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Displaying results 801 - 900 of 13048

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

Sequence 9
We give far too much attention to the conscious, and hardly any to the unconscious. And yet, it is the unconscious which…
Sequence 12
was already filled with this respect for life. Obligations and religious feelings come into sight if we have the chance to…

NAMTA Journal 19/2 06 The Child and the Adult

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THE CHil.D AND TIIE ADULT by Sofia Cavalletti 7be one who makes himself as little as this little eh ild is the greatest i:n…

NAMTA Journal 19/2 12 Montessori and Learning Disabilities

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F~----------------- MONTESSORI AND LEARNING DISABIUTIES by Sylvia 0. Richardson American education is currently under attack…
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A great deal of learning is dependent upon early sensorimotor integration and perceptual maturation. Children learn first…
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teaching, which are now standard fixtures in the early education scene in America. Dr. Montessori was strongly influenced by…
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the teacher must awaken the spirit of the child. They considered the moral preparation of the teacher to be the key to…
Sequence 9
and she stressed that every unnecessary aid to a child is an impediment. Thus, the "prepared environment"…
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mention reading; there is one section on the material for the preparation for writing and another on exercises for writing…
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analysis of sounds relative to speech is essentially auditory-visual-tactile- kinesthetic exercises connected with the…
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Children who can compose a word with the letters of the movable alphabet are not writing, but they are ready to write-they are…
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Next, phonogram cards and "puzzle words" (nonphonetic words) are introduced and later, the roots of words…
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behavior and learning such as posture and coordination, the development of directionality and laterality, and the development…
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NJCLD Cl 988). Position paper on definition of learning disabili- ties. Baltimore: The Orton Dyslexia Society. Orton, J.L. (…

NAMTA Journal 19/3 01 Survey of Montessori Adolescent Programs: Interpretive Commentary

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Timeline of Montessori Adolescent Programs 1900 1910 1907: Casadei Bambini founded In Rome 1920 1930 early 1930s: first…
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SURVEY OF MONTESSORI ADOLESCENT PROGRAMS: INTERPRETIVE COMMENTARY by John Long Introduction Let me Lell a personal story…
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of life when young people lhrive on real life experience and active involvement. And lhe adults seemed to the adolescent…
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II little real knowledge of it. Instead, it is lo those three essays, and in particular Lo "The Erdkinder,&quot…
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Adults in the Beginning Adulcs 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Total Raw number of schools 20 10 2 1 0 0 0 1 34 Percent…
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• choose well; need normalized core group • limited to 15% of class • limited to 20% of class • only after extensive…
Sequence 19
schools. Maybe not in our schools, but perhaps in open schools, etc. They should also be academically competent in the…
Sequence 20
Of those teachers who are Montessori-trained, a slight majority (51%) has elementary training only. Slightly more than one…
Sequence 49
Insurmountable Difficulties • Urban setting, public school. • Inner city school ... experience things in our community as…
Sequence 52
• car washes, working together to earn money for class Lrip (2), sell refreshments at basketball games Other (4) • in-jokes…
Sequence 55
Many middle schools, Montessori and od1erwise, utilize some form of advising or counseling lo meet Lhe social needs of lhe…
Sequence 56
What about Montessori's Erdkinclcr proposal? The teachers at Median Montessori t.liddle School foci che Erdkinder is an…
Sequence 57
This is the picture that emerges from the survey data of Median Montessori Middle School. That Median is in only its sixth…
Sequence 58
to this survey, only the Franciscan Montessori Earth School in Portland, Oregon, gives adolescents an Erdkinder experience of…
Sequence 60
• At the same time, we need Lo decide as a group of Montessori schools \, hat our target is in the clevcloprnenl of adolescent…
Sequence 61
lis), Montessori on the Lake (Lake Forest, CA), Meadow Montessori School (Monroe, lvll), Mercy Montessori Center (Cincinnati…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 01 To Nurture the Human Potential

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To NURTURE THE HUMAN PoTENTIAL by David Kahn, Editor When Maria Montessori looked to the child, she saw unlimited human…
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occupations, looking at new challenges in linking practical life and experience with academic frameworks. Louise Chawla and…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 02 Creative Ability in Childhood

