My Montessori School Coronado at 950 B Avenue in Coronado holds California Community Care License #376701528, operating a Montessori-method early childhood program in the 92118 village residential grid two blocks east of Orange Avenue and within walking distance of Hotel Del Coronado, Coronado Beach, and the village commercial corridor. The B Avenue address sits in the residential core where the majority of Coronado Island's young families live between the D Avenue public school campus and the Orange Avenue dining and retail spine, and the Montessori curricular model — self-directed learning with mixed-age classrooms, hands-on manipulative materials, and uninterrupted work periods — distinguishes the program from the structured group-instruction formats at Crown Preschool, Graham Memorial, and the island's other licensed early-childhood providers. Enrollment serves children from toddler age through kindergarten in classrooms equipped with Montessori-certified learning materials spanning practical life skills, sensorial development, language, mathematics, cultural studies, and science, and the program's emphasis on individual developmental pacing means children advance through skill progressions on their own timelines rather than grade-level lockstep. The Coronado Public Library at 640 Orange Avenue — a Harrison Albright–designed 1909 Carnegie building housing 203,823 volumes — provides a natural extension of the Montessori literacy curriculum through children's storytime programming and picture-book lending that supplements classroom reading activities. Military families stationed at Naval Air Station North Island use the school as an off-base Montessori option during assignment periods when on-base Child Development Center waitlists create placement delays, and the B Avenue location is accessible from both the NASNI main gate and the Silver Strand housing corridor without crossing the Coronado Bridge. Performing-arts enrichment and creative-movement exposure for enrolled children connects to the broader Coronado arts-education ecosystem, including the conservatory pipeline that begins at Coronado School of the Arts on the Coronado High School campus. Coronado Beach, Spreckels Park, and Glorietta Bay Park are all within the school's field-trip walking radius.