Kaibigan39 Год назад
Same! I've seen a lot of this in the homeschool community!
@mixed_and_nerdy
@mixed_and_nerdy 3 года назад
FANTASTIC research!!! I really loved learning about the differences in teaching style as a teacher myself and even the smallest differences in the classroom with the color verses minimalism. Definitely make this a series!
@mama2two138
@mama2two138 3 года назад
I’d love a series too!
@jennyp8243
@jennyp8243 3 года назад
The research detail really makes it more thorough
@MariaandMontessori
@MariaandMontessori 3 года назад
Same here Margie!!! My teacher heart loves these videos 🥰Absolutely would love to see this as a series!
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
What other approaches would you be interested in seeing in the series? Any input would be appreciated! :)
@mixed_and_nerdy
@mixed_and_nerdy 3 года назад
@@HapaFamily would be interested in your takes of Harkness or Sudbury, but also the differences in following Montessori through expensive and cheap alternates for items and if there is a difference in how the child plays or learns
@jessicac3598
@jessicac3598 3 года назад
Thanks for all the research Ashley! I actually live 20 minutes away from Reggio Emilia and yes it's still there 😅(the city).
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
Ahh that’s so fun! :)
@cocowhite588
@cocowhite588 3 года назад
Oh wow, this is really cool. However I just realized that I have been implementing some of this in our home. The loose parts and the sensory exploration are a big hit for my toddler and that’s why they are always available, buttons, rocks, sticks and strings get so much love from my toddler. I’m thinking that all this time I’ve been doing a mix of Montessori, RIE and Regio Emília 😅 and it has worked wonderful for our family. I don’t know if that’s a valid thing but I can assume that as long as we are all happy that’s all that matters 🤣. I can’t wait for the RIE/Montessori video 💕
@pam1126
@pam1126 3 года назад
Same here and we love it! I believe that in the end we know our children best and don't have to refrain from something that brings joy and excitement and allows them to learn etc just because a philosophy created by someone else doesn't! When we know our children we know what they love! My daughter always had a collection of loose parts before I even knew it was a thing because she loved them so much!
@joniescott8
@joniescott8 2 года назад
As an RECE, I am a fan of both themes. I like the minimalization that is featured in a Montessori room it is calming and not overwhelming at all and I am a fan of organization! When items are stationery it can be so satisfying. The use of bright colours in the Reggio theme are really nice, very inviting it sets more of an exciting tone and I believe in provocations so much it is so necessary especially when being a teacher in a preschool room!
@annaw7437
@annaw7437 2 года назад
With my nearly 3yo being autistic, he is definitely more inclined towards the Montessori method (left alone to play and only using adults as tool/help when needed, not for play interactions). So in order to pull him out of this a bit into the social world, I do try and step in = join him, propose ways to play together (show him that doing things together/with others can be fun), as naturally due to his autism he is not much interested in social interactions. That leads me to think that with a Montessori setting, it may be easier to miss the autism red flags (if the child is alone with a parent at home, and not in a busy children setting)? hmm...
@zk.13
@zk.13 3 года назад
I just found myself using a combination of both I try to use prepared curriculums montessori way, but always got used books for different ages like human body/planet earth/sences/math... but for older kids , reading them together and trying to explore them around us (i'm learning along the way too) So most of what we learn isn't planned, we hang kids work up high as a decoration, and we try to let them choose what they want to learn
@kazbee6978
@kazbee6978 Год назад
I have been very fortunate to work in a Reggio inspired kindergarten. In recent times I have been doing agency work and have worked at a Montessori school. My previous experience in Reggio was more then “ inspired “. It was an amazing environment. I agree that everyday was different and if you were prepared to give up on your own preconceived ideas for the day, it would take you to on an amazing journey. Not that there isn’t a place for intentional teaching. I think the biggest difference is listening; Montessori doesn’t want you to engage with the child. With Reggio, if you don’t engage and listen, then you don’t have a program. I have been very fortunate to attend 3 Reggio conferences. One of the statements made at one of them has stuck with me for years; “ as educators we are not to stand over children, imparting all of our knowledge into them. Instead we are to come alongside them and assist them in exploring their own ideas “.
@sakisgirl1
@sakisgirl1 6 месяцев назад
Where does one find a good Reggio conference?