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CREATIVE ABILITY IN CHILDHOOD by Maria Montessori Dr. Montessori presented this lecture at the Eightlz l11ternatio11al…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 03 Nurturing the Creative Personality

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NURTURING THE CREATIVE PERSONALITY Rita Schaefer Zener, PhD Exploring in careful sequence Dr. Montessori's writings…
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concrete, real, and relevant to the lives of young children; (5) provid- ing experiences for children that are outside of the…
Sequence 3
(1936/1975, 1949/1961, 1949/1975). When the developmental pro- cess proceeds normally, normalization occurs, and all four of…
Sequence 5
ln a little girl of 3½, who attended our first school, the intensity of this was amazing. With many interesting things on all…
Sequence 13
child and the world of possible activities. The lessons that they offer, the interventions they make to re-direct non-…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 04 Montessori as an Aid to Life

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students performed higher than expected. In fact, the homeroom teachers had to be convinced that is was really the students…
Sequence 7
continuously remind ourselves and others of the creative power within the child that we must trust. It calls on faith, a faith…
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This Is a wonderful profession, but It Is not easy. We must pro- vide the structure for the soclal group and have clear…
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cannot be free without being independent, hence, in order to gain independence, the active manifestations of personal liberty…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 06 The Place of Reading Recovery in Montessori Schools

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THE PLACE OF READING RECOVERY IN MONTESSORI SCHOOLS by Mary Maher Boehnlein, PhD Dr. Boehnlein discusses the Reading…
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A good reader anticipates a possible sentence or discourse pattern and/or uses repetition to confirm the sentence or…
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cess rates. In the first Montessori school to implement Reading Recovery, all of the six-year-olds (100% of the children…
Sequence 7
While Montessorl's definition of reading seems very similar to that of current ex- perts, her explanation of how to…
Sequence 12
word, the child can pronounce the sounds faster and faster, as Montessori suggests, and pronounce the word. Montessori states…
Sequence 14
The use of books which have repeated sentence patters with changes in only one or two words helps overcome the problem…
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Qf current research on the acquisition of literacy and of the currently popular whole language approach. Reading Recovery,…
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ber leopard. If not, then the teacher simply tells the child the word but requires him or her to look at the word and run a…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 07 Cosmic Education and Literature-Based Teaching

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COSMIC EDUCATION AND LITERATURE- BASED TEACHING by Daniel Bachhuber Daniel Bachhuber provides a practical gttide to the…
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multiplicity of forms (myths, legends, folklore, poems, nonfiction, short stories, novels) with self-confidence intact,…
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and meaning in the universe is one of the ways we provide a secure environment. But we also create a context in which there is…
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When we study a poem or a novel, children will know where to place it in the history of literature. We make these choices as…
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From the very beginning, children are presented with and encouraged to compose whole texts-real lan- guage written for real…
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Since we are not omniscient, we cannot completely know what is in the child. Therefore, both Montessori and the whole language…
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chapter is called "Discipline and the Teacher," and in it, Montessori is sympathetic to the struggle of a…
Sequence 24
-----------------------------~ - - where children need never experience the kind of total isolation Rogers touches upon.…
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part) of the disturbing hormonal changes of adolescence, the child of 9 to 12, Montessori believed, is a stronger learner than…
Sequence 26
or your eye blinking or a field of grass blowing in the wind Silence is perhaps a fish swimming or a witch flying or the…
Sequence 29
is a question they often think about. How did something get the way it is? They ask this question about animals, about apples…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 08 Toward Key Experiences for the Adolescent

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Hopkins, L.B. (1987). Pass the poetry, please. New York: Harper Collins Children's Books. Koch, K. (1970). Wishes, lies…
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TOWARD KEY EXPERIENCES FOR THE ADOLESCENT by John Long John Long compares the early-childhood and adolescent levels of…
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after hour, day after day, is a prison sentence. They need activity. They need to be up and down. They need to do physical…
Sequence 5
Montessori reminded us that our students are training for the intellectual professions (1948/1973, p. 99), but we are not…
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the silo. They need to sweep the barn. They need to prepare lunch for 10 people or for 200. They need to plan and organize and…
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announcements of upcoming events and advertising posters. They need to write biographies of historical characters, of…
Sequence 8
The work of this stage of development is adaptation to social life. The adolescent is vulnerable to the development of all…
Sequence 9
Part II: Valorization, Normalization, and the Key Experiences The comparison of the adolescent and the very young child can…
Sequence 10
How is valorization accomplished? It is through work, by activ- ity, by experience, by action, by being active with one's…
Sequence 11
The normalized child displays all of the characteristics familiar to experienced Montessori teachers: love of order, love of…
Sequence 13
Experience for the sake of experience is not the goal. It is not the intent to merely make education fun. Experiences are a…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 09 Reinventing Civility

