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montessori

Reggio Emilia, Montessori, or Waldorf: Which Educational Approach is Right for Your Child?
Alternative Education | Child Development | Learn

Reggio Emilia, Montessori, or Waldorf: Which Educational Approach is Right for Your Child?

Montessori Parenting: A Guide to Raising Confident, Independent, and Curious Kids
Child Development | Learn

Montessori Parenting: A Guide to Raising Confident, Independent, and Curious Kids

Montessori vs Public School: What’s the difference?
Alternative Education | Raising Confident Kids

Montessori vs Public School: What’s the difference?

a Montessori floor bed for toddlers the pros and cons of using one
Child Development | Parenting | Raising Confident Kids

Pros and cons of utilizing a Montessori-Style floor bed

Together we’ll slow down, stop rushing our kids through life and raise lifelong learners who will become confident and independent adults. 

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thealannagallo

📖 Former teacher (M.Ed.)
🧠 Raising curious, uninfluenceable kids
🚫 Rethinking play, screens & school

Can we be honest about the homeschooling fear for Can we be honest about the homeschooling fear for a second?Because I’ve talked to a lot of parents who are curious about it, and the fear is almost never really about the kids. It’s about the script. The one we were all handed that says responsible parents send their kids to school, period, end of story.And stepping off that script is scary because it’s unfamiliar and people will have opinions, and now suddenly you’re the one who has to justify your choices at every family dinner for the next decade.I get it. I really do.But here’s what I’ve learned after years of teaching inside the traditional system and then building something completely different for our own family: most of the fear dissolves the moment you start actually looking at your options instead of just imagining the worst-case scenario.You don’t have to have it all figured out to start asking better questions.Follow @thealannagallo for honest, no-sugarcoating conversations about homeschooling, alternative education, and what it looks like to raise kids outside the path everyone assumes you’ll take.
This is just our why. And we’re not apologizing fo This is just our why. And we’re not apologizing for it.Follow @thealannagallo if this feels aligned.
We will be over here reading banned books, fightin We will be over here reading banned books, fighting for social justice, having high academic standards, loving on our immigrant friends and keeping our kids far away from social media.If this is your homeschool vibe let’s be friends ✌🏻Secular homeschooling | academic homeschooling | breaking homeschool stereotypes
Let me be honest: this isn’t a popular approach. Let me be honest: this isn’t a popular approach.Most people around us are raising kids to respect authority, follow the rules, and not ask too many questions. And I get it. It’s easier. It’s comfortable. It’s what we were all taught to do too.But I kept coming back to the same thought: if I never teach my kids to question the world around them, how will they ever know when something is worth questioning?So we do it differently. We have debates at the dinner table. We welcome “but WHY though?” We sit with uncomfortable conversations instead of shutting them down.It doesn’t make parenting easier. It makes it more honest.Follow @thealannagallo if you’re raising kids who think for themselves too.
Not everyone is going to be comfortable with this Not everyone is going to be comfortable with this one. And that’s kind of the point.If you’re raising kids who question, wonder, and think for themselves: you’re in the right place.Follow @thealannagallo for more.
I get it. Homeschooling feels scary.What if I’m I get it. Homeschooling feels scary.What if I’m not qualified? What if they fall behind? What if I ruin them?Those are real fears. I had every single one of them.But somewhere along the way I started questioning the fears I WASN’T having. The ones I’d just… accepted as normal.I wasn’t afraid of my kid staring at a school-issued screen for six hours. I wasn’t afraid of a curriculum built around standardized tests instead of actual curiosity. I wasn’t afraid of recess being treated like a privilege instead of a necessity.I had just stopped questioning those things because everyone else had too.This isn’t about convincing you to homeschool. It’s about giving yourself permission to look at the whole picture... not just the parts that feel familiar.What are you actually afraid of?Follow @thealannagallo for an honest look at what education can look like when you start asking different questions.
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