@MariaandMontessori
@MariaandMontessori 3 года назад
Ooh you know this is right up my alley of interests! What an amazing summary!!! 👏 Not only would I love this as a series, I'd be so curious to hear if you're going to implement any of these concepts in any form in your home! Maybe something to end the video with or a culmination video to the series 🤔 I doubt I'd ever abandon Montessori as our main focus at home but I see space for incorporating elements of other philosophies throughout. I had somehow ended up introducing loose parts and provocations here and there in our open play spaces and it's so interesting to hear about an intentional way to do this 🥰 Down the rabbit hole I go 🐇
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
That’s how I felt after researching!
@MariaandMontessori
@MariaandMontessori 3 года назад
I also can't help but chuckle at the fact that both approaches originated in Italy 😅 I'd be so curious to figure out if the concept of a cozy, homey classroom was commonplace in traditional schools there. Because it definitely was in Belarus. Teachers of course brought everything in themselves 😑 but curtains, plants, paintings..all standard part of the decor. One of the biggest culture shocks I had walking into an American school was how blank and cold the environment is (and that some classes have no windows!) Not surprising that the approaches focused on the child start with a cozy environment-regardless of what the details are in materials, colors, etc. You're going to need to kick me off your page or I'll be here for days. I love nothing more than geeking over kids and education 🤓
@AmmaraSHAH773377
@AmmaraSHAH773377 3 года назад
@@MariaandMontessori im wondering did youth find a local Montessori school that you liked i think missed something going through your videoes multitasking is not always efficient. Did you find the schoola in your area to be minimalist or with decor like you described. Growing up with clutter and still having to declutter for my mum around the play areas and the normal schools here being so hectic with pages of info on the walls that we'r only used to look at during tests, it just releases all this tension and stress when i see a minimalist and structured Montessori school.
@MariaandMontessori
@MariaandMontessori 3 года назад
@@AmmaraSHAH773377 ah the decor comparison is definitely traditional schools. When we were looking at schools (pre-covid) we actually didn't end up liking any of the 0-3 Montessori programs. Especially the schools that were certified. The ones on the pathway to certification were much more pleasant to be in, which is why I always stressed that distinction too 😅 Even if the children's area was minimalist, the teacher space and hallways were quite...cluttered. So it really detracted from the beauty of the class 🥺 We had selected a different school that also focused on the child, giving them freedom, learning through play. Though the environment was a bit more colorful and full of decor than the Montessori class, at the 0-3 age it aligned enough with my own philosophy that we thought it was the best fit. I hadn't remembered what they're aligned with until watching this video...went back to check and sure enough- "Reggio inspired" 😅 If there's a day before Stella's 3 when we feel it safe for her to go and for me to work again, she will go there. Once she's 3, we'll be driving up to my mom's school. Her teachers definitely maintain a true Montessori environment but I wouldn't call it full minimalist either. There's pictures at the children's height. There's plants for them to care for. There's an art area with a small display area. It feels cozy but not overwhelming, in my opinion.
@AmmaraSHAH773377
@AmmaraSHAH773377 3 года назад
@@MariaandMontessori oh wowww thats great you already had a background in Montessori that stella can share in still i didn't really understand that your mum actually had a Montessori school that was still running i assumed she just did Montessori parenting like Elon musk's mum had lolllll but this is great that you have somewhere you know first hand you can trust. Its so cool that you also have somewhere near by that follows this schooling system that's Noval to us now but already you seemed to have found it for rainy days. I think i need to look around nowe that schools are open here and we had our vaccines. Im still soooooo hesitant that I've not looked around there's just 2 Montessori inspired nurseries here. And one certified nursery that is 1.5 hours away so definitely need to check if there's a Regio Emilio one anywhere ahahaha🤞😅
@mrklabunde485
@mrklabunde485 2 года назад
Thank you so much for your time! I am a kindergarten teacher in a public school. I am researching all that can potentially help peel students off of Chromebooks. Reggio is intriguing and hard to understand. Thank you for your introduction to the concept.
@jordanh9520
@jordanh9520 3 года назад
As you described it, Reggio Emilia sounds so much like it inspired some of my early schooling. Although... It was certainly a watered down version of it being a public elementary school, but certainly the texture and natural material, the correlated learning of multiple disciplines with a common theme or topic. I think that's why I get the feeling I do when I see a brick school house, and it's more than just nostalgia. Leaving that school for one that was tall and featureless was a bit of a shock and it did disrupt my learning for some time.
