Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Military Kindergarten

Hey! Hey! Wonderful to see you today! I'm glad you parachuted out of cyberspace and landed right next to the coffeepot. So help yourself while you're there and snag a virtual treat to munch on at the same time, why don't'cha, as I bend your ear about another version of the 'school of hard knocks'...

At the Albert Kindergarten, in Taichung, Taiwan, children aged three to six don camouflage outfits and take part in a mandatory exercise program modeled after marine drills. Their parents hope the rough training will prepare them for the hardships of life, but there are those who criticize the preschool for pushing the kids too hard and exposing them to injury.

For one to two hours a day, the children enrolled at Taichung’s Albert Kindergarten perform a series a series of physical exercises inspired by military drills. Principal Fong Yun believes Taiwanese kids lack confidence and courage compared to youngsters from other countries, so over 10 years ago she teamed up with pediatric professor Chen Yi-hsin to develop a special program that combined military drills and gymnastics to boost their physical and mental strength. 

Yun is convince her training will help the students deal with hardships like tough college admission exams, job hunting and even marriage. Many Taiwanese parents seem to share her beliefs, as all the classes at Albert Kindergarten are full and parents drive from over half an hour ever day just to drop their kids off here. The children climb ladders, do handstands, backflips and all kinds of other exercises that even hardened marines sometimes find difficult. In order to graduate, they must prove they’ve mastered the entire routine by passing a challenging test.

Kind of the direct opposite to the Montessori philosophy of letting the children decide what they want to learn that day, eh.  But with the classes full, I suppose we'd have to gather that there is a call for this kind of school. Me? I vote for Montessori!

See ya, eh!

Bob

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