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Sequence 2"The child in the elementary is learning to organize and plan his day, has more control over when he is going to do… |
Sequence 1MONTESSORI, POVERTY, AND THE SPECIAL CHILD by Jon R. Osterkorn, Ph.D. With wit and substance, Dr. Osterkorn exposes the… |
Sequence 5with familiar ones at first, but the proportion of unfamiliar patterns was to be increased until the child could imitate… |
Sequence 3immediately oversee the development of these arts in the relations between the student discussants, while simultaneously… |
Sequence 5to discourse daily about virtue and self-examination. But he finally proposes a small money offering· guaranteed by his… |
Sequence 7feelings of others. Why couldn't he pursue his mission and still be accepted by others? Seems to me he'd have a… |
Sequence 8Mr. C: Well, I can accept that. But I still don't think that money, power and fame are evils, as Socrates says. Mr. B: I… |
Sequence 9Ms. A: Yes, that's why oratory would fail too. Even a speech in a grand style would fail where experience and feelings… |
Sequence 10Ms. A: Well, man does some things that don't require a body. Leader: Such as ... Ms. A: We think. And therefore thinking… |
Sequence 14seeking martyrdom by not saving himself? Or is there a real opposition between surviving in Athens and obeying the gods? In… |
Sequence 7Lillard, Paula Polk. (1972) Mant.essori a modern approach. New York: Schocken Books. Orem, R.C. (1974) Montessori her method… |
Sequence 1ALBER!' M. JOOSTEN - A BIOGRAPHY Albert M. Joosten was born in the Nether lands on November 21, 1914. His formal… |
Sequence 1610. Jerome S. Bruner, Toward a Theory of Instruction (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Universiry Press, 1966). I l. Alexis Carrel,… |
Sequence 7Asians, Egyptians, Indians, Europeans, Syrians, Armenians, and Arabs. The students encounter Alexandrian mathematics, physics… |
Sequence 16References Egan, Kieran (1992). Imagination in Teaching and Learning. Chicago: U of Chicago. Montessori, Maria (1965; first… |
Sequence 6The danger of textbooks is that their similitude, their averaging of information, their limited scholarship, and their lack of… |
Sequence 9• c:: I,) 0 ;·; I,) • ... ,, c:: ·- QI 0• QI .. a. CII .: . .c= c.,•- • .ii: OCI) (J .. .... • .ii: c:: • o… |
Sequence 8The capacity to heighten significance and enlarge meaning by thinking about events "romantically" can be… |
Sequence 25part) of the disturbing hormonal changes of adolescence, the child of 9 to 12, Montessori believed, is a stronger learner than… |
Sequence 87part) of the disturbing hormonal changes of adolescence, the child of 9 to 12, Montessori believed, is a stronger learner than… |
Sequence 4The elementary student is especially sensitive to historical context. The sense of time and duration crystallizes out of a… |
Sequence 19CONCLUSION Thus far we have looked at two intelligences and their relation- ship to the Montessori materials. We have looked… |
Sequence 13excavating ruins and describing how to build. The techniques, the skills, the information about building and sculpting were… |
Sequence 6exploitation somewhat irrelevant. If it costs just $3 to rent a Pocahontas video, do you really care if Michael Eisner made $… |
Sequence 11especially in the beginning. Once the child has become acquainted with the different names, it is no longer essential and the… |
Sequence 12-------------------------------- --~ we are attempting to do with the Erdkinder project in Cleveland is to bring farm and… |
Sequence 18• human settlement and needs of settlement, including impact studies • evolution of the environment in relation to human… |
Sequence 81• human settlement and needs of settlement, including impact studies • evolution of the environment in relation to human… |
Sequence 8In October, 1939, Maria and Mario, her son, landed in Madras, south India, guests of George Arundale, President of the… |
Sequence 5PROTOTYPE YEAR J (HUMANITIES IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH FARM OCCUPATIONS) Architectural Principles in Buildings and Bridges… |
Sequence 6in our 1998 report on the project to the AMI Peda- gogical Committee, "The goal for us this year is to… |
Sequence 1DR. MONTESSORI' s APPROACH TO LANGUAGE IN THE SECOND PHASE OF THE CHILD'S DEVELOPMENT by Mario M. Montessori Many… |
Sequence 6-Independent interdisciplinary study is begun in accordance with student's interest following the excursion. It would be… |
Sequence 1Pr.ut JJ: 71,,e, eau ~ .M~ g~ 11 . .Jl~P~ DR. MONTESSORI' s THIRD LECTURE GIVEN AT THE MONTESSORI CONGRESS IN OXFORD… |
