Nontraditional Learning
Children thrive in both our indoor and outdoor classrooms where curiosity about the world drives them to learn. We provide professional guidance, the prepared environment, and scientifically developed materials for children to live
up to their full potential.
Learning Happens through purposeful activity
Children work with specially designed learning materials, manipulating and investigating them to master the lessons they embody.
abstract ideas in concrete form
Children use real objects to translate abstract ideas into concrete form. The example above, the binomial cube, physically represents a mathematical equation, which is (a + b)³ = (a + b) (a + b) (a + b) = a³ + 3a²b + 3ab² + b³.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR Outdoor learning
We are lucky to have a safe and secure 13-acre campus which provides students with many opportunities to work and play outside. Each classroom also has an exterior door, so students have access to the prepared outdoor learning environment daily.
Committed professionals
Our committed and credentialed professionals foster a child's cognitive, physical, and social/emotional well-being, leading children to become enthusiastic, intrinsically motivated learners.
TMA at a Glance
Our Global Community Celebrating DEIB
Maria Montessori’s educational philosophy, emphasizing equality, inclusivity, and the empowerment of marginalized communities, was rooted in the belief that every child, regardless of their background, deserves access to quality education. With students and staff members representing more than 20 countries, we consider TMA to be a small-scale global community.
Highly Committed Teachers
29% of our teachers are in their second decade of service at TMA, while the average tenure of lead classroom teachers at TMA is 9 years. The average tenure of all teaching staff at TMA is 7.5 years.
Accreditation
“The child who has never learned to work by himself, to set goals for his own acts, or to be the master of his own force of will is recognizable in the adult who lets others guide his will and feels a constant need for approval of others.”
- Maria Montessori, Education and Peace
A Walk through Early Childhood
What does a typical day look like?
Indoor Classroom
Students engage in academic and other purposeful work using hands-on, scientifically developed materials.
Outdoor Classroom
Students engage in academic work, gardening, animal care, gross motor development, and imaginative play.
TMA Programs
Lower and Upper School
Developmental stages of learning are at the core of a Montessori education. Our Lower School is designed for children between 6 weeks and 6 years of age, and our Upper School is for children between 6 and 12 years old. Within each school, there are programs designed to enhance learning for each specific developmental stage.
Process vs. Product Based Learning
Infant – 6 weeks to 18 months
Toddler – 18 months to 3 years
Early Childhood – 3 to 6 years
Lower Elementary – 6-9 years
Upper Elementary – 9-12 years
A Peek Inside
FAQs
Usually, our operational hours are from 7:00 am to 6:00 pm. Due to the new restrictions for the 2020-21 school year, we are only able to provide care between the hours of 7:30 am and 4:30 pm.
Infant, Toddler, and Early Childhood
The school day is from 8:30 am to 3:30 pm, with Before Care from 7:30-8:30 am and Extended Day from 3:30-4:30 pm.
Elementary
The school day is from 8:00 am to 3:30 pm, with Extended Day from 3:30-4:30 pm.
Under normal circumstances, the new school year starts with our summer term, the day after Memorial Day, near the end of May or beginning of June depending on the calendar. This is the beginning of our 12-month option. Our fall term and 10-month option begins in August and closely follows the Arlington ISD school calendar, though, we usually begin a week before AISD.
We are open for the 2020-2021 school year! The first day of school was August 10 and the last day will be May 28. We have added an additional 2 weeks to the school year to try to offset possible future stay-at-home orders.
Our ratios vary by program and have changed for the 2020-21 school year due to COVID-19:
-- Infant – 1:4 (2 teachers for 8 students)
-- Toddler – 1:7 (2 teachers for 14 students)
-- Early Childhood – 1:10 (2 teachers to 20 students)
-- Elementary – 1:10 (2 teacher to 20 students)
While these are the minimum ratios, we have an additional teacher available for each of the Infant, Toddler, and Early Childhood classrooms throughout the day. Elementary students also participate in Enrichment classes with Enrichment Specialist teachers.
All families provide their own healthy lunch options for their children.
Parents provide snacks and lunch for children enrolled in the Infant program.
