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Displaying results 23001 - 23100 of 40617

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 21, Number 2, 1996, Spring

Sequence 128
If you're a Bell Curve thinker, you think that a quarter of the people don't even have intel- lect and most of…
Sequence 129
Remember the kids who have perfect pitch at seven? What hap- pens to it at fourteen? Not nurtured. They say most kids get…
Sequence 130
and needs, then you have to create the environment. Even if it's not necessary to get a job at IBM, that's okay; if…
Sequence 131
Donaldson, M. (1978). Children's minds. New York: W. W. Norton. Feuerstein, R. (1980). The dynamic assessment of…
Sequence 132
WHAT IT MEANS TO FOLLOW THE CHILD by Martha McDermott Martha McDermott makes an evocative plea for accepting children where…
Sequence 133
We might now continue our conversation with Montessori: "Now that you have returned to your studies, what are you…
Sequence 134
children are not yet fully formed. We can make a contribution to that creative formation. Freeman Dyson wrote, "…
Sequence 135
These graces have every opportunity to be exercised and imple- mented because the children are free to act, free to choose,…
Sequence 136
After the lesson I remarked to the teacher that I wished I knew the children better. He happened to be close by, so I said…
Sequence 137
and sticking it on his face, was actually getting more attention than I. I was not willing to go to those lengths, so I told…
Sequence 138
intelligence. If action is not so guided it does not fully serve the child. It has to be guided by the intelligence and in…
Sequence 139
and grandmother walked into a social services agency in Los Angeles, the social workers there thought her an autistic 6-year-…
Sequence 140
each plane, is where children have opportunities to engage in and implement their expanding humanness, this hierarchical…
Sequence 141
Children are in a place that is the result of their experiences. The results of those experiences can be shifted if the…
Sequence 142
Follow the child. Trust her judgments. Inspire trust by trusting. Why does it seem so difficult? Follow the child. Find…
Sequence 143
NAMTA's MONTESSORI ADOLESCENT PROJECT The spirit and energy currently surrounding work toward Montessori adolescent…
Sequence 144
138 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 21, No. 2 • Spring 1996
Sequence 145
WHY NoT CONSIDER ERDKINDER? by Peter Gebhardt-Seele Answering possible objections and citing his own personal experiences,…
Sequence 146
The word is obviously German. Literally it would translate into English as "earth children." It is a plural…
Sequence 147
to revolt. If self-construction is obstructed, deviation may occur, which can lead to an inferiority complex, maladjustment,…
Sequence 148
• serious farming: growing crops and animals; • selling the products for monetary gain at the nearby town market; •…
Sequence 149
Decision-maki_ng by the students is important. Under the guid- ance of the resident adults, they decide what to plant, which…
Sequence 150
Greek, ·French, Latin, science, history. High school ends with the toughest exam in one's life. Without passing it, one…
Sequence 151
and some of them will be constructed by the students. A traditional high school in an urban setting may need a smaller place,…
Sequence 152
them. I spent many days in the cow pasture tending the four cows and one pony, keeping them from dashing into the neighbor…
Sequence 153
visitors. One engaged us in Latin readings, another showed me how to play the guitar. When the refugees came from eastern…
Sequence 154
rewarded. We did trust her with our 6- to 12-year-olds. That was more of a challenge, because there is a competing model, the…
Sequence 155
THE ELEMENTS OF SOCIAL LIFE AND THE MONTESSORI ADOLESCENT by Linda Davis Linda Davis traces the Montessori view of…
Sequence 156
gether. If they could function so beautifully in an environment de- signed for their psychological characteristics, could the…
Sequence 157
That doesn't mean that the individual develops as an island with no social interaction. Social development begins at…
Sequence 158
Montessori says that this harmonizing of activities will happen quite naturally in prepared environments, and the result will…
Sequence 159
234-235). In a Montessori elementary class, the children are allowed to form groups; most of their work is done in groups.…
Sequence 160
