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Displaying results 701 - 800 of 13048

NAMTA Journal 18/2 05 Whole Language in the Montessori Classroom: Continuing the Story

Sequence 13
occured in the method. My guess is that it was when the method was first tried in English, with its many varied spelling…
Sequence 16
a,od t ea se s e be e,\{ed cbild OU 0 eln eile especial V.:bat tt)eyf ea from the alphabetic into the orthographic…
Sequence 17
with children. I can almost guarantee that Montessori would not have approved of basal readers because she believed that…
Sequence 18
episodes. Specifically, there were the tales of Andersen, some of the short stories of Capuana, episodes of the life of Jesus…
Sequence 21
Loeffler, Margaret H. (1980). An Investigation of the Relationship of Protowriting (Invented Spelling) and Cognitive…

NAMTA Journal 18/2 06 Literature and Grammar

Sequence 4
language. When the interest in words begins, as a teacher you can be a great help by developing that interest. I once heard Dr…
Sequence 8
kitchen. Adding section by section, piece by piece, they discovered the style pattern and saw that the repeats in Malory are…
Sequence 14
the t i n ings ngl o- fY, au & f>eau ng is po- ttry, tincf:'from the p f other na- tions, f…

NAMTA Journal 18/2 07 Folk Tales, Fairy Tales and History: Uses and Classification

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story, for example-give the most excellent details about life in a country. When you are teaching, look up the tales. In the…

NAMTA Journal 18/2 09 Time for Sixes and Sevens

Sequence 1
TIME FOR SIXES AND SEVENS by Rilla Spellman Startingfrom an analytical understanding of the developmental process that takes…

NAMTA Journal 18/2 10 Old Truths, New Children

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Orn TRUTIIS, NEW CHIIDREN by Edwin J. Delattre, Ph.D. Holding up such exemplars of intellectual diligence as Helen Keller and…

NAMTA Journal 18/2 11 Philosophy and Practice: Primary Considerations for the Implementation of an All-Day Montessori Program

Sequence 3
Montessori talked a good deal about the "spiritual preparation" of the teacher(1936, pp. 115-123), and it…
Sequence 4
re you willing.to be open d to abando,n the com- n presupposition ejudice) that "children ed 'to have ~ hot…
Sequence 5
reversal in attitude of the children affected by the response to stimuli of the environment including the apparatus and the…
Sequence 6
Montessori and conventional child care. Parents do not find the jarring and discomforting situations in a good Montessori…
Sequence 14
can set a place, serve the food and eat, alone or with another, wipe off the table, replace the mat, and do the dishes. This…
Sequence 15
be present in a room if they are present within the children and even more importantly within the person who staffs that room…
Sequence 17
servation and discovery, freedom and discipline. These are not things which are switched off and on for certain periods…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 01 The Adolescent and the Future

Sequence 3
Dr. Montessori expressed her hope "for a normal development, that fortunately does not depend on what we attempt to…
Sequence 4
discovered a key with which to unlock the immense constructive powers of the human being, powers that were capable of changing…
Sequence 5
were the first small children of the San Lorenzo Quarter experiment called "the new children"? It took Dr.…
Sequence 6
These two territories became the properties of the societies and nations of man, as time went on, and the story of man was…
Sequence 7
The sensorial material is a key to the environment, Dr. Montessori said, but only if we present it for the child to use in the…
Sequence 9
The child still needs a prepared environment for his work and activities. Dr. Montessori warns us: "Education between…
Sequence 10
At the second plane of development we have the same formula to use as at the first-the psychological characteristics of the…
Sequence 11
logical characteristics and each needs a prepared adult to help the individual help himself. The four planes of development…
Sequence 12
product of a Casa dei Bambini and a Montessori elementary class which have followed vigorously Dr. Montessori's formula…
Sequence 13
not want to make mistakes about the adolescent program, great care must be taken in implementing it. If Dr. Montessori was…
Sequence 14
do they give all the special physical care that is necessary during the period of adolescence. Thus not only do they not corre…
Sequence 15
Dr. Montessori reminds us that the child at the third plane experiences difficulty in maintaining concentration during study.…
Sequence 16
social life which may endure for years. Such defects in social adjustment may have dangerous consequences for the indi-…
Sequence 17
with society; it would offer the control of error and the possibility of repeated activity. The working of the human…
Sequence 18
of the race. And we have the adolescent to prove otherwise to us. "If we gave the world to the small child,&quot…
Sequence 19
And moreover, she suggested a program, as she had done for the first and second planes of development. To some extent we have…
Sequence 20
to studying. In order for the adolescent to acquire social experience, society must build the right sort of environment for…
Sequence 21
constructive instincts that as yet have neither been recognized nor put to use .... Might not this goal be reached by changing…
Sequence 22
But Or. Montessorl's pri- mary concern for the ado-, lescent was that he should be allowed a life of activ- ity and…
Sequence 23
contacts. Running the shop would necessitate a study of commerce and exchange, of supply and demand, of the rules of book-…
Sequence 25
presented the child of the first plane with the world, and the child of the second plane with the universe. What Dr.…
Sequence 26
gives individuals infinite possibilities for growth and improvement and constitutes the starting point of man's complete…
Sequence 27
achieving the development of the human personality, rather than the narrower one of providing culture only, then a close…
Sequence 28
Sir Richard Livingstone had argued that education must be not just vocational but also social and spiritual. Much earlier, Dr…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 02 Designing for the Needs of Adolescents: An Interview with John McNamara