A few times each year, families with students enrolled in the Toddler and Early Childhood programs will receive a list of groceries to purchase to bring for the classroom snack. As part of the Practical Life work in class, students will prepare snack each day.
Lower Elementary students will be assigned a day each month to bring the classroom snack. Upper Elementary students will bring snacks for themselves each day.
The nap schedule for infants is individualized and based on an infant’s age and need.
Toddlers and 2.5 to 3-year old Early Childhood students take a nap in the afternoon, after lunch.
Early Childhood students who are 4-years old are asked to rest for at least 30 minutes each day, with some still needing a full nap and others only resting their bodies for a short time.
Early Childhood students who are 5-years old do not nap and take part in special enrichment classes or work in the afternoon.
Parents of children with diagnosed allergies or asthma are required to provide the school with an individualized health care plan, signed by the child’s medical provider. A list of children with medically documented food allergies is posted in every classroom throughout the school, and a list of the classroom allergens is posted outside of each room.
TMA was established as a parent cooperative and, as such, requires parental involvement. Not only does community service help to build stronger bonds between community members, but it also provides excellent modeling for the volunteerism that we wish to instill in our students.
Parents pay a Community Service Fee of $300 each year, $150 for the fall term and $150 for the spring term. If one or more members of your family volunteer at TMA for 5 hours each semester or 10 hours for the year, you will be refunded the entirety of the Community Service Fee, or you may contribute it to the Scholarship Fund.
Several forms of communication are used to meet the needs of our community. These include email, texting, phone calls, Microsoft Teams, written documentation, parent/teacher conferences, a parent portal on our website, a closed Facebook group, and Bloomz, a photo/video sharing app so parents can catch glimpses of the work their children are completing.
We produce a weekly e-newsletter to keep parents informed about school-wide activities and events which is available via email, text, our closed Facebook group, the parent portal, and through Bloomz.
For infants, in additional to daily, in-person communication, teachers and parents complete a daily form so both parties know when diapers were changed, meals/snacks were eaten, and naps were taken.
Injuries will be promptly treated by a staff member and parents will be notified either by telephone or through a copy of a completed Accident/Incident Report form. Parents will receive a short report which documents how, when, and where and accident or incident occurred.
FAQs
Usually, our operational hours are from 7:00 am to 6:00 pm. Due to the new restrictions for the 2020-21 school year, we are only able to provide care between the hours of 7:30 am and 4:30 pm.
Infant, Toddler, and Early Childhood
The school day is from 8:30 am to 3:30 pm, with Before Care from 7:30-8:30 am and Extended Day from 3:30-4:30 pm.
Elementary
The school day is from 8:00 am to 3:30 pm, with Extended Day from 3:30-4:30 pm.
For the Lower School, the new school year starts the day after Memorial Day, near the end of May or beginning of June depending on the calendar. Our Upper School begins in August and closely follows the Arlington ISD school calendar, though, we usually begin a week before AISD.
Our ratios vary by program and have been lowered due to COVID-19:
-- Infant – 1:4 (2 teachers for 8 students)
-- Toddler – 1:7 (2 teachers for 14 students)
-- Early Childhood – 1:10 (2 teachers to 20 students)
-- Elementary – 1:10 (2 teacher to 20 students)
While these are the minimum ratios, we have an additional teacher available for each of the Infant, Toddler, and Early Childhood classrooms throughout the day. Elementary students also participate in Enrichment classes with Enrichment Specialist teachers.
All families provide their own healthy lunch options for their children.
Parents provide snacks and lunch for children enrolled in the Infant program.
A few times each year, families with students enrolled in the Toddler and Early Childhood programs will receive a list of groceries to purchase to bring for the classroom snack. As part of the Practical Life work in class, students will prepare snack each day.
Lower Elementary students will be assigned a day each month to bring the classroom snack. Upper Elementary students will bring snacks for themselves each day.
The nap schedule for infants is individualized and based on an infant’s age and need.
Toddlers and 2.5 to 3-year old Early Childhood students take a nap in the afternoon, after lunch.