@silviabassi6254
@silviabassi6254 3 года назад
Yaaay! Thank you Ashley, so proud of my country for these two learning philisophies! Yes, they are different but they both focus on the child unicity, natural materials and the teacher as a helper... I'm fascinated with both!
@theinquisitiveapproach9899
@theinquisitiveapproach9899 3 года назад
I was a teacher at a Reggio inspired preschool and I would say this is pretty accurate
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
👏 I’m so glad to hear this! ☺️ Thanks for letting me know!
@ema8909
@ema8909 2 года назад
Thank you for this! I had never heard of Reggio Emilia until this video so I am very very grateful. I prefer Waldorf over Montessori and after watching this video I am loving Reggio Emilia method too! 7:20 and 7:39 and 10:20 and 11:11 and 13:00 Love it! Of course now I want a Waldorf vs R.E. comparison! Pleeeeeass
@wenshuanghao9332
@wenshuanghao9332 3 года назад
hi, I am your big fan who is not a native English speaker. So the subtitle is very important for me to understand the content. Please put the subtitle on every episode. Much appreciate! Love you and the girls !
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
I just went back and looked at the video and noticed that the closed captions were not generated for this video, and I’m not sure why because I always have that setting turned on by default. I’ll have to take a look later at the individual settings for this video to see if I can change it.
@sondrapedersen947
@sondrapedersen947 Месяц назад
Great video. I just did an observation in a Montessori school (not accredited), and I was not impressed with what I saw. In fact, it was disturbing to see children and teachers with no voices or joy in the learning process. With a Reggio background, as an early childhood educator, I did see some similarities in the materials used, but it was not a learning environment that felt community-like by a long shot. This video was clear and well communicated. Thank you. Now I understand that what I saw was probably not an authentic view of the Montessori philosophy being played out --in real time. I have been in Reggio inspired schools that also had no real knowledge of the philosophy they claimed on their website. I appreciate this video tremendously.
Год назад
What you explained about Reggio is exactly what I’ve been studying so far. Thanks for been so didactic and straight to the major points. I work in a Montessori school and I let the Reggio philosophy guides me when I have to talk about arts - that’s something Montessori doesn’t explore so much due the people researching for bring some lighting for our practices…
@juliedew6669
@juliedew6669 Год назад
As of preschool teacher I think this is a lovely and accessible explanation. Really nice job!
@eanatra
@eanatra 3 года назад
Thank you for this video! I've just realised my daughters' nursery is definitely Reggio Emilia inspired. Their classrooms look exactly how you described. Very informative💕🙏
@AmmaraSHAH773377
@AmmaraSHAH773377 3 года назад
Awwwh ths is fascinating i never heard of this until now. Although i like the emphasis on learning through physical activities, im getting the feeling that this is not so common place as an alternative to schooling systems. It sounds initially similar and closer to Waldorf. I feel like i am too committed to Montessori and i see the benefit in every aspect and every activity in Montessori that even one being missed out on gives me a strange feeling. Hahahaha I'm going to have a tough time finding the right place for my child. Even with homeschooling she's going to miss out on the socialisatio. On another note i am soooo excited for your book i can't wait!!!
@dianewetherill185
@dianewetherill185 Год назад
Well done descriptions of the similarities and differences between Montessori and Reggio Amelia. I am a Montessori trained teacher since 1978 and enjoyed a workshop on Reggio years ago. I found that Montessori education is more readily available for jobs but loved the Reggio approach as well.
@lismipro
@lismipro Год назад
Hi, Ashley! Wow, you just amazed me with this Reggio-Emilia method 🤯🤯🤯 I didn't know about it and wasn't even interested, but all those beautiful baskets made me watch this video. I've been thinking that the best method for me and my kid is Montessori and only Montessori. But my messy flat is more like Reggio-Emilia environment. And thought-provoking questions and those exercises with samples - I like them so much! I think I should do more research now and... Here is the second surprise for me - the amount of useful links that you attached😍 THANK YOU! I'm so inspired🥰
@claudiajade624
@claudiajade624 3 года назад
Trust the Italians to say that you can't actually properly use their style outside of the specific town 😋😅
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
😂
@shanbe7925
@shanbe7925 3 года назад
Thank you for taking the time out to research and inform your viewers. There are aspects of reggio Emilio that I like and certainly would look into. Some of it reminds me of activities I did at school many many many years ago! 👍
@_Keira_
@_Keira_ 3 года назад
Oh my gosh, thank you so much for posting this. It just so happened that I've been doing research on a lot of other teaching methods, so this was a huge help and so was your Montessori vs Waldorf video ❤
@nataliemccluskey1199
@nataliemccluskey1199 3 года назад
I’d never heard of this approach! Thanks for sharing. I’d be curious to hear of approaches that are of African origin.