Sequence 1
DESIGNING FOR THE NEEDS OF ADoLESCENTS: AN INTERVIEW WITH JOHN MCNAMARA by David Kahn Ibis interoiew focuses on Mr. McNamara…
Sequence 2
What are the new frameworks and Montessori telling us? Mathematical reasoning, problem solving, communication, and connections…
Sequence 5
the tools of the future. The technology and the knowledge explosion are changing education. The how it is to be done remains…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 03 Montessori Adolescent Education: Toward an Emerging Framework

Sequence 1
MONTESSORI AooLESCENT EDUCATION: TOWARD AN EMERGING FRAMEWORK by David Kahn Mr. Kahn summarizes his understanding of major…
Sequence 4
or no documentation available. There is no governing standard or consensus of design. Teaching personnel who are sensitive to…
Sequence 8
The Paideia model is clearly compatible with Montessori, both stressing presentation and coaching. The Paideia chart goes on,…
Sequence 9
• c:: I,) 0 ;·; I,) • ... ,, c:: ·- QI 0• QI .. a. CII .: . .c= c.,•- • .ii: OCI) (J .. .... • .ii: c:: • o…
Sequence 10
Grade 7 (Continued) • C Judaism, Ch.ristianity, Islam U.S.A. Government USSR U 0 Electoral Process Derived From…
Sequence 16
assignments. Unless departmentalized team teaching is thoroughly orches- trated, work surges and student overloads in homework…
Sequence 22
between the specialists in order to get an overview of each individual student. The generalist approach is entirely necessary…
Sequence 23
Assessment Interestingly enough, with all the alternative assessment now in process outside of Montessori education, a good…
Sequence 24
generalizations and integrative structures. Most programs are worked empirically with different segments evolving into an…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 04 A Montessori Vision of Adolescence

Sequence 1
Lake Country School is a city school (in south Minneapolis), and for obvious reasons our program is not Erdkinder-it is a…
Sequence 2
Th&i;young' child de- mands, "Help me to doit myself.n:rheado- lescent demands, "Help me to…
Sequence 6
possibilities, and potentials of life clash with the present and the past, with the real, with the might-have-beens, with…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 05 The American Adolescent: Facing a "Vortex of New Risks"

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CHARACTERISTICS AND NEEDS OF Anol.ESCENTS: A COMPARATIVE STIJDY compiled by John Long Almost eve,y Montessori seconda,y…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 06 Characteristics and Needs of Adolescents: A Comparative Study

Sequence 1
Characteristics of Adolescents Physical Characteristics Emotional Characteristics Social Characteristics Cognitive…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 09 Outreach Service Curriculum—Ruffing Montessori Middle School, Cleveland Heights, Ohio

Sequence 1
he, too, is connected to every living being and bears a responsibility toward all. As young adolescents study history and…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 11 Science Mentor Project

Sequence 3
and reread Montessori's books and lectures. As the middle school class has evolved through the years, I have listened to…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 12 Woods Middle School: A Profile

Sequence 7
I believe that this age group is in the sensitive period for developing relationships, and one of the necessary tools for…

NAMTA Journal 18/3 13 Discipline

Sequence 14
NAMTANEWs The Montessori Academy Is Full A new kind of summer program intended to encourage depth, The Montessori Academy…

NAMTA Journal 19/1 01 Montessori Mathematics: A Model Curriculum for the Twenty-First Century

Sequence 5
the main objective, with understanding relegated to unimportance. On the contrary, a formula is only a short method of stating…
Sequence 6
rather, they will say that you multiply by the reciprocal of the divisor. They have gradually developed an understanding of…
Sequence 7
In their independent investigations, Montessori students learn how mathematics is applied to the real world and are encouraged…

NAMTA Journal 19/1 02 Extensions in the Mathematics Area of the Children's House

Sequence 1
EXTENSIONS IN THE MATIIEMATICS AREA OF TIIE CHDDREN'S HOUSE by Rita Schaefer Zener Looking at very practical variations…
Sequence 4
All of the above are like the first period of a three-period lesson. Each activity is an association of words with the sensory…