Early Childhood students who are 4-years old are asked to rest for at least 30 minutes each day, with some still needing a full nap and others only resting their bodies for a short time.
Early Childhood students who are 5-years old do not nap and take part in special enrichment classes or work in the afternoon.
Parents of children with diagnosed allergies or asthma are required to provide the school with an individualized health care plan, signed by the child’s medical provider. A list of children with medically documented food allergies is posted in every classroom throughout the school, and a list of the classroom allergens is posted outside of each room.
TMA was established as a parent cooperative and, as such, requires parental involvement. Not only does community service help to build stronger bonds between community members, but it also provides excellent modeling for the volunteerism that we wish to instill in our students.
Parents pay a Community Service Fee of $300 each year, $150 for the fall term and $150 for the spring term. If one or more members of your family volunteer at TMA for 5 hours each semester or 10 hours for the year, you will be refunded the entirety of the Community Service Fee, or you may contribute it to the Scholarship Fund.
Several forms of communication are used to meet the needs of our community. These include email, texting, phone calls, Microsoft Teams, written documentation, parent/teacher conferences, a parent portal on our website, a closed Facebook group, and Bloomz, a photo/video sharing app so parents can catch glimpses of the work their children are completing.
We produce a weekly e-newsletter to keep parents informed about school-wide activities and events which is available via email, text, our closed Facebook group, the parent portal, and through Bloomz.
For infants, in additional to daily, in-person communication, teachers and parents complete a daily form so both parties know when diapers were changed, meals/snacks were eaten, and naps were taken.
Injuries will be promptly treated by a staff member and parents will be notified either by telephone or through a copy of a completed Accident/Incident Report form. Parents will receive a short report which documents how, when, and where and accident or incident occurred.
FAQs
We are open between 7:00 am and 6:00 pm, Monday through Friday. The school day is from 8:30 am to 3:30 pm, with Before Care from 7:00-8:30 am and Extended Day from 3:30-4:30 pm or Extended Day Plus from 3:30-6:00 pm.
Yes. Our enrollment contracts cover an entire school year. If you are admitted after the beginning of a school year, your tuition is pro-rated based on when you enroll. There is a 3-week trial for students enrolled in our Lower School.
For the Lower School, the new school year starts the day after Memorial Day, near the end of May or beginning of June depending on the calendar. Our Upper School begins in August and closely follows the Arlington ISD school calendar, though, we usually begin a week before AISD.
Our ratios vary by program:
-- Infant – 1:4 (2 teachers for 8 students)
-- Toddler – 1:8 (2 teachers for 16 students)
-- Early Childhood – 1:12 (2 teachers to 24 students)
-- Elementary – 1:18 (1 teacher for up to 18 students)
While these are the minimum ratios, we have an additional teacher available for each of the Infant, Toddler, and Early Childhood classrooms throughout the day. Elementary students also participate in Enrichment classes with Enrichment Specialist teachers.
All families provide their own healthy lunch options for their children.
Parents provide snacks and lunch for children enrolled in the Infant program.
A few times each year, families with students enrolled in the Toddler and Early Childhood programs will receive a list of groceries to purchase to bring for the classroom snack. As part of the Practical Life work in class, students will prepare snack each day.
Elementary students will bring snacks for themselves each day.
The nap schedule for infants is individualized and based on an infant’s age and need.
Toddlers and 2.5 to 3-year old Early Childhood students take a nap in the afternoon, after lunch.
Early Childhood students who are 4-years old are asked to rest for at least 30 minutes each day, with some still needing a full nap and others only resting their bodies for a short time.
Early Childhood students who are 5-years old are asked to rest for at least 30 minutes a day and take part in special enrichment classes or work in the afternoon.
Parents of children with diagnosed allergies or asthma are required to provide the school with an individualized health care plan, signed by the child’s medical provider. A list of children with medically documented food allergies is posted in every classroom throughout the school, and a list of the classroom allergens is posted outside of each room.
TMA was established as a parent cooperative and, as such, requires parental involvement. Not only does community service help to build stronger bonds between community members, but it also provides excellent modeling for the volunteerism that we wish to instill in our students.