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and intolerance of others-especially others who are or appear differ- ent. There are the universal put-downs, the hurtful and…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 10 The Roots of Environmental Concern

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THE ROOTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERN by Louise Chawla, PhD, and Roger A. Hart, PhD Louise Chawla and Roger A. Hart present a…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 11 Equal Opportunity and the Montessori Magnet School

Sequence 4
According to Kenneth Strike's analysis (1982, p. 214), two educa- tional strategies are possible prescriptions to…
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(2) Class position. Making students into numbers and segregat- ing them in classes trains them to stay in their place. (3)…
Sequence 11
What Tolstoy and Montessori saw so clearly and worked so hard to eradicate were the barriers which tra- ditional…
Sequence 13
Montessori writes: ... every living creature possesses the power to choose, in a complex and many sided environment, that…
Sequence 16
emphasizing the "knowledge and skills that might ensure a more responsive culture" (Shapiro, 1993, p. 299)…
Sequence 18
a need for whole men. Every side of the human personality must function. A young person may have special aptitudes in some…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 12 In Memoriam: Elise Braun Barnett 1904-1994

Sequence 3
IN MEMORIAM ELISE BRAUN BARNETT 1904-1994 On November 20, 1994, the Montessori community lost a tireless lover of children…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 13 The Montessori Approach to Music

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In 1938, with the help of friends in India, she and her family managed to leave Austria before the War. She was to spend nine…
Sequence 4
Dr. Maria Montessori (1870-1952) was the first woman physician of her native country, Italy. She became interested in…
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speed, according to his own capacities in a non-competitive atmo- sphere. The teacher introduces the didactic material…
Sequence 6
First, identities are to be recognized; then a few strongly contrast- ing stimuli are presented, followed by gradual…
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It seems strange that it is the rhythm in music and not the melody to which children show their first active response. When…

NAMTA Journal 20/1 14 In Memoriam: Nancy McCormick Rambusch 1927-1994

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It seems strange that it is the rhythm in music and not the melody to which children show their first active response. When…
Sequence 11
First, identities are to be recognized; then a few strongly contrast- ing stimuli are presented, followed by gradual…
Sequence 12
speed, according to his own capacities in a non-competitive atmo- sphere. The teacher introduces the didactic material…
Sequence 13
Dr. Maria Montessori (1870-1952) was the first woman physician of her native country, Italy. She became interested in…
Sequence 16
In 1938, with the help of friends in India, she and her family managed to leave Austria before the War. She was to spend nine…
Sequence 17
IN MEMORIAM ELISE BRAUN BARNETT 1904-1994 On November 20, 1994, the Montessori community lost a tireless lover of children…
Sequence 20
Haberman, M. (1991). The pedagogy of poverty versus good teaching. Phi Delta K.appan, 73(4). Hannaford, I. (1994, Spring).…
Sequence 22
a need for whole men. Every side of the human personality must function. A young person may have special aptitudes in some…
Sequence 24
emphasizing the "knowledge and skills that might ensure a more responsive culture" (Shapiro, 1993, p. 299)…
Sequence 27
Montessori writes: ... every living creature possesses the power to choose, in a complex and many sided environment, that…
Sequence 29
What Tolstoy and Montessori saw so clearly and worked so hard to eradicate were the barriers which tra- ditional…
Sequence 31
(2) Class position. Making students into numbers and segregat- ing them in classes trains them to stay in their place. (3)…
Sequence 36
According to Kenneth Strike's analysis (1982, p. 214), two educa- tional strategies are possible prescriptions to…
Sequence 48
THE ROOTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERN by Louise Chawla, PhD, and Roger A. Hart, PhD Louise Chawla and Roger A. Hart present a…

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