Are you ready to help retell the story of Montessori literacy for today’s world—rooted in a century of practice yet responsive to the urgencies of this moment?
We invite you to submit a proposal.
Montessori Literacy Today: Aligning Timeless Practice With Modern Demands
Purpose & Strategic Focus
The American Montessori Society community is standing at an inflection point. Across districts and continents, Montessori guides are being asked to demonstrate “evidence-based literacy,” align with the science of reading expectations, and show impact for diverse learners—while safeguarding the integrity of a century-old pedagogy.
This white paper will illuminate how Montessori literacy can meet—and exceed—the demands of today while remaining faithful to its philosophical roots. We are seeking a rigorous, practice-anchored manuscript that:
- Synthesizes current literacy research and policy expectations with Montessori principles and practices.
- Clarifies how Montessori environments support code, language, comprehension, and writing across the developmental planes.
- Identifies gaps, tensions, and misalignments (e.g., with curricula such as Fundations, Wit & Wisdom, HMH Into Reading, state standards, and science-of-reading frameworks).
- Proposes actionable pathways for schools, systems, and teacher education programs to strengthen Montessori-aligned, research-grounded literacy.
The final product should serve as a strategic guidance document for Montessori leaders, districts, and policymakers—a bridge between Montessori language shelves, standards, and system-level decision-making.
Core Questions to Be Addressed
Proposals should address most, but not necessarily all, of the following guiding questions. You may also propose additional, tightly aligned questions.
- What is distinctively “Montessori” about literacy?
- How do Montessori principles (e.g., prepared environment, auto-education, sensorial foundations, cosmic education) uniquely shape literacy development?
- How do Montessori principles (e.g., prepared environment, auto-education, sensorial foundations, cosmic education) uniquely shape literacy development?
- How does Montessori align with (and diverge from) contemporary literacy research?
- Where do Montessori practices support components such as phonemic awareness, phonics, vocabulary, fluency, comprehension, oral language, and writing?
- Where are there misperceptions or genuine gaps that must be addressed?
- How do Montessori literacy environments serve diverse learners today?
- Multilingual learners, students with learning differences, and children from historically marginalized communities.
- Equity implications: where is Montessori literacy closing gaps—and where is it at risk of reproducing them?
- What are the system-level pressures and opportunities?
- How are Montessori schools navigating alignment with mandated literacy curricula, state frameworks, district assessments, and accountability systems?
- What are emerging promising practices and pain points?
- What does “Montessori-aligned, research-grounded literacy” look like in practice?
- Concrete examples (case studies, vignettes, brief data snapshots) from classrooms, schools, or systems.
- Professional learning and teacher-education implications.
- What strategic recommendations should AMS and the broader field consider?
- Near-term, actionable steps for schools and systems.
- Longer-term recommendations for research, teacher education, accreditation, and policy.
Intended Audience
The white paper should be written in clear, accessible language for a well-educated professional audience, including:
- Montessori school leaders and guides (public, charter, and independent).
- District and system leaders overseeing Montessori programs.
- Teacher education and preparation programs.
- Policymakers and partners are seeking to understand how Montessori aligns with contemporary literacy expectations.
- Researchers and funders interested in literacy, equity, and innovative learning environments.
Eligibility & Author Profile
We welcome proposals from:
- Montessori practitioners (guides, coaches, school leaders).
- Researchers and academics (literacy, bilingual education, special education, and educational policy).
- Cross-sector collaborators (district leaders, curriculum specialists, assessment designers).
Single-author and multi-author proposals are both welcome. Proposals that bridge research and lived practice—for example, a researcher co-authoring with a school leader—are especially encouraged.
Submission Requirements
Proposal (Initial Submission)
Please submit a 1.5–2 page proposal (approx. 750–1,000 words) that includes:
- Working Title and Author(s)
- Problem Statement & Rationale
- What challenge(s) in Montessori literacy are you addressing, and why now?
- Conceptual Frame
- Key lenses (e.g., science of reading, equity, multilingualism, special education, systems change, etc.).
- Outline of the White Paper
- Proposed sections and key content points.
- Methods and Evidence Base
- Types of evidence you will draw on (e.g., peer-reviewed research, program data, case studies, practitioner interviews, policy analysis).
- Intended Contributions
- What will Montessori leaders, systems, and partners be able to do differently as a result of this paper?
Full White Paper (Invited Submission)
For authors selected to proceed:
- Length: 22–24 pages | ~5,500–6,500 words (all-in: main text, tables/figures, endnotes, references, and appendices).
- Format:
- 12-point, standard, accessible font, double-spaced (main text).
- APA-style citations and reference list.
- Use clear headings, subheadings, and brief call-out boxes where helpful.
- Content Expectations:
- Executive summary (1 page).
- Core narrative with integrated evidence.
- 2–4 short practice vignettes or mini-case studies.
- 1–3 figures or tables (e.g., alignment maps, models, frameworks, data snapshots).
- Concluding section with actionable recommendations for multiple stakeholder groups.
Reviewers will also consider overall strategic fit with the goals of the AMS white paper series on Montessori literacy.
Key Dates
- Proposal due: January 16, 2026
- Notification of invitation to submit full paper: January 30, 2026
- Full white paper draft due: March 6, 2026
- Peer/editorial feedback returned: March 23, 2026
- Final white paper due: April 10, 2026
- Publication & dissemination: April 24, 2026
Publication & Dissemination
The selected white paper will be:
- Published as part of the AMS White Paper Series on Montessori Literacy.
- Shared with AMS member schools, teacher education programs, and key partners.
- Highlighted in the AMS Research Digest and featured in relevant AMS events and communications.
How to Submit
Please submit your proposal as a single PDF document to:
Subject line: White Paper Proposal – Montessori Literacy
Include:
- Proposal document (per Section 5).
- Current CV or brief bio (1–2 paragraphs) for each author.
- Disclosure of any relevant funding or organizational affiliations.