@TalkWithJoce
@TalkWithJoce 2 года назад
I super appreciate this video and will also look through the comments and resources more too! I'm excitedly learning/researching/networking more about Montessori, Reggio, Waldorf, and other aspects of early childhood education lately as I clarify which focus for my career/education path towards classroom lead teacher for under age 7. Kinda amazing how much some aspects of these align with my interests like I decorate with sunlight, nature objects, natural materials, value art, like enough organization/simplicity, value autonomy and kind collaboration and outdoors a lot, am very into diving into an interest (I call it following the heart), love psychology, etc. Bummer there's no USA training for Reggio but definitely eyeing Montessori training. P.S. Growing up my family had a book on Pablo Picasso as a kid where he collected nature objects.💚🌿
@tiffanyscott1523
@tiffanyscott1523 2 года назад
Thanks so much for this video! I think I’ve heard of RE before, but this comparison overview was so refreshing to watch. I love spending time observing my son’s interests, so I feel like I’m more drawn to RE now.
@nawaalislam5884
@nawaalislam5884 10 месяцев назад
You saved my life today. God Bless
@emmastoelk2132
@emmastoelk2132 Год назад
I'm currently in college and work in a lab school with infants from ages 8 months to 1 and half and I will say that it is harder to find interests for infants so they send be subtle things, shapes, animals or sensory play but it depends on class and what children like.
@louisalowry6229
@louisalowry6229 3 года назад
Ahh - connecting dots here. I’ve been seeing Nido early learning centres popping up all round Perth in Western Australia and had wondered. Going through your links I can see who they are. I work in primary education and our early childhood teachers have started to bring in some Reggio Emilia philosophy.
@bibbedyboo3532
@bibbedyboo3532 2 года назад
Really good information. I am a beginner studying montessori however considering a daycare that bases its philosophy of learning on Reggio Emilia
@larenaki5213
@larenaki5213 3 года назад
Thank you for making this video and doing the research for us. Thank you so much for the links. This helps me answer my questions. 💛🧡
@starshine9836
@starshine9836 Год назад
I worked in both environments before. I definitely love Reggio more due to my personality. One is more of feeding knowledge, and the other is discovering knowledge. but the teacher has to be very sharp in observation and flow with the child, asking open-ended questions and one season, working on the topic in various subjects. Very very fun. Eg. a Child came in with a Chinese character on the cloth eg tiger, and the children got curious, then we went to understand the word, going as deep as a Chinese oracle, Chinese poem, and zodiac under Chinese folk culture, Chinese painting, study the anatomy of tiger, learning the age, eating habit of tiger, physical edu- move like tiger, sing folk song on tigers. so much to explore. physically and mentally exhausting, but so much fun. Montessori is good for cultures like Japanese who love structure and sequence as well as for the special needs and intellectual challenging ones, that could receive the knowledge step by step
@teachthemfun
@teachthemfun 3 года назад
This is a super interesting video concept. Great job on all the explanations.
@Hitogata
@Hitogata 3 года назад
This is so interesting!! Thank you for doing the research for us 😄😄😄
@angelicelly_904
@angelicelly_904 3 года назад
Thank you so much for this. I like Reggio Emilia better.
@AM-bm2xw
@AM-bm2xw Год назад
Ive never heard of this method and it is very interesting. I liked the examples you showed of "provocations", I think that is really useful. There are definitely things I like from different approaches, and enjoy making my own mix.
