

A few good seats still available at MacDowell Montessori
You know by now that I support public Montessori, a method that has been responsible for some of the highest achieving schools in MPS.
(Note: I say "a" method, not "the" method in response to some talkbacks on my commentary recently on the opening of the new Howard Avenue Montessori School. There are other methods, too, that are doing good things – one's mind immediately jumps to the language immersion schools and the IB programs as examples.)
Today, I visited the former Juneau High School on 64th and Mount Vernon (sorta midway between Maxie's Southern Comfort and Balistreri's Bluemound Inn, for you dining fans out there), and got a tour of MacDowell Montessori from the K3-12 school's principal Andrea Corona.
In addition to the beautiful 1930s moderne building designed by Van Ryn & DeGelleke – my Facebook friends will get to see (or suffer through) most of the photos I took, and I'm posting a few here, too – I had a good chat with Corona, who is still overseeing the move over the summer from MacDowell's previous location at 17th and Highland.
What surprised me most is that the newly relocated school has seats available. Yes, folks, if you're looking for a great public Montessori school option for this year – school starts one week from today – MacDowell has openings at most grade levels. And, get this parents, there will be an on-site day care option for the half-day kids (color me jealous)!
Principal Phil Dosmann tells me there are a few K4 seats open at the new Howard Avenue Montessori, too. They also offer after-school care for half-day kids.
MacDowell was MPS' first traditional public Montessori, though Highland Community School – chartered through MPS – is older still. It's got some of the best veteran teachers in the system and there's also a crop of talented younger teachers, too. Some of them made the move to MacDowell when the Montessori High School (which had been at Juneau, too) closed in June.
MacDowell will be a unique option among Montessori elementaries. Because it is located in a building designed as a high school, there are large classrooms, a sprawling library, a giant auditorium and gym, and plenty of green playfields adjacent.
Today, most teachers were hard at work today readying their rooms, a task made more difficult than normal thanks to the move. Ones who were close to ready were helping others get their rooms together, too.
The mood was cheery, with the hopes that accompany the approach of a new school year, and it was a visit that reminded me how much I love the atmosphere of a good school.
If you're curious, call the school (414-935-1400), meet Corona and her teachers, see the building. Tell her I sent you.
Talkbacks
writerlizlincoln | Aug. 29, 2012 at 1:09 p.m. (report)
Thanks for writing this. We're hoping to send our daughter there for 3K next year. And with so much negative news, it's nice to hear positive things about MPS.
| Rate this: |
![]() |
1 comment about this article. Post your comment/review now |
Facebook comments
Disclaimer: Please note that Facebook comments are posted through Facebook and cannot be approved, edited or declined by OnMilwaukee.com. The opinions expressed in Facebook comments do not necessarily reflect those of OnMilwaukee.com or its staff.
Recent Articles & Blogs by Bobby Tanzilo
Luminescent new MOWA lets Wisconsin artists shine
Published May 24, 2013
Difficult as it is to imagine now that I've seen the place, I was almost a bit worried I might have trouble spotting the new Museum of Wisconsin Art on my first visit recently. Turns out there's no way I could miss Hammel Green & Abrahamson architect Jim Shields' luminescent West Bend building, the pointed prow of which seems to make a statement by aiming itself not southeast toward Milwaukee, but northwest, toward the broader expanse of the state.
Inspired by Aimee Mann, Ben Smith salutes The Bronze Fonz
Published May 23, 2013
More melodious love for the Bronze Fonz has arrived from afar. Yesterday, West Chester, Pa.-based singer and songwriter Ben Smith wrote to share one of his tunes with us. It's one that pays homage to the Bronze Fonz, says Smith.
Traveling Slugger show steps up to bat at Miller Park
Published May 23, 2013
If Discovery World's recent "Baseball - Innovations That Changed the Game" exhibit caught your attention, head over to Miller Park as the Brewers tackle the Pirates this weekend, May 24-26. In the stadium's concourse, you'll find a traveling interactive experience created specifically for this series at Miller Park by the Louisville Slugger Museum & Factory in Louisville, Ky.
Krause's pamphlet considers the junction of comedy and politics
Published May 22, 2013
It seems, at the outset, like an unexpected marriage: "The acts of thinking comedically and behaving democratically share enough analogous elements that an extended comparison between the two makes each much clearer." But, Milwaukee writer and musician Adam Krause sat down at the intersection of Comedy and Politics to have a think and the result is "The Revolution Will Be Hilarious," which in a mere 41 pages makes a cogent and, in the end, startlingly simple point.
Getting to the bottom of Bay View
Published May 21, 2013
A group of students from MPS' Bay View and Bradley Tech High Schools is working in concert with Discovery World to excavate a lost block of homes in Bay View this weekend.
Scouting the Sherbrooke fish fry
Published May 21, 2013
After a big renovation and a quiet relaunch, Shepherd's on North in Wauwatosa has now been officially re-christened "The Sherbrooke," and I stopped in recently on a Friday to scout the fish fry.
Pabst's enduring pavilion faces extinction
Published May 20, 2013
Thanks to Erik Larson's 2003 bestseller, "The Devil in the White City," yet another generation is fascinated by the 1893 Chicago World's Fair: Columbian Exposition. Despite its enduring - in itself somewhat surprising - popularity, little remains of this by all accounts stunning little temporary city. One survivor serves as the entrance and gift shop to The Pabst Mansion, 2000 W. Wisconsin Ave., and it is in increasingly desperate condition.
The coolest record of the '60s folk revival was made in Milwaukee
Published May 20, 2013
As part of "The Avant Garde Coffee House Project" exhibit currently on view, there's a glass-topped case with some posters and a record. It's a pretty nondescript thing, frankly, with a black and white photo and some not especially artful text. But that little record - "Blues, Rags and Hollers," by folk blues trio Koerner, Ray & Glover - made a big bang when it was released in June 1963. And it was made in Milwaukee.
Former Color Truth frontman Steinbach finds the road back
Published May 19, 2013
It's been a long time since we've heard from Zach Steinbach. Nearly five years ago Steinbach fronted The Color Truth, a Milwaukee band that seemed poised to take the next step with its big, melodic, poppy rock and roll. The band fizzled out a couple years back, leaving Steinbach a bit lost. But now, he's back. He's got a band, and he's got a new solo record. More, than anything, he says, he's got a new lease on a musical life.
Let's put the "front" back in Front Street
Published May 16, 2013
For a variety of reasons, I've been thinking about Front Street, which now seems so ironically named, fronting as it does onto nothing and serving as the ultimate definition of a Milwaukee "backstreet." In my mind, I see something much different that can be seen on the block today.
Like Us
Follow Us











