Summer Is the Perfect Canvas: Why Process Matters More Than Product
June 29, 2026

With the slower pace of summer, more time at home and outdoors, and more unstructured hours to fill, it’s a perfect time to pull art supplies out fo the closet, cover tables with paper, and unleash some creative energy!


What happens in these creative moments matters more than most of us realize. And how we respond to what children make matters just as much as the making itself.


The Process Is the Point


A foundational principle behind Montessori's approach to children's artmaking is that the process of making art is far more important than the product.


This can be difficult for us to internalize, because the product is what we most often see. It’s not that we don’t care about our children’s experience. But the painting is what comes home. The drawing gets taped to the refrigerator. We get handed the collage at pickup. So it’s natural to focus on what is right in front of us.


But it is the moments when children are deeply absorbed in moving paint across paper, pressing clay between their fingers, or scribbling long, looping lines with a crayon that something essential is happening. This is a deep form of creative expression and an outlet for feelings children may not yet have words for. Plus, children are developing visual-spatial skills, fine motor coordination, and the capacity for innovative thinking. During art-making, children are problem-solving in real time, making decisions about color, form, pressure, and space. And they are experiencing the deep satisfaction of following an internal creative impulse all the way through to its end.


What Not to Say and What to Say Instead


One of the most important things we can do to support young children's creative process is to be thoughtful in our comments. Even well-meaning responses can shift children's focus from their own inner experience to an adult's reaction. Once that shift happens, children begin making art for the audience rather than for themselves.


Comments like, "That's beautiful!" or "What is it?" or "Can you make one for Grandma?" are all, in different ways, asking children to produce something for someone else or to explain and justify what they've made. Neither of these supports genuine creative development.


Instead, focus on objective, process-focused observations. For example, "I can see you used a lot of green and purple today," or "Your lines extend all the way to the edge of the paper," or "It looks like you really enjoyed making that." These responses acknowledge children's work without judging it, and they communicate that what they made matters, and what they experienced while making it also matters.


Young children often cannot (and should not have to) explain their art. The experience of making art is enough.


A Summer Opportunity: Freedom to Explore


Summer is an ideal time to offer children a real variety of creative materials and the freedom to choose what calls to them. Different children will be drawn to different media, and what each child gets from a new experience will be entirely their own. Variety is important precisely because it sparks different kinds of interest and expression in different children.


Here are some starting points for summer art exploration, appropriate for toddlers and young children:


Offer crayons and large paper for open-ended scribbling and mark-making. It’s best to begin by offering large spaces before moving to smaller ones. Large paper means that children's bodies have room to move freely. Easel painting or watercolors offer the joy of color mixing and the experience of a brush moving across a surface. Play-dough and clay can satisfy children's deep need to manipulate, press, and build with their hands. Collage materials (paper scraps, leaves, fabric, natural objects) invite children to arrange and compose in ways that feel both free and purposeful. Chalk on pavement (or dark paper, if the weather isn’t cooperating) is especially magical outdoors on a summer morning.


From a practical standpoint, it’s helpful to protect clothing and surfaces before beginning, so children can work freely without worry (theirs or ours!). Choose non-toxic materials, particularly for the youngest children who may still explore things with their mouths. And resist the urge to direct the outcome. Children who cover their paper entirely in black paint are not doing it wrong. They are doing exactly what they need to do.


What to Do With What They Make


Not every piece of art needs to be saved or displayed. Saving a selection of artwork from across the summer (early pieces, middle-of-summer pieces, late-summer pieces) can serve as a timeline or record of your children's creative development and a meaningful way to look back together at the end of the season. If there isn’t room to display selected pieces, a simple folder or large envelope can also work perfectly for this. When you look through the artwork together, let your child lead the conversation or simply look at it together without words.


The goal is never gallery-ready products. The goal is children who trust their own creative impulses, who feel free to experiment and make a mess and start over, and who carry the confidence of someone who has been allowed to make things in their own way.


Summer is long, and the canvas is wide! Let children fill it however best suits their needs!


We'd love to hear how your family is spending the summer months. And we always love to share how we support creative exploration in our prepared environments in Miami Beach. Contact us to learn more!