Parents pay a Community Service Fee of $300 each year, $150 for the fall term and $150 for the spring term. If one or more members of your family volunteer at TMA for 5 hours each semester or 10 hours for the year, you will be refunded the entirety of the Community Service Fee, or you may contribute it to the Scholarship Fund.
Several forms of communication are used to meet the needs of our community. These include email, texting, phone calls, Microsoft Teams, written documentation, parent/teacher conferences, a parent portal on our website, a closed Facebook group, and Bloomz, a photo/video sharing app so parents can catch glimpses of the work their children are completing.
We produce a weekly e-newsletter to keep parents informed about school-wide activities and events which is available via email, text, our closed Facebook group, the parent portal, and through Bloomz.
For infants, in additional to daily, in-person communication, teachers and parents complete a daily form so both parties know when diapers were changed, meals/snacks were eaten, and naps were taken.
Injuries will be promptly treated by a staff member and parents will be notified either by telephone or through a copy of a completed Accident/Incident Report form. Parents will receive a short report which documents how, when, and where and accident or incident occurred.
FAQs
We are open between 7:00 am and 6:00 pm, Monday through Friday. The school day is from 8:30 am to 3:30 pm, with Before Care from 7:00-8:30 am and Extended Day from 3:30-4:30 pm or Extended Day Plus from 3:30-6:00 pm.
Yes. Our enrollment contracts cover an entire year, offering options for a traditional school year of 10 months or a year-round, 12-month option. If you are admitted after the beginning of a school year, your tuition is pro-rated based on when you enroll. There is a 3-week trial for students enrolled in our Lower School.
Each new school year begins in August and closely follows the Arlington ISD school calendar. We offer enrollment throughout the school year on a space-available basis, with tuition being pro-rated for those who start later in the year.
Our ratios vary by program:
-- Infant – 1:4 (2 teachers for 8 students)
-- Toddler – 1:8 (2 teachers for 16 students)
-- Early Childhood – 1:12 (2 teachers to 24 students)
-- Elementary – 1:18 (1 teacher for up to 18 students)
While these are the minimum ratios, we have an additional teacher available for each of the Infant, Toddler, and Early Childhood classrooms throughout the day. Elementary students also participate in Enrichment classes with Enrichment Specialist teachers.
All families provide their own healthy lunch options for their children.
Parents provide snacks and lunch for children enrolled in the Infant program.
A few times each year, families with students enrolled in the Toddler and Early Childhood programs will receive a list of groceries to purchase to bring for the classroom snack. As part of the Practical Life work in class, students will prepare snack each day.
Elementary students will bring snacks for themselves each day.
The nap schedule for infants is individualized and based on an infant’s age and need.
Toddlers and 3- and 4-year-old Early Childhood students take a nap in the afternoon, after lunch.
Early Childhood students who are 5-years-old take part in special enrichment classes and have another work cycle in the afternoon.
Parents of children with diagnosed allergies or asthma are required to provide the school with an individualized health care plan, signed by the child’s medical provider. A list of children with medically documented food allergies is posted in every classroom throughout the school, and a list of the classroom allergens is posted outside of each room.
TMA was established as a parent cooperative and, as such, requires parental involvement. Not only does community service help to build stronger bonds between community members, but it also provides excellent modeling for the volunteerism that we wish to instill in our students.
Parents pay a Community Service Fee of $300 each year, $150 for the fall term and $150 for the spring term. If one or more members of your family volunteer at TMA for 5 hours each semester or 10 hours for the year, you will be refunded the entirety of the Community Service Fee, or you may contribute it to the Scholarship Fund.
Several forms of communication are used to meet the needs of our community. These include email, texting, phone calls, written documentation, parent/teacher conferences, a parent portal on our website, a closed Facebook group, and Bloomz, a photo/video sharing app so parents can catch glimpses of the work their children are completing.
We produce a weekly e-newsletter to keep parents informed about school-wide activities and events which is available via email, text, our closed Facebook group, the parent portal, and through Bloomz.
