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Displaying results 1 - 100 of 155

NAMTA Journal 14/1 08 The Activity and Art of Reading

Sequence 1
THE ACTIVITY AND ART OF READING by Mortimer Adler and Charles Van Doren Dr. Adler's cw.ssicrendering of the thinking…

NAMTA Journal 14/2 03 Learning by Class Discussion

Sequence 7
4-A,C,D. To facilitate as leader is not to make difficult subjects easy but to make it easier for participants to initially…

NAMTA Journal 15/1 09 The Evolution of a Child-Centered Curriculum

Sequence 10
Negative Education Rousseau says, "let him be disposed to respect the individual, butl to despise the multitude&…

NAMTA Journal 16/1 09 The Hand in Education (1971)

Sequence 3
Its function and the objects it needs change, however, with the characteristics of the successive phases in the development of…
Sequence 5
a great and essential part. The exact movements of the hand as it uses the sensorial apparatus repeatedly in as exact and…
Sequence 6
Last, the hand should not be forgotten or banished when the intel- ligence starts building its very own construction - culture…

NAMTA Journal 17/1 04 The Child and the World of Nature

Sequence 8
names of different animals and plants-wonderful words like "red- winged blackbird" and "white-…

NAMTA Journal 17/1 09 A Model of the Maturing Person

Sequence 12
casks in terms of the adaptive actitudes and skills chat he believes every person should master, including industry, identity…

NAMTA Journal 17/3 24 Tuning in to Our Animal Nature (Upper Elementary)

Sequence 4
"We should not pretend to understand the world only by the intel- lect; we apprehend it just as much by…

NAMTA Journal 18/1 08 The Intellectual Lives of Teachers

Sequence 9
questions, and methods worth thinking about. These are the necessary intel- lectual conditjons of sound in-service programs.…
Sequence 17
teachers to work with administrators on a plan for released time distribution and an in-service schedule for the system.…

NAMTA Journal 20/3 04 The Organization of Intellectual Work in School

Sequence 7
quantity of water acquires a motor force which, for instance, may be utilized for the production of electricity. Any teacher…

NAMTA Journal 21/2 01 The Theory of Multiple Intelligences: In Support of Montessori

Sequence 2
think of multiple talents, potentialities, or manifestations of intelli- gence than a fragmented intelligence." With…

NAMTA Journal 21/2 03 How Are You Smart? Multiple Intelligences and Classroom Practices

Sequence 1
How ARE You SMART?: MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES AND CLASSROOM PRACTICES by Bruce Torff The question "How are you smart…

NAMTA Journal 21/2 04 The Verbal/Linguistic and Visual/Spatial Intelligences

Sequence 5
Praxis refers to the different uses of words. Praxis involves aware- ness of different parts of speech, for example,open the…

NAMTA Journal 21/2 05 The Personal Intelligences: Linking Gardner to Montessori

Sequence 3
manifestations of intelligence than a fragmented intelligence. I still believe in a cosmic intelligence, of which we are all…

NAMTA Journal 24/1 03 Past, Present, and Possible: A Montessori Global Perspective

Sequence 2
Mario Montessori was unique in a very special way. He was highly intel- ligent, wise, naughty, and great fun. He was…

NAMTA Journal 24/1 14 Multiple Intelligences: Past, Present, Future

Sequence 3
Howard Gardner's work and the present state of his Theory of Multiple Intelligences, which debunks traditional notions of…

NAMTA Journal 25/2 13 Innovation within Limits: How Is It Possible? – A Summary of the Proceedings

Sequence 20
High U) w C, z w .J .J ~ :c 0 Low SKILLS High Figure 1 itself. One situation that does often produce flow is…

NAMTA Journal 25/3 03 The First Plane of Development

Sequence 6
given special gifts as he had a unique part to play in the drama of life. Those special gifts were intellect and love, reason…

NAMTA Journal 26/1 07 In the Service of Creation

Sequence 4
Implicit in love of the environment are the awe and wonder of discovering the world. Another element