July 6, 2026
As parents, we quickly learn that young children hold ultimate control over three main areas of daily life: eating, sleeping, and toileting. When we lean into power struggles over these routines, it can feel exhausting for everyone involved. Instead, the Montessori approach invites us to step back and help children develop the intrinsic skills and body awareness they need to achieve true mastery over these essential functions. In our infant and toddler communities at The Montessori Academy at St. John’s, children naturally learn to prepare snack, rest when their bodies are tired, and dress themselves. Alongside these milestones, they are also developing the neurological and physical control needed to stay dry. We intentionally refer to this journey as "toilet learning" or "toilet awareness," rather than "toilet training." After all, we aren’t training our children through external conditioning. Rather, we are walking alongside them as they discover the joy of physical independence and become masters of their own bodies. While this process takes time, it does not have to feel daunting. Here is how we approach toilet learning at MASJ, and how you can mirror these practices at home. 1. Establish Body Awareness from the Beginning Toilet awareness does not start at two or three years old—it begins at birth. From the earliest days of life, we can speak respectfully to our infants about their bodies during diaper changes. Saying, "Your diaper is wet from your urine," or "I am wiping your bottom," helps them connect words to their physical sensations. To support this awareness, we highly recommend using cloth diapers or moving into cotton underwear as they enter toddlerhood. Modern disposable diapers are remarkably effective at wicking away moisture. While convenient, they often prevent a child from feeling the actual sensation of being wet, which delays the brain-to-body feedback loop. Phrases to try: "Does your diaper feel wet or dry right now?" "Your underpants feel heavy. You had a lot of pee come out." "I see you are squatting down and concentrating. Your body is working on a poop." 2. Form a True Collaboration When a child is wet or soiled, we view the diaper change or bathroom visit as an opportunity for connection, not an interruption to the day. We invite the child to actively collaborate in the process. Even young toddlers can assist by pulling down their own pants, grabbing a clean pair of underwear, or placing their soiled clothes into the laundry basket. This active participation satisfies their developmental need for functional assignment and autonomy, reducing the urge to resist. Phrases to try: "You can hold your shirt up while I help you pull down your pants." "You open this side of the diaper tabs, and I’ll open this side." "I will take a turn to wipe, and then it will be your turn." 3. State the Facts Safely and Plainly In our MASJ classrooms, our Guides stay entirely matter-of-fact throughout the toileting routine. Elimination is a completely natural bodily function, and we treat it with calm neutrality. If a child experiences an accident and wets the floor, we avoid expressions of disappointment. Similarly, when they successfully use the toilet, we avoid excessive clapping or rewards. Over-celebrating can accidentally introduce performance anxiety or make the child dependent on external praise. Instead, we acknowledge the direct reality. Phrases to try: "Pee and poop go into the toilet." "Your underpants are wet. Let’s change into dry ones. Do you remember where your clean clothes are kept?" "I see pee on the floor. Please bring me the clean-up cloth from the bathroom so we can dry the puddle together." 4. Keep the Attitude Light and Friendly Children are incredibly sensitive to adult emotions and can easily internalize our underlying stress or impatience. Maintaining a light, relaxed, and encouraging attitude ensures that children feel safe and comfortable with their normal bodily processes. We want to entirely eliminate any sense of shame, frustration, or disgust around toilet learning. Phrases to try: "We can always change into dry clothes, it's no big deal!" "Everyone used to wear diapers when they were small—even Mommy and Daddy. Now we use the toilet, and you will learn to use it too." 5. Step Away from Tricks or Treats At MASJ, we offer the toilet based on the consistent rhythms of our daily routine, but we never force a child to sit. We also tend to avoid asking open-ended questions like, "Do you want to use the toilet?" as a toddler's natural default answer is often a resounding "No!" Instead, find the comfortable middle ground by clearly stating that it is time to visit the bathroom as part of a transition (e.g., before going outside, or right after waking up). We intentionally avoid sticker charts, treats, or bribes. While these tactics can produce short-term compliance, they interfere with the long-term goal of developing genuine self-assurance and internal motivation. Trust the process and trust your child's natural drive toward mastery. Phrases to try: "It is time to walk to the bathroom and try sitting on the toilet." "You listened to your body and peed in the toilet. You did it all by yourself." Respecting the Journey When caregiving routines are rushed, children miss the opportunity to understand their own physical identity. Taking the time to slow down, communicate clearly, and invite collaboration shows the utmost respect for your child's developing personality.  By guiding your toddler through toilet learning with patience and consistency, you are helping them take a monumental step toward becoming a confident, fully independent young person. If you are currently navigating this milestone at home, remember that our AMI-trained Guides are always here to support your family. Feel free to reach out to discuss how we can beautifully bridge the routines of our school environments with your home.
Child seated at a table, peeling an orange over a plate with small food pieces.
June 22, 2026
Discover how Montessori self-care activities build independence, confidence, and capability through everyday summer routines.