For infants, in additional to daily, in-person communication, teachers record when diapers were changed, meals/snacks were eaten, and naps were taken in the Bloomz app.
Injuries will be promptly treated by a staff member and parents will be notified either by telephone or through a copy of a completed Accident/Incident Report form. Parents will receive a short report which documents how, when, and where and accident or incident occurred.
4 Easy Steps to Admission
Our admissions team will lead you through the entire process to answer your questions and provide all the information you need so your family can make an informed decision about whether TMA is the right choice for your child and your family. We understand that choosing the right school is an extremely important decision and we will be here to guide you through the decision-making process.
Schedule a Visit
Apply Online
Complete an online application and submit $300 application fee. The application fee is fully refundable until an enrollment contract is signed.
A 3-day classroom evaluation will be scheduled for students applying for a space in the Elementary program; a 3-week trial may instead be offered during the summer months when an evaluation is not possible.
Meet with the Head of School
During the 1½ hour meeting, “fit and match” between the family’s expectations for their child and TMA’s vision is explored and information about the classroom evaluation (if applicable) and a detailed tuition payment schedule will be discussed.
Complete Online Enrollment
Upon acceptance to TMA, the enrollment process begins with a contract being offered. The Application Fee becomes non-refundable after we receive your contract. Once we have received your online enrollment and first tuition payment, your enrollment is complete.
What do parents say about TMA?
We are happy with TMA, my child has been attending the school and he has learned so much. The school environment is clean and has so much for my son who loves to be in outdoors. Teachers and the administrators are helpful.
Great Schools
After touring over a dozen preschools, TMA came out on top for us. We love the focus on teaching important life skills and building character, not just behavior. The teachers interact with the students in a way that helps them to become independent and thoughtful little people.
Google Reviews
This is a GEM in the middle of the metroplex, with acres of nature surrounding the school. Kids are given a unique opportunity to experience and enjoy nature in a caring environment, while learning so much, both in and out of the classroom. Our child really likes it here.
Niche Reviews
TMA is a great school that helps students gain independence, learn concepts deeply, and become well-rounded citizens of the world. The teachers are dedicated, and the campus is beautiful and inviting. TMA is a great place to be!
Private School Review
Important Dates
Gallery of Student Work
🐟 Building Knowledge, One Connection at a Time 🐟
In our Early Childhood classroom, a student is exploring the Parts of a Fish using a wooden puzzle with knobbed pieces alongside Montessori 3‑part cards. The child removes, replaces, and names each part of the fish puzzle, providing a concrete introduction to the vocabulary, while the small knobs strengthen fine motor control and support a proper pencil grip.
After completing the puzzle, the child matches the picture cards and labels at their own pace. The 3‑part cards include a control card (picture with label), a picture‑only card, and a label. This work supports vocabulary development, early reading skills, visual discrimination, and a deeper understanding of science concepts—all while encouraging concentration, order, and independence.
#handsonlearning #intrinsicmotivation #finemotorskills #vocabulary #readingskills #visualdiscrimination #science #order #concentration #coordination #independence #tma #montessori #privateschool #arlingtontx #arlington #texas #infant #nido #toddler #earlychildhood #preschool #kindergarten #elementary #education #privateeducation #nontraditional #themontessoriacademyofarlington
🌿 Learning Beyond the Classroom 🌿
Our toddler students took learning on the trail today with a guided hike through the Wildscape! Accompanied by their teachers and supported by our upper elementary students, this experience nurtured so much more than movement.
✨ Outdoor exploration builds independence, coordination, and a deep connection to nature
✨ Multi-age learning allows older students to model leadership, responsibility, and empathy
✨ Real-world experiences strengthen confidence, curiosity, and community
Moments like these show how meaningful learning happens when children are trusted to explore, observe, and grow together—one step at a time. 💚
#nature #outdoorexploration #multiagelearning #leadership #responsibility #empathy #confidence #curiosity #community #order #concentration #coordination #independence #tma #montessori #privateschool #arlingtontx #alrington #texas #infant #nido #toddler #earlychildhood #preschool #kindergarten #elementary #education #privateeducation #nontraditional #themontessoriacademyofarlington
Hands-on learning sparks real understanding! 🔬✨
In our Enrichment Science Lab, elementary students explored exothermic chemical reactions by conducting their own experiment. They compared rapid-rise and regular baking yeast to observe how each affected the reaction’s intensity and energy release.