Sequence 5A NEW EDUCATION FOR THE SECONDARY SCHOOL A PUBLIC LECfURE GIVEN AT UTRECHT, JANUARY 18, 1937 (ORIGINAL IN FRENCH) by Maria… |
Sequence 6TWENTY-EIGHTH LECTURE OF THE TWENTY-THIRD INTERNATIONAL MONTESSORI COURSE AMSTERDAM, JANUARY-JUNE, 1938 DELIVERED MONDAY,… |
Sequence 10CHILDREN OF THE EARTH by Jan Koning and Fred Kelpin Jan Koning and Fred Kelp in' s interest in and commentan; about the… |
Sequence 2After the Second World War, several secondary Montessori schools were founded in Germany. In general, they followed the same… |
Sequence 3MONTESSORI HIGH SCHOOL by H.J. Jordan Dr. Jordan, a collaborator with Maria Montessori, speaks of his conceptual framework… |
Sequence 10exams in mind there is a somewhat stricter working-program which, to conform to exam requirements, candidates are obliged to… |
Sequence 19critics. I think in this case the Right was right, that eventually our capitalist system would create so many goods and… |
Sequence 22appearances. Jim provided on the farm support as farm manager. We keptthe focus pretty directed, with student choices… |
Sequence 23find their own identities as emerging social beings? Did conscious- ness create a bridge between how communities of people… |
Sequence 30In some ways, it started with our election study, when two people were invited to each represent the views of Gore and Bush on… |
Sequence 31was magical. Even for the most reticent students-who were very reluctant to get up and do it-it was a moment of triumph when… |
Sequence 1My followers will surely continue without me. I just hope that they do not become victims of Epicureanism. As for the Stoics… |
Sequence 1Goo WHo HAs No HANDS by Mario M. Montessori Sometimes referred to as the "Story of the Universe," "… |
Sequence 1INTRODUCTION TO uKEYS TO THE WORLD: THE SECOND PLANE OF EDUCATION" by Camillo Grazzini Forty-three years ago,… |
Sequence 4of the Netherlands. He was following in his grandmother's footsteps, for Maria Montessori was similarly honored in 1950… |
Sequence 20of the Netherlands. He was following in his grandmother's footsteps, for Maria Montessori was similarly honored in 1950… |
Sequence 142INTRODUCTION TO uKEYS TO THE WORLD: THE SECOND PLANE OF EDUCATION" by Camillo Grazzini Forty-three years ago,… |
Sequence 18REFERENCE Montessori, Mario M. "Keys to the World: The Second Plane of Education." Summary of lectures,… |
Sequence 3work together, move forward in history. This is what the adolescent must experience and absorb: division of labor, the… |
Sequence 10ITHE .4 PLANs~ OF DJVELOPMENT! I TH «BULB> ,~~~' ~ ~ Figure 1. The Bulb. Maria Montessori, Rome, 1951 (cited… |
Sequence 1OF HEROES AND THE HEROIC: REFLECTIONS ON THE EARLY LIFE AND ACHIEVEMENTS OF MARIA MONTESSORI by Lawrence Schaefer Lnrry… |
Sequence 48Oasis for Montessori Expansion Elementary students sketching from nature, Amsterdamsche Montessori School, 1930s The role of… |
Sequence 49portive from very early on; this atmosphere helps to explain how the Montessori schools could survive through such difficult… |
Sequence 50The Netherlands, continued One cannot see the method; one sees the child. One sees the child soul, freed from obstacles,… |
Sequence 52Display Case II Natural History Drawings, Amsterdam, 1930s Documents from the Model School ot Loren, Netherlands, 1938-/939… |
Sequence 55The Model School at Laren, Netherlands, continued Documents from the Model School at Laren, Netherlands, 1938-1939 At Laren… |
Sequence 128Montessori College Oost, Amsterdam, 2000 Architect: Herman Hertzberger Side view of the school Technical lesson Workshop… |
Sequence 130Study need not be restricted by the curricula of existi.ng secondary schools and still less need we make use of their… |
Sequence 138Religious Education, continued Pope John Paul II visiting on atrium in Rome, /983 The atrium is in Nostro Signora de Lourdes… |
Sequence 165/915 Second trip to the United States, accompanied by her son. Mario. Addresses International Kindergarten Union and… |
Sequence 166India, 1939 1928 The book Das Kind in der Familie, based on lectures she gave in 1923 in Vienna, is published in Germon. (… |
Sequence 1671948 Training courses in Mmedabad, Adyar, and Poona; lectures in Bombay. Trip to Gwalior. India; supervises the opening of a… |
Sequence 187Another Viennese Montessorian and Holocaust survivor who made a significant contribution in the United States was Lena Gitter… |
Sequence 5Dr. Maria Montessori's first work, Tlte Mo11/essori Method, was published in English in New York in 1912. It was an… |