groups" (1992, p. 324). Tying together: maybe not quite the same thing as weaving, but close. So the Erdkinder is…
Sequence 161
took on individual tasks-shoveling, hoeing, raking-and sometimes they, doing their individually chosen tasks, ended up working…
Sequence 162
to the patience of the people we encountered. In fact, the students expressed some sadness when we returned to the city and to…
Sequence 163
with her husband. She was also a vet. The students who worked with her went early in the morning to help her with the hard,…
Sequence 164
One other factor to mention briefly is the quality of parent- adolescent interaction that I saw and heard about after two…
Sequence 165
singing, dancing, and storytelling that people did not only as they worked but also when the work was finished. I saw…
Sequence 166
duplicating famous experiments of history and others being the inventions of the students themselves. They seem to be going…
Sequence 167
We talked frankly. I watched interactions be- tween them and acted on my observations. They didn't always like the re…
Sequence 168
bility. What is it? We do not know, but we must hasten to find out. It must be the child who reveals to us what happens during…
Sequence 169
This is the first year of NAMT A's Administrators' Group, an attempt to forge stronger relationships between…
Sequence 170
Mary Zeman 164 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 21, No. 2 • Spring 1996
Sequence 171
THE NORMALIZED SCHOOL: MONTESSORI AS A WAY OF LIFE by Mary Zeman Mary Zeman offers a definition of the "nonnalized…
Sequence 172
We can readily sympathize with any reader who finds the record of these events hard to believe. It was exactly the same with…
Sequence 173
occasionally, after warming up with a few easy questions-why is the program five days a week, what do you do about discipline…
Sequence 174
Montessori's characteristics for normalization include (and you know them) love of work, order in movement, and…
Sequence 175
schools. We've visited a few and they seemed good enough. Good enough, in fact, that we even put in applications…
Sequence 176
healthy, so must our own lunches be. If we promise to children that they may take their time, so must we honor ourselves with…
Sequence 177
spiritual exercises, having found the path ... of ascent to the inner heights of the soul" (1949 /1984, p. 207). Is…
Sequence 178
have a bell but more surprised by the way it is used-and by what the bell isn't. The occasional use of the bell in a…
Sequence 179
is natural. She is an artist in the classroom. I imagine that nearly any moment of any day I might enter with any stranger,…
Sequence 180
There are many things I love about this experience and about this story. One is that this is a community where we feel safe to…
Sequence 181
with what had become a luscious, teeming mountain of fertilizer and abundance. He looked up from a vast shovel-full, and,…
Sequence 182
When something is amiss in our classroom, in our school, among the parents, or within ourselves, why not take Montessori'…
Sequence 183
The NAMTA Journal 177
Sequence 184
Sharon Dubble, PhD 178 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 21, No. 2 • Spring 1996
Sequence 185
EVOLVING THROUGH TRANSITIONS: MITIGATING ANXIETIES by Sharon L. Dubble Sharon Dubble evolves a new vision of the school…
Sequence 186
through adolescence), Montessori schools are seeking to understand how best to proceed. Where can schools look for guidance?…
Sequence 187
A second principle is that full development occurs through an interactive process which engages the individual with the…
Sequence 188
individual, giving attention to segments rather than the whole. We begin to speak of the intellect as separate from the body,…
Sequence 189
level, renovating or changing space, creating an administrative struc- ture, experiencing staff changes. Montessori always…
Sequence 190
No matter what the particular transition, it is usually a time of vulnerability for a school. Change in one area has multiple…
Sequence 191
KNOWLEDGE Transitions raise questions which, in turn, propel us to seek information. Often, just knowing more about an aspect…
Sequence 192
other schools. A teacher who wants to develop a parent support group takes the opportunity to work with an experienced…
Sequence 193
By reframing Montessori's principles of human development in light of the whole school's development, we can move…
Sequence 194
