Does a Montessori child's classroom independence actually follow them home into the kitchen and around the house? This study answers that question with detailed parent observations from 99 families at Blue Blocks Montessori School, Hyderabad (children aged roughly 2¼ to 6 years), collected over January and February 2026. Across eleven care-of-environment behaviours and nine food-participation activities, a clear texture emerges: plant care and material organisation are the most embedded household behaviours, while surface-maintenance routines like table-wiping remain rare — a gap the authors attribute to the difference between behaviours that transfer by adult modelling and those that require deliberate environmental redesign. In the kitchen, the picture is notably strong: roughly half of children participate in food preparation at least several times a week, 55% volunteer to help without being asked, and adults overwhelmingly report a low-interference teaching stance and high tolerance for mistakes. Five qualitative themes drawn from parent reflections give the data its grain — child-led ecological engagement, the kitchen as a site of Indian cultural apprenticeship, the structural constraints of joint-family living, safety anxieties around real tools, and the role of consistent invitation. The paper closes with five concrete recommendations for home–school partnership, including reframing Indian culinary practice as authentic Montessori practical life and tracking independent snack preparation as a graduation milestone. Part of the Blue Blocks Home As The First Classroom series.
Blue Blocks Micro Research Institute (Thu,) studied this question.
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