Sequence 15In comparison to even fifty years ago, let alone the time of Spinoza, no one can dispute the arrival of the enormous comfort… |
Sequence 44rupting the good principles of their original virtuous nature ... but the true, content mortal alone earns and cultivates… |
Sequence 9erism at a grand scale and new forms of freedom possible, industrial- ization also caused new inequalities and poverty, and… |
Sequence 14· Origin of the city; comparison of Mesopotamian (anxiously walled in) and Egyptian (calm, ceremonial) cities; · Alexandria,… |
Sequence 4to keep track of all these scrolls. Each book might have multiple scrolls, and they all had to be numbered and organized.… |
Sequence 8the children in the class will know where the child is going in a short time. Parents of children in the class who are from a… |
Sequence 1MONTESSORI ELEMENTARY EDUCATION: PATHWAYS TO GLOBAL UNDERSTANDING by Phyllis Pettish-Lewis Phyllis Pottish-Lewis has… |
Sequence 3Of the many cultures of humankind, of the plenitude of history's eras and their mass of pivotal artifacts, we reasoned… |
Sequence 8With the picture of Rome's history cradled in our cerebella, we move on to an overview of the orders of architecture,… |
Sequence 14116 Part Two - For a Science of the Formation of Man materials; playful and expressive activities, with particular regard lo… |
Sequence 6School, Family and Society 123 Moreover, in 1918 Montessori had been received in private audience with pope Benedict XV,… |
Sequence 5Far from Italy: First Europe and then India 159 who received Montessori's resignation as director of the Scuola di… |
Sequence 6160 Par/ Two - For a Science of the Formation of Man disappointments, requests for help, mediations, threatened break-ups and… |
Sequence 289Montessori National Curriculum for the Third Plane of Development from Twelve to Fifteen/Sixteen Years Detailed studies:… |
Sequence 5lution relative to place and time the adolescent could make come to life through the re-imagination of lives lived, using the… |
Sequence 19Now 12 says, for the betterment of society. The high school is the training ground for a scie11tia co11- at11rnlis, an exalted… |
Sequence 10116 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 38, No. 1 • Winter 2013 Montessori, Maria, “Educazione cosmica,” 8. manuscript published in the… |
Sequence 1the adolescent: taKinG on the tasK of huManity— conductinG the dialoGue between nature and suPranature by Laurie Ewert-… |
Sequence 2226 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 39, No. 2 • Spring 2014 Greater Twin Cities United Way. “Faces of Poverty: A United Way Report… |
Sequence 19215 Sackett • “The Lines That Make the Clouds” a references Devlin, Keith. The Math Gene: How Mathematical Think- ing… |
Sequence 2563 Nehring • Implementing Inclusion Theory into Practice ---.The 1946 London Lectures. Ed. Annette Haines. Laren, The… |
Sequence 1212 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 40, No. 2 • Spring 2015 and allows us to understand reality more precisely (“the hand is the… |
Sequence 2074 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 40, No. 3 • Summer 2015 Landy, R. J. Persona and Performance: The Meaning of Role in Drama,… |
Sequence 1868 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 41, No. 1 • Winter 2016 about the way the world works and the way that we work as human beings… |
Sequence 2561 Kahn • Global Science and Social Systems all stages of the child’s self-construction, widening like the spider web is the… |
Sequence 1880 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 41, No. 2 • Spring 2016 McNamara, J. (2016). “How the Montessori Upper Elemen- tary and… |
Sequence 39171 MacDonald • Becoming a Scientific Observer references Doyle, Arthur Conan. “The Adventure of the Copper Beeches.” The… |
Sequence 10182 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 41, No. 3 • Summer 2016 references Montessori, Maria. From Childhood to Adolescence. 1948.… |
Sequence 4232 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 41, No. 3 • Summer 2016 drama or elocution competitions were held to reflect the philosophy of… |
Sequence 1660 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 42, No. 2 • Spring 2017 scientificamerian.com/article/critical-ingredients-for- brain-… |
Sequence 17137 Lebitz • Creative Engagement: Handwork as Follow-Up Work Music: models of antique or historical instruments, dioramas or… |
Sequence 23285 Massie • Helping Children with Attentional Challenges Danner, N. & Fowler, S.A. “Montessori and Non-Montessori… |