@kishakisha17
@kishakisha17 3 года назад
These two are my favourite approaches … thanks for all the info
@JessieUpward95
@JessieUpward95 3 года назад
Thanks for this insightful video. I’m a mum to a 14 month old and I’m currently studying Early Childhood and Primary education so naturally I find all of this very interesting. In Australia Reggio is the number one approach taken by early childhood centres. And you are right in that it’s easy to confuse the two when just looking at a classroom. I personally think that Reggio has a lot of benefits too. For example I personally don’t have an issue with playing make belief whilst still grounding children with the fact that it is make belief as teaching fictional stories such as fairy tales is apart of the Foundation primary curriculum here. Also it’s fun! Haha! Plus I like to pull my parenting and teaching from various different sources. The childcare my son goes to is interesting because they do not take a singular approach, they are created their own approach stemming from only what I can assume is different perspectives such as Montessori and Reggio. They have a lot of natural resources and in the babies room there is a lot of open space and it is set up more like a Montessori room. But they have a lot of teacher led sessions in the day too. I am going to address his education again once he reaches 3 year old kinder. I really like the idea of him participating in some form of bush kinder (inspired by the forest schools approach) or at least do a bush playgroup. I think that equally teaches a lot and I pull from the forest school philosophy for our outdoor adventures every day. Thanks again for this insight!
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
I think I might look into forest schools for another video to add to this series of comparing approaches, I’m certainly quite interested to learn more about it!
@JessieUpward95
@JessieUpward95 3 года назад
@@HapaFamily It’s really interesting and there have been a few studies on it’s effectiveness for school readiness in Denmark seeing as it’s a non traditional early childhood education. However they have found they have no delays and are at the same level as their peers who have attended more traditional education. There is a great video on RU-vid by SBS Australia following a forest school.
@whossoul
@whossoul 3 года назад
When I went to college even my professors would say "Montessori is great but we have to talk about the pretend play issue." We have so much concrete scientific evidence that pretend play is so beneficial to kids. It helps them work out problems at home, helps them work through stressful things and fears, helps their imagination, it's so psychologically beneficial to them! So often what's written off as "fantasy" is really just real fears coded, ie being a knight fighting a dragon, the dragon is really something scary they saw in a nightmare and they are acting out defeating it.
@calichan3245
@calichan3245 2 года назад
​@@HapaFamily That would be great to learn about the forest school comparison!
@nataliaechandi7937
@nataliaechandi7937 2 года назад
Thank you so much for this information! Pictures with examples were great to further appreciate what you were explaining. I will be sharing this with all my colleagues. There is also a lot of valuable info in the comments, thanks everyone!!
@leanneworld
@leanneworld 2 года назад
Found this video very helpful for my coursework. Thank you
@analyticalchick3064
@analyticalchick3064 Год назад
My former nanny kids went to a Waldorf school (NYC), were homeschooled with their mom and I for 2 years (NYC) and now they are in a Reggio Emilio school (Budapest). I moved to Idaho right after they moved to Hungary. I interviewed with a Montessori preschool and the Waldorf forum parents sent me to your channel here on RU-vid. I didn't get the job, though. I ended up at a traditional Christian daycare. It's ok, but I don't think I would or could love it here.
@teocola2652
@teocola2652 2 года назад
Do you have a comparison video between Montessori and Waldorf? If not, would you consider making one?
@a.o.j.3474
@a.o.j.3474 Год назад
Most Montessori settings have almost everything you have described in RE's settings. Creativity is also one the main aspects of Montessori practice and this involves providing children lots of natural open ended materials in Montessori environments.
@kazbee6978
@kazbee6978 Год назад
Hmmm….but RE don’t have “ jobs “ on little trays. They are still open ended.
@GuyG.KTalesOfAnimals
@GuyG.KTalesOfAnimals 2 года назад
Reggio Emilia is BRILLIANT, as a person who grew up going to Democatic Education, it seems absolutely thought out and beautiful. If you believe in the power of imagination, and imagintive/creative education, it is absolutely brilliant and is just that. Where I live Montessorians are actually the ones who practice it, which I was surprised to find out.
@claudiajade624
@claudiajade624 3 года назад
Very interesting! Prior to learning about Montessori, the only 'alternate' learning style I had heard about was Steiner (and there seems to be more Steiner schools in my country than Montessori). Would be v keen to learn from you about this style as well 🙂
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
I shall keep that in mind for the future, thank you!!
@ligiam.martinezl.2612
@ligiam.martinezl.2612 3 года назад
Steiner Is Tha same as Waldorf!