188 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 21, No. 2 • Spring /996 ------ -- -- ________________________ _J
Sequence 195
There is increasing awareness of Montessori as a comprehensive approach to education from birth to adulthood. The feature…
Sequence 196
p ARENTING FOR INDEPENDENCE by Mary G. Matthews In our Spring 1995 issue, we published an article by William Sears, MD,…
Sequence 197
tinely tells parents that there is no set number of years (italics added) to nurse (Sears, 1992, p. 120). To further…
Sequence 198
nursing the older child can be a means to comfort him or her easily, these emotional needs may be filled in other ways.…
Sequence 199
an alternative. A doth baby sling is wonderful for limited use, but marsupial mothering for long periods during the day is…
Sequence 200
THE CHILD AS GUIDE Late weaning, shared sleep, and marsupial mothering are under- taken with the highest of motives. They are…
Sequence 201
independence in the child's life. Dr. Sears states, "Independence is not, in itself, one of our most important…
Sequence 202
Sears, W. (1985). Nighttime parenting: How to get your ba/Jy and child to sleep. Franklin Park, IL: La Leche League Interna-…
Sequence 203
RESPONSE TO .11p ARENTING FOR INDEPENDENCE" by Anne McNamara Anne McNamara, who submitted the original William…
Sequence 204
functioning adult member of society. Common sense suggests that attachment parenting has a role to play beyond the first two…
Sequence 205
will demand to be given some food. This is true independence-when the child chooses to begin the weaning process-and quite…
Sequence 206
when baby-carrying seems so appropriate. A sensitive mother knows when a child wants out of the baby sling, and, for that…
Sequence 207
The NAMTA Journal 201
Sequence 208
•Paula Lillard is an excellent guide to Marla Montessorl's ~ ideas and to the place of Montusorl •ducat1on In…
Sequence 209
MONTESSORI TODAY: A COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO EDUCATION FROM BIRTH TO ADULTHOOD, BY p AULA POLK LILLARD by David Kahn…
Sequence 210
Stephenson, Elementary Director of Training emerita of the Montes- sori Institute of Milwaukee. Not only does Lillard present…
Sequence 211
Chapter Two, "An Overview of the Primary Years," is an expert portrait of the prepared environment for the…
Sequence 212
dren. She serves as a catalyst to the children's own explora- tions, not as an authority on specific subject matter.…
Sequence 213
and the role of AMI in counteracting dilution are all issues that could extend from this important chapter. Lillard's…
Sequence 214
THE FOUR PLANES OF DEVELOPMENT by Camillo Grazzini Camillo Grazzini presents two charts designed by Maria Montessori to…
Sequence 215
birth to 3 years of age, the child from 3 to 6 years, the child from 6 to 12, concerns a much more detailed look at individual…
Sequence 216
What I propose to do today is not to repeat, or even to summarize, what has already been said by Montessorians preceding me,…
Sequence 217
Chart 1 THE 4 PLANES OF DEVELOPMENT THE <CONSTRUCTIVE RHYTHM OF LIFE> I CAUSALITY !MARIA MONTES§9BI PERUGIA-…
Sequence 218
Coming out from the zero, there is an oblique line which is the line of progression; it represents the progression of…
Sequence 219
Nonetheless, the four triangles, and therefore the four planes, are distinguished two by two through the use of color. The…
Sequence 220
"potentialities which determine his development"; "there exists within this inert being a global…
Sequence 221
The Conscious Worker The nature of the work of development changes during the second sub-plane of infancy, during the years…
Sequence 222
And these separate energies, finding nothing to satisfy them, give rise to innumerable combinations of wrong and deviated…
Sequence 223
what this child can explore, if the op- portunities are there and the condi- tions are favorable. The child's powers…
Sequence 224
The "Red Plane" of Adolescence With the plane of adolescence, 12 to 18, we come to another plane of…
Sequence 225
The "Blue Plane" of Maturity The plane of maturity, 18 to 24, corresponds more or less to university life,…
Sequence 226
adult who can work for the good of humanity and can participate in humanity's (cosmic) mission on this Earth. This is…
Sequence 227
and therefore they also represent the amount of knowledge that is being offered to the individual. The subjects, the teachers…

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