Skip to main content

Our Story

Our Story

Learn about what sets us apart.

 

Learning Occurs Naturally

Read our belief statements on children and teens.

Two young children work together with buckets and cloth

Independence & Interdependence

Children and teens are given the opportunity to take care of themselves, each other, and the environment--gardening, cooking, building, moving gracefully, speaking politely, doing social work in the community, and more.

Freedom

Children and teens are given the freedom to learn at their own pace and in the manner that best facilitates the learning process.  The result is children with confidence to know what they do well, the ability to recognize what they need to improve upon, and the freedom to accomplish goals that best suit their individual strengths and challenges.

Children excitedly swinging together while other children watch from the background

A group of teens sit around a table, engaged in conversation.

A Prepared Environment

A Montessori learning environment differs from traditional education in that it allows learning to occur naturally.  A well-prepared environment includes trained, attentive adults who know children and teens well and can skillfully guide their learning journey.  The result?  A positive, challenging, learner-centric atmosphere.

Eight Learning Constructs

Social.  Intellectual.  Physical.  Aesthetic.  Ethical.  Emotional.  Creative.  School Success.

Not only are our children and teens learning state-stipulated academic topics, they are learning valuable life skills that will produce happy, competent adults.  That is what educating the whole child means.

Children play a game in a fenced-in area, one about to throw a ball.

A History of Community Montessori

1998

Community Montessori is born: Through the dedication of a small group of people the school earned a non-profit status, opening at capacity with 59 children.

2001

Charter Law passes in Indiana: After years of lobbying and partnerships with legislative allies, the Charter School law passed in our state.

2002

Community Montessori joined with the Charter School movement: The school is authorized by Ball State University.

2006

Our "Dream School" vision is fulfilled and we move into our new permanent home.

2011

First class graduated in 2011: After our founding we added an age level every year. Today there are more than 200 graduate alumni.

2015

The Community Nurtury opens: Expanding a staff-serving program into a beautiful licensed home daycare.

2018

Community Montessori celebrates its 20th year!
undefined
undefined

2020/January

Food Pantry Set-up

Fall 2020

CASA grand opening

2022 Summer

Natural Playground (sept 29, ribbon cutting)

August 2024

New Early Ed Studio

2025/February

Courage Cabin Expansion

October 2025

CM has a bus

Realizing the Impossible, From the Start

In the early 1990s, Barbara Burke Fondren and Glenn Fondren began to explore options for educating their own children in New Albany, Indiana.  Barbara had begun her career as a teacher after earning her degree in Education from Indiana University.  When they began this research, they happened to view an episode of the show "60 Minutes" about Montessori education.  Barbara could not believe that she had never heard of this method during her education.  Barbara and Glenn became determined to make sure that a school offering the Montessori approach to educating children would be offered in our community.

fullsizeoutput_444c.jpeg

Initially, the hope for the school was that it would be able to be a part of the New Albany Floyd County public school system.  Even though the Superintendent at the time, Ed Adams, was very supportive of Montessori education, it was too expensive for the district to take on as a goal.  Barbara quotes herself as saying, "Well, if I find the money...will you open the school?"  Thus began her research about how a school could be funded as part of the school system, or opened independently.  Because of the options available the school was founded in 1998 as a private, non-profit organization, with two goals Barbara gave to the Board of Directors:  add an age level each year through high school and eventually be tuition-free (possible as a charter school).

In the late 1990s, there was a movement to create innovative, independent Charter schools to improve the educational environment and options in the nation.  Indiana was considering this option, and after years of lobbying by Barbara and other school leaders, as well as support by key Legislative partners like Teresa Lubbers, the Charter School law was passed in 2011 in Indiana.  After meeting with staff, parents, and learners, there was a consensus of the members of the school that they would agree to the additional requirements of becoming a public Charter school, and applied for authorization from Ball State University.  Since then, Community Montessori has been a tuition-free, independent Charter School for grades K-12 serving any family that resides in the state of Indiana.

fullsizeoutput_4444.jpeg

The school began with only 59 learners enrolled, but added an age level each year until the school reached capacity with over 600 learners ages birth through 18.  The school also offers infant and toddler care through the Community Nurtury and tuition-based Early Education for ages 3 and 4.  The Charter School maintains a waitlist of over 100 children and teens throughout the year and has a retention rate higher than 95%.