Bullsback said:When my wife and I visited Northwood Montessori, we were not impressed during our tour (least impressive of all the schools we visited, that said, part of that is just the "sales pitch" I presume it is actually a pretty solid school. Seemed like there were plenty of happy kids there. Our daughter goes to Leport and we love it (as does she), but I have never specifically asked about butt wiping and I'm not aware of any issues my daughter has had (she isn't 3, although she is potty trained, and the school played an integral part in the training).
When we looked at the different schools, the difference between LePort and others wasn't that much. Not sure what close to 2K is, but we pay about $500 less than that. Yes, expensive, but in general, seemed like all the schools we looked at in Irvine were between 1250-1600 or so. I do agree that it is pricey, but at the same time, I have friends that live in New York and Chicago and they think what I pay is a bargain. And for most they were all within $150-$200, which is basically the price of cable / internet, so my rule was, if my wife liked one way more then the others (and I tended to agree, plus quite a few of my friends had nothing but great things to say from there experiences), than thankfully I'm in a position where I can make a sacrifice elsewhere (drive a little crappier care, own a little crappier house, whatever that might be).Irvinecommuter said:Bullsback said:When my wife and I visited Northwood Montessori, we were not impressed during our tour (least impressive of all the schools we visited, that said, part of that is just the "sales pitch" I presume it is actually a pretty solid school. Seemed like there were plenty of happy kids there. Our daughter goes to Leport and we love it (as does she), but I have never specifically asked about butt wiping and I'm not aware of any issues my daughter has had (she isn't 3, although she is potty trained, and the school played an integral part in the training).
LePort is unbelievably expensive though...close to $2,000 a month if you add in early and afternoon child care IIRC
Bullsback said:When we looked at the different schools, the difference between LePort and others wasn't that much. Not sure what close to 2K is, but we pay about $500 less than that. Yes, expensive, but in general, seemed like all the schools we looked at in Irvine were between 1250-1600 or so. I do agree that it is pricey, but at the same time, I have friends that live in New York and Chicago and they think what I pay is a bargain. And for most they were all within $150-$200, which is basically the price of cable / internet, so my rule was, if my wife liked one way more then the others (and I tended to agree, plus quite a few of my friends had nothing but great things to say from there experiences), than thankfully I'm in a position where I can make a sacrifice elsewhere (drive a little crappier care, own a little crappier house, whatever that might be).Irvinecommuter said:Bullsback said:When my wife and I visited Northwood Montessori, we were not impressed during our tour (least impressive of all the schools we visited, that said, part of that is just the "sales pitch" I presume it is actually a pretty solid school. Seemed like there were plenty of happy kids there. Our daughter goes to Leport and we love it (as does she), but I have never specifically asked about butt wiping and I'm not aware of any issues my daughter has had (she isn't 3, although she is potty trained, and the school played an integral part in the training).
LePort is unbelievably expensive though...close to $2,000 a month if you add in early and afternoon child care IIRC
In reality it goes to show, if you can afford preschool, no reason you can't afford saving for college. That said, I don't know how the teachers could do it. I have enough trouble with my two little ones, can't imagine being one of two teachers with a class full of 10 or 12 little one's.irvinehomeowner said:Montessori = 4 year pre college tuition
And there are no scholarships!![]()
bones said:Speaking of montessori, I have noticed that "montessori" in irvine is very wide ranging. Some don't seem to follow the Montessori principles fully.
Irvinecommuter said:bones said:Speaking of montessori, I have noticed that "montessori" in irvine is very wide ranging. Some don't seem to follow the Montessori principles fully.
Montesorri principles are pretty broad...essentially they emphasis kids learning at their own pace, mixed ages, and hands on play. There is a Montessori program that the instructors have to go through but other than that, it's open for interpretation.
Some Montesorri hired credentialed instructors/teachers while others don't.
bones said:Irvinecommuter said:bones said:Speaking of montessori, I have noticed that "montessori" in irvine is very wide ranging. Some don't seem to follow the Montessori principles fully.
Montesorri principles are pretty broad...essentially they emphasis kids learning at their own pace, mixed ages, and hands on play. There is a Montessori program that the instructors have to go through but other than that, it's open for interpretation.
Some Montesorri hired credentialed instructors/teachers while others don't.
Yea I get that part, but theres some "montessori" schools in Irvine that I feel just use the Montessori name to draw in parents b/c that's what popular at the moment. Not saying they don't practice the Montessori principles, but they deviate from it more than they should if they're supposed to be "montessori". Just my opinion.
Bullsback said:In reality it goes to show, if you can afford preschool, no reason you can't afford saving for college. That said, I don't know how the teachers could do it. I have enough trouble with my two little ones, can't imagine being one of two teachers with a class full of 10 or 12 little one's.irvinehomeowner said:Montessori = 4 year pre college tuition
And there are no scholarships!![]()
Yeah, when I've visited, I was amazed at the complete control that they have. Have total respect for what they do. Let me just put it this way, I absolutely couldn't do it full time. With my two, I am under a controlled chaos with a pure focus of making sure no one gets hurt (just over 2.5 and almost 1) haha.qwerty said:Bullsback said:In reality it goes to show, if you can afford preschool, no reason you can't afford saving for college. That said, I don't know how the teachers could do it. I have enough trouble with my two little ones, can't imagine being one of two teachers with a class full of 10 or 12 little one's.irvinehomeowner said:Montessori = 4 year pre college tuition
And there are no scholarships!![]()
I used to wonder this myself. Have you visited your kids class during the day? I've checked out a couple of classes at my daughters Montessori and the control the teacher (with assistants) has over 16 kids is crazy. In class my daughter puts all of her toys away (or whatever she is using). She comes home and it's like she forgets everything she learned at school. I thought about just stealing one of the teachers or aides to be our nanny.
Sounds like a cult. No child naturally puts toys away.qwerty said:I've checked out a couple of classes at my daughters Montessori and the control the teacher (with assistants) has over 16 kids is crazy. In class my daughter puts all of her toys away (or whatever she is using).