@kimalton6556
@kimalton6556 2 года назад
Absolutely love your presentations. I find them full of great information. Very helpful.
@hannahz4956
@hannahz4956 3 года назад
Thank you so so much for this!!!
@Jacqueline102610
@Jacqueline102610 Год назад
I am loving your explanations. Excellent!!!❤
@serrankare
@serrankare 3 года назад
Thank you for sharing this information. Reminds me of a mix of Waldorf and Montessori
@ThisIsLeah
@ThisIsLeah 2 года назад
This is FASCINATING!! Thank you so SO much for sharing!! I’m looking forward to researching more about some of their teaching styles! ;) ;) :D
@MaddieCooperMusic
@MaddieCooperMusic 3 года назад
This is SUCH a high quality video - thank you!!
@zhaniyabekbau9379
@zhaniyabekbau9379 3 года назад
Yeah, there are so few info on Reggio Emilia
@jennyesperanzajoyaballen1482
This information is very helpful, very concrete and interesting, thank you!
@melissahowe6254
@melissahowe6254 2 года назад
Thats interesting you said that montessori is more structured, cause a regular parent in a discussion group didnt see it that way. But then again i think in the group they arnt very familiar with everything
@edu_c
@edu_c Год назад
Reggio Emilia is the Champaign of teaching methods.
@oceansurferg
@oceansurferg 2 года назад
For comparison, I think this video does a good job, but I definitely recommend looking elsewhere to get a strong overview on what Reggio is without the comparison. As a small note - those chandeliers mentioned and pictured all looked like children's work, so just another means of display.
@juniperk912
@juniperk912 2 года назад
Thus was so helpful and explained really well. Thank you!
@alexmngn
@alexmngn 3 года назад
Hey Ashley! Thanks you for all your videos it’s always very insightful! I wanted to give a little feedback about the lighting of your video, they used to be much better with natural light on the side rather than an artificial light in front of you. You might want to reconsider filming in Kylie’s room! :)
@andreasanchez1453
@andreasanchez1453 Год назад
I think had I gone to a Montessori Reggio Inspired school as a small child I would of thrived.
@iamnykira
@iamnykira 2 года назад
Thank you so much for this video, sending love
@amessyclassroom
@amessyclassroom 2 года назад
I taught Reggio for six years in China; I really enjoyed it. As a teacher, I feel either one is effective.
@greencatwithaball
@greencatwithaball 2 года назад
I read that Reggio-Emilia is response of citizens-parents for horror of II World War.Parents united to create nursery/preschool to let children grow an environment so social and inspiring to make sure that next generation won't allow another devastating war to happen. That's why so much city budget in Reggio-Emilia is directly for preschool education.
@maridewaal9483
@maridewaal9483 3 года назад
Wondering whether you would adopt some of these Reggio Emilia practices into your own homeschooling method. Love that strewing/invitation-to-play idea, with all the different materials laid out. Another great video Ashley. But now I need to get back to your courses!!!
@buzzi2k
@buzzi2k 3 года назад
Wonderful video!! I also really like the channel This Family Thing for ideas about how to present loose parts and 'invitations to play'
@colorswordsandlearning
@colorswordsandlearning Год назад
Thank you ! This was very helpful..
@th33399
@th33399 2 года назад
thank you so much for this. very interesting
@brandi92y
@brandi92y 2 года назад
Thank you for posting
@demekefekadu9205
@demekefekadu9205 2 года назад
Brief and informative
@achak.l.5966
@achak.l.5966 Год назад
thank you for sharing 💛
@borislavanikolova
@borislavanikolova 2 года назад
Do I get it right that Reggio Emilia is something like Montessori and Waldorf combined to a great extend?
@christal576
@christal576 3 года назад
Thank you
@geneoluminology
@geneoluminology 10 месяцев назад
FALLING in LOVE with Loris MALAGUZZI
@heidibedidee
@heidibedidee 2 года назад
Hi there, do you think a child going through Montessori for elementary school would have a difficult time entering a private, traditional liberal arts high school? Thank you!
@ErklaerMirDieWelt
@ErklaerMirDieWelt Год назад
Reggio Emilia is not a small town :D It has almost 200000 inhabitants and is the capital of the province Reggio Emilia.