Through experiments like this, students don’t just learn scientific concepts—they develop critical thinking skills, practice forming hypotheses, analyze results, and experience the excitement of discovery firsthand. Learning comes alive when curiosity leads the way!
#handsonlearning #science #experiments #criticalthinkingskills #analysis #discovery #curosity #order #concentration #coordination #independence #tma #montessori #privateschool #arlingtontx #arlington #texas #infant #nido #toddler #earlychildhood #preschool #kindergarten #elementary #education #privateeducation #nontraditional #themontessoriacademyofarlington
Watching a Lower Elementary student work with the Stamp Game is a reminder that strong math understanding is built from the ground up. 🧮
As this child solves 4‑digit addition, the material makes place value visible and tangible—each stamp representing a quantity that can be built, combined, and exchanged. Instead of memorizing steps, the student is actively thinking through how numbers work and how quantities come together. 🔢
What’s especially powerful about this work is the opportunity for self‑correction. The child can check their own thinking, notice mistakes, and make adjustments independently—building confidence, focus, and trust in their abilities. ✅
This concrete experience is an important step in the Montessori math journey, laying a strong foundation for logical reasoning and helping students gradually move toward abstraction. 👣✨
#handsonlearning #selfcorrecting #problemsolvingskills #confidence #focus #logic #reasoning #order #concentration #coordination #independence #tma #montessori #privateschool #arlingtontx #arlington #texas #infant #nido #toddler #earlychildhood #preschool #kindergarten #elementary #education #privateeducation #nontraditional #themontessoriacademyofarlington
🗺️ Learning the world, one discovery at a time.
By working with concrete materials—continents, labels, and animals—this Early Childhood student is developing reading skills, geography knowledge, and critical thinking all in one purposeful activity. This kind of self-directed, hands-on learning is part of Montessori’s non-traditional approach to education—one that moves beyond worksheets and memorization and allows children to actively construct knowledge in ways traditional models often don’t.
#handsonlearning #concretetoabstract #continentstudy #readingskills #geography #criticalthinkingskills #purposefulactivity #order #concentration #coordination #independence #tma #montessori #privateschool #arlingtontx #arlington #texas #infant #nido #toddler #earlychildhood #preschool #kindergarten #elementary #education #privateeducation #nontraditional #themontessoriacademyofarlington
✨ Building Literacy, One Letter at a Time ✨
Our Early Childhood students are hard at work with the Moveable Alphabet, a foundational Montessori material that helps young learners connect sounds to symbols and grow into confident writers. In this photo, one child has carefully spelled words like ax, van, web, elk, and elf with wooden letters, and is now focused on recording them on paper—an essential step in moving from hands-on exploration to written expression. 📝
What we also love about this moment is what’s happening all around:
🔹 Another child is choosing a different version of the Moveable Alphabet, exploring letters in a way that matches their readiness.
🔹 A third student is fully absorbed in their own work at a nearby table.
This is the beauty of a Montessori classroom—independent learners, purposeful choices, and meaningful work happening simultaneously, each child following their own learning path while developing focus, confidence, and intrinsic motivation. ❤️
#handsonlearning #language #writing #followingtheirpath #intrinsicmotivation #confidence #order #concentration #coordination #independence #tma #montessor #privateschool #arlingtontx #arlington #texas #infant #nido #toddler #earlychildhood #preschool #kindergarten #elementary #education #privateeducation #nontraditional #themontessoriacademyofarlington
It is the policy of The Montessori Academy to maintain a school environment that is free from discrimination and to conduct its educational practices, admissions program, financial aid policies, hiring, and other school-administrative programs on the basis of an individual’s qualifications and abilities. The Montessori Academy does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion (unless it is required as a bona fide occupational qualification), sex, national origin, age, gender, sexual orientation, marital status, disability, genetic information, or any other characteristic protected by law.