NAMTA Journal 19/1 03 Maria Montessori's Contribution to the Cultivation of the Mathematical Mind

Sequence 1
F~&A~--------------- MARIA MoNTFSSOm's CONTRIBUTION To nm CULTIVATION OF TIIE MATIIEMATICAL MIND by Mario M.…
Sequence 2
some of her experiences in this research and the conclusions she came to, it is because they will throw some light on the…
Sequence 4
and of the distribution in age of the various items connected with basical mathematical knowledge. Only with this background…
Sequence 5
The first conscious step into arithmetical knowledge was-and still is-learning numbers up to ten with ten square prisms whose…
Sequence 6
presented Dr. Montessori with a conundrum similar to the one she had been confronted with when the children "…
Sequence 8
sensitive period pertinent to each age group, activity, and spontaneous passing into abstraction were possible for the…
Sequence 9
something else, the name comes into our mind. This is due to the engrams that, urged by our interest, have started to work,…
Sequence 10
them not sufficiently prepared, while the scientific progress of our days demands greater mathematical knowledge. Certainly…

NAMTA Journal 19/1 05 The Keepers of Alexandria: A Missing Link for Montessori History? An Introduction.

Sequence 4
the Coming of Man to convey the sequence of Australopithecus, Homo habilis, Neanderthal, Cro-Magnon, etc.? Again philosophy…
Sequence 5
together any civilization and compare their findings with modem times. For starters, the Montessori elementaty curriculum also…
Sequence 7
that are real and necessary in order to take the path to maturity. Thus, for the purposes of introducing the Story of…

NAMTA Journal 19/1 10 Progressive Vision, Leadership, and System Change

Sequence 1
PROGRESSIVE VISION, LEAoERSIDP, AND SYSTEM CHANGE by Robert Peterkin, EdD Jn this presentation given at the November public…
Sequence 11
leadership. Montessori teachers, parents, and students are already prepared to enter into dialogue with visionary and…
Sequence 12
international in scope. Montessori has a proven track record in over one hundred school systems. Montessori education also…
Sequence 14
We need to examine the work of the National Urban Alliance for Effective Education, a consortium of twenty-eight school…

NAMTA Journal 19/1 11 Scientific Pedagogy Revisited

Sequence 1
SCIENTIFIC PEDAGOGY REvlsITED by Margaret Loeffler, PhD From her perspective as coordinator of the Teachers' Research…
Sequence 2
and must be carried out by teachers in their own classrooms. Although much verbal agreement has been given to this original…
Sequence 3
The time seems to be right to suggest a new view of teachers as scientific pedagogues who study children in a classroom…
Sequence 4
and writing. Teachers have written about their experiences, anecdotaJly and informally, through diaries, logs, and narratives…
Sequence 10
References Hubbard, R.S., & B.M. Power 0993). 7be art of classroom inquiry. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann Educational…

NAMTA Journal 19/1 12 Breakthrough in Evolution: Toward a Partnership Future

Sequence 1
F~I'-------------------- BREAKTHROUGH IN EvoLunoN: TowARD A PARTNERSIDP FUITJRE by Riane Eisler Jn The Chalice and…

NAMTA Journal 19/2 01 Truth in Parenting

Sequence 2
The articles in this NAMTA]ournal, while they are compatible with Montessori thought, are not meant to represent the…

NAMTA Journal 19/2 02 The Ecology of the Mind

Sequence 4
of the word, in the sense of Socrates and Plato, the master or majenta who recognizes that in every child and perhaps in every…

NAMTA Journal 19/2 04 The Developmental Crises of the First Three Years

Sequence 1
THE DEVELOPMENTAL CRISES OF THE FIRST THREE YEARS by Silvana Quattrocchi Montanaro, M.D. Introduction In our growth…

NAMTA Journal 19/2 05 Dr. Maria Montessori and the Child

Sequence 1
DR. MAruA. MONTESSORI AND THE CHILO by Dr. Mario Montessori I hope that you are not going to be disillusioned by what I say.…
Sequence 2
in order to study medicine. At that time, a woman who went among men, and especially among naked bodies which she cut to…
Sequence 3
to it, drop it, and break it. Such was the child, and thus it was described by official psychology. So, there was Dr.…
Sequence 4
So we start with this group of children, belonging to that group of parents, and a positivist. The positivist was a scientist…
Sequence 5
to wh:11 was happening in ordinary life: There the children were disorderly, always leaving Lhings lying around, and the…
Sequence 6
unable to account for them. The only thing she had done was lo give them freedom, freedom to choose their tasks, and she had…
Sequence 7
perfect society touched this woman. And the positivist, who disbelieved in religion, continues: "One day, in great…
Sequence 8
The first lesson the child gives us is love. He has love in himself, and he knows how to arouse love in others. developing…

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