@kikijewell2967
@kikijewell2967 2 года назад
I used to think other pedagogy were inspired by Montessori, but then I realized: *_they're all inspired by the child!_* When we respect the child, listen, and follow their interests, the child blossoms and grows. I finally wrote this explanation: "when the curriculum is the goal, the child is the enemy!" The child is working to build the adult they will become. When the child is the goal, the curriculum is the _tool._ But what you teach matters less than that you foster joy and excitement with learning - learning to love learning. The adult can then learn anything they "missed" or anything new.
@4whirledpeas
@4whirledpeas 5 месяцев назад
I will be honest and say that this summary makes me a little sad. I think that Maria Montessori wanted most of the elements described as "Reggio" to be available in Montessori classrooms. We say EVERY shelf is an art shelf. Her classrooms are supposed to be like an artists's studio, or a scientist's laboratory, or woodworker's shop. I think the misunderstanding happens when teachers or other adults see the materials similar to traditional education "lessons" (a "curriculum") instead of TOOLS the children can use to solve problems or to satisfy or extend their curiosity. For example, if a child sees a ladybug on the playground, the adult might discuss supplies/materials in the classroom to respond to the child's questions or interest in the ladybug. This could be a story or poem, an artistic depiction, a scientific exploration (creating their own book about "parts of an insect" - how many legs, etc.), or a mathematical puzzle -" if one ladybug had 15 spots and another had 12, how many spots would that be altogether?" (using math materials to solve and to then create more scenarios). The problem lies in the way Montessori is now most commonly taught instead of what Maria Montessori originally intended. I must also add another Montessori element that is important to the discussion - which is that Dr. Montessori's materials are designed to match the child's physiological and neurological needs of each stage of human development (she was a medical doctor) and each material proceeds by only one small isolation of difficulty at a time. This means that there are no cognitive gaps in understanding - allowing the child to move on to the next concept at their own pace. Each lesson on the shelf relates to the one that comes before and the one that comes after. If you look at a shelving unit, a child sees the parts as well as the sum of the whole (for a given topic). This organization can be of profound help to the child, creating a deeper level of understanding and a sort of "memory palace" (with multiple retrieval cues that are interrelated and interdisciplinary). There is much more that could be said. I think that Montessori teachers would do well to study Reggio Emilia because it would help inform their Montessori practice. Montessori BEGS teachers to FOLLOW THE CHILD and not fall into traditional teaching practices with her materials. But sadly, since it is easier and resembles their own experiences/beliefs about education, many teachers and training programs do just that.
@anavazquez9646
@anavazquez9646 3 года назад
Can you please do a video of how white middle class women gentrified Montessori? I’m so interested in understanding how that happened
@benstagg4544
@benstagg4544 3 года назад
I wish you were my uni lecturer lol
@jwilson4568
@jwilson4568 2 года назад
👍🏼
@k10teky
@k10teky Год назад
Why did you name your channel a word that means "half Hawaiian"?
@betterfamilytravel
@betterfamilytravel 4 месяца назад
Her husband is Hawaiian. 😊
@k10teky
@k10teky 4 месяца назад
I see, then the family is not hapa because they are not half Hawaiian.
@snowshadow11
@snowshadow11 Год назад
I just think this is rediculous. Love your kid, teach it manners, teach your kid to love others. You do not have to have everything cut down ,.it is what you do as a parent that counts. Every parent thinks their kid is advanced and a genius. Guess what, people are not too smart, look at the mess we live in. Change your focus, change your life. Hey all the control is a joke in the mind. There is structure, but too much is not good. Too little is not good. My kid is an engineer. She quit and went to work in a warehouse. She is great! At least she is not into titles, money, or putting on a front. She was advanced everything, so what. I told her to quit the gifted classes.
@analyticalchick3064
@analyticalchick3064 Год назад
Sounds like my mom always telling me to quit and give up.
@judylin1749
@judylin1749 3 года назад
I love to watch your youtube, but will you be able to do more videos than just talking, which to me is easier to get more ideas from your youtube videos. To me, pictures and videos are worth a thousand words, and I tend to lack the patience to listen to all the talking. Sorry, my bad.
@HapaFamily
@HapaFamily 3 года назад
I don’t have access to a Reggio Emilia classroom, and I did try to include as many visuals as I could in this video to help you visualize the concepts.
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