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Sequence 2misleading if it leads someone to believe that cosmic education also applies, or can apply, to other planes of development-… |
Sequence 2misleading if it leads someone to believe that cosmic education also applies, or can apply, to other planes of development-… |
Sequence 2principles of scientific pedagogy."' Surely our aims as Montessorians are not merely those of child minding… |
Sequence 3Implementation of a genuine "Children's House" or all-day Montessori primary program seems to pose… |
Sequence 8prepared environment throughout all the hours that they spend in the Children's House. Surely we cannot ignore Dr.… |
Sequence 3the widening gulf between affluent and improverished people, and the diversion of societal resources to military expenditures… |
Sequence 3years of age. The thousands of older children are bussed to schools many miles away. The need for local community-based… |
Sequence 5Just as the understanding of the growth and development of the child in our complex society continues to build in the… |
Sequence 4Montessori did, however, write extensively on the will and the development of will in young children. Later interpreters of… |
Sequence 9requires participation. And finally, but importantly, silence should only be initiated at normal times when the room and those… |
Sequence 1A COMPARISON OF LOWER AND UPPER ELEMENTARY MONTESSORI STUDENTS WITH A PUBLIC SCHOOL SAMPLE By Christopher M. Glenn, Ph. D.… |
Sequence 9language approach in which all aspects of language study support the acquisition of meaning from print and from oral… |
Sequence 1THE ROLE OF THE PRACTICAL LIFE EXERCISES IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF EQIDLIBRIUM by M. Shannon Branner Ms. Branner's… |
Sequence 3ality, let us then also recognize that it was built on respect for the child in this capacity, on recognition of his place in… |
Sequence 12The Foundation Center has adopted or installed as part of its full-day program for children and families: 1. Adoption of… |
Sequence 14We are not always successful in achieving our objectives of parent involvement and in using the strategies 9f participation… |
Sequence 15Gloria Dei Virginia Varga Hershey Montessori School Michael Bagiackas Judson Montessori School Jim Judson Lake Country… |
Sequence 3Gloria Dei Virginia Varga Hershey Montessori School Michael Bagiackas Judson Montessori School Jim Judson Lake Country… |
Sequence 35its implications for cross-cultural studies. In S. Modgil & C. Modgil (Eds.), .lean Piaget: Consensus and controversy… |
Sequence 16References Egan, Kieran (1992). Imagination in Teaching and Learning. Chicago: U of Chicago. Montessori, Maria (1965; first… |
Sequence 1SLIDE SHOW TO INTRODUCE WHAT Is MONTESSORI PRESCHOOL? Maria Montessori was, in many ways, ahead of her time. Born in Italy… |
Sequence 1How ARE You SMART?: MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES AND CLASSROOM PRACTICES by Bruce Torff The question "How are you smart… |
Sequence 1THE VERBAL/LINGUISTIC AND VISUAL/ SPATIAL INTELLIGENCES by Rita Schaefer Zener Dr. Zener aligns Gardner's verbal/… |
Sequence 2THE PERSONAL INTELLIGENCES: LINKING GARDNER TO MONTESSORI by Silvia C. Dubovoy In discussing the personal intelligences, Dr… |
Sequence 1MovEMENT, Music, AND LEARNING: THE MUSICAL AND BoDILY/KINESTHETIC INTELLIGENCES by Audrey Sillick Audrey Sillick' sin… |
Sequence 9dren who learn better with hands and movement rather than visually or auditorially. Young children experience the world with… |
Sequence 2THE MATHEMATICAL INTELLIGENCE SEEN THROUGH THE LENS OF THE MONTESSORI THEORY OF THE HUMAN TENDENCIES Kay M. Baker Dr. Baker… |
Sequence 33In The Absorbent Mind, Montessori writes, "The child is endowed with unknown powers which can guide us to a radiant… |
Sequence 2misleading if it leads someone to believe that cosmic education also applies, or can apply, to other planes of development-… |
Sequence 2"Respect This House" is Mario's anecdote about the early days of the Spanish Civil War, and it is… |
Sequence 5when the teacher observes the child's adaptation to the modern world, the educator becomes educated by just how the… |
Sequence 23REFERENCES Alston, P., ed. The Best Interests of the Child: Reconciling Culture and Human Rights. Florence, Italy:… |
Sequence 24Hart, R., & L. Chawla. The Development of Children's Concern for the Environment. Zeitschrift fur Umelweltpolitik… |
Sequence 15grateful have apparently been also self-serving, a strange and intrigu- ing paradox! To begin to see that "an… |
Sequence 1POETRY AND THE EARLY ADOLESCENT by Mary Jo Moore The concept of teacher as coach is demonstrated by Ms. Moore'… |
Sequence 20Montessori, Mario. The Human Tendencies and Montessori Education. Amsterdam: Association Montessori lnternationale, 1966.… |
Sequence 193Montessori, Mario. The Human Tendencies and Montessori Education. Amsterdam: Association Montessori lnternationale, 1966.… |
Sequence 2DEVELOPING A POSITIVE VISION FOR THE WHOLE SCHOOL by Sharon L. Dubble Dr. Dubble features one of the pivotal methodologies… |
Sequence 2Montessori Institute of Milwaukee. Miss Stephenson now lives in England, where she is an AMI lecturer, examiner, and trainer… |
Sequence 4unearthed what Montessori saw as optimal developmental outcomes along social, moral, cognitive, and emotional dimensions. 1… |
Sequence 9Montessori, Maria. To Educate tile Humnn Potential. 1948. Adyar, Madras, India: Kalakshetra, 1986. Montessori, Maria.… |
Sequence 1IN THE SERVICE OF CREATION by Renilde Montessori Renilde Montessori's evocative call to protect, nurture, and aid life… |
Sequence 8some segment of Montessori consciousness. Another such crystalliza- tion point, for example, was Mario Montessori' s 1956… |
Sequence 13that is to bring the developing human through optimal prepared environments for every stage of development. The Farm School is… |
Sequence 5REFERENCES Suber, Martin. Between Man and Man. New York: Macmillan, 1978. Suber, Martin. I and Thou. New York: Scribner… |
Sequence 5should exist side by side: the first belongs to the inner life of man, the second to his life in society. (102) In their own… |
Sequence 3Palmer, Parker J. The Courage to Teach. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1998. Rathunde, Kevin. "Adolescent Engagement… |
Sequence 2ATTACHMENT PARENTING: A STYLE THAT w ORKS by William Sears It is important to fully explore the questions of attachment and… |
Sequence 4challenged by highly articulate and stimulating "contexts for learn- ing" implicit to the prepared… |
Sequence 8Houses. This is not a snobby attitude. If we take in too many children who cannot follow their healthy inner urges, then we… |
Sequence 10great fanfare: muscle coordination, perception, language, order. Don't expect great developmental efforts, for instance,… |
Sequence 14Montessori, Maria. The Secret of Childhood. 1936. Trans. Barbara Barclay Carter. New York: Ballantine, 1966. Montessori,… |
Sequence 12Building Up of the Moral Conscience Of what use is intellectual knowledge if one is corrupt? So we prepare a social… |
Sequence 14as a model for the "Children's House" of San Lorenzo. Montessori gave the name "Erdkinder,… |
Sequence 16care about the development of the child. In a lecture given in 1939 in London, Dr. Montessori said: The child is not only the… |
Sequence 16• feeling of usefulness and an understanding of one's "many sided powers of adaptation" (Montessori,… |
Sequence 11"This," she said, "is our hope-a hope in a new humanity that will come from this new education, an… |
Sequence 5measuring levels of engagement. NAMTA plans to explore flow in relation to all stages of development as well as to review best… |
Sequence 10REFERENCES Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly. "Flow and Education." The NAMT A Journal 22.2 (1997, Spring): 3-35.… |
Sequence 4for The NAMT A Journal outlining three connections between Montessori education and optimal experience theory: (1) an… |
Sequence 40Nichols, J ., & R. Miller. "Cooperative Learning and Student Motivation." Contemporary Educational… |
Sequence 3Consequently, it is easy to understand why, for many years, the students of Children's House courses prepared five (not… |
Sequence 5see or somewhat less easy to see. Either way, the material is a concrete aid to this child: to become aware and therefore to… |
Sequence 6than one of our four canonical sections or areas for the Children's House. Perhaps it is also worth pointing out that… |
Sequence 7During the 1930s, given all the work and materials developed for both the Children's House and the Elementary, Maria… |
Sequence 10language in all its various aspects or all of the math, and how the fifth album with its old identity tag was simply a working… |
Sequence 19Montessori, Maria. The Secret of Childhood. 1936. Trans. Barbara Barclay Carter. Calcutta: Orient Longmans, 1958. Montessori… |
Sequence 1OBITUARY: GIANNA GOBBI by Camillo Grazzini On January 29, in her eighty-third year, Gianna Gobbi suddenly, unexpectedly,… |
Sequence 8OBITUARY: GIANNA GOBBI by Camillo Grazzini On January 29, in her eighty-third year, Gianna Gobbi suddenly, unexpectedly,… |
Sequence 102Montessori, Maria. The Secret of Childhood. 1936. Trans. Barbara Barclay Carter. Calcutta: Orient Longmans, 1958. Montessori… |
Sequence 152language in all its various aspects or all of the math, and how the fifth album with its old identity tag was simply a working… |
Sequence 155During the 1930s, given all the work and materials developed for both the Children's House and the Elementary, Maria… |
Sequence 156than one of our four canonical sections or areas for the Children's House. Perhaps it is also worth pointing out that… |
Sequence 157see or somewhat less easy to see. Either way, the material is a concrete aid to this child: to become aware and therefore to… |
Sequence 159Consequently, it is easy to understand why, for many years, the students of Children's House courses prepared five (not… |
Sequence 28Montessori, Maria. The Discovery of the Child. 1948. Trans. M. Joseph Costelloe. New York: Ballantine, 1967. Montessori,… |
Sequence 1How ARE You SMART?: MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES AND CLASSROOM PRACTICES by Bruce Torff One should not address the concept of… |
Sequence 8objects and exercises, which one might l.ook for in vain at a later age. (cited in Standing 120) We might ask ourselves,… |
Sequence 10homes and health clinics, our early childhood centers and classrooms, America's schools and human service institu- tions… |
Sequence 5The Children's Statement In the address at the opening of the UN General Assembly's Special Session on Children,… |
Sequence 10Rathunde, Kevin. "Montessori Education and Optimal Experience: A Framework for New Research." The NAMTA… |
Sequence 6eighteen years" (124). This, then, is an example of where one version of the Appendices cou Id eliminate the need for… |
Sequence 10environment special for everyone else. They have to feel connected through common goals, mutual activities, and mutual tasks.… |
Sequence 2To KNow THE PLACE FOR THE FIRST TIME: WHY THE YOUNG ADOLESCENT BENEFITS FROM THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PEDAGOGY FOR THE OLDER… |
Sequence 6planes, according to Montessori' s 1950 "Four Planes of Development" diagram (Figure 1), that are… |
Sequence 13goals must be the realization of the values of the human personality and development of mankind" (Education and Peace… |
Sequence 14enlarges this picture to the great array of grazing and browsing animals all over the planet-the deer, the antelope, the bison… |
Sequence 18Montessori, Maria. Education and Peace. 1949. Trans. Helen R. Lane. Chicago: Henry Regnery, 1972. Montessori, Maria. &… |
Sequence 14Montessori, Maria. The Absorbent Mind. 1949. Trans. Claude Claremont. Thiruvanmiyur, Madras, India: Kalekshetra, 1959.… |
Sequence 4This article represents my progress thus far in understanding how flow theory and Montessori philosophy help to reveal the… |
Sequence 34Louv, R. Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder. Chapel Hill: Algonquin, 2005. Martindale… |
Sequence 13... the fact that the child learns by himself, that he can overcome so many difficulties by himself, gives him an inner… |
Sequence 23learning style. Territorial design will similarly motivate the continu- ing interest of teachers, who will be as excited to go… |
Sequence 33education of children. She prepared a children's chapel, called an Atrium, so children could have a living experience… |
Sequence 62The Early Days of Montessori Education in Berlin Multiplication work, Berlin Montessori class, I 92 7 Children's House… |
Sequence 66Furniture and Architecture for Children's Houses Montessori exhibition accompanying the Congress on Early Childhood held… |
Sequence 68Furniture for Children's Houses . 1n Germany In 1928, the journal issued by the German Montessori Society published… |
Sequence 108Children's House co/or toblet work at Telperion Farm School, 1998 Montessori in Africa, continued Inter }oho C/… |
Sequence 164Rome, 1886 Los Angeles. I 915 United States, 19 I 7 United Kingdom, 1929 1870 Maria Montessori born on August 3 I in… |
Sequence 178A Montessori Journey 1907 to 2007 Patrons Anonymous Donation through Si Helena Monressori School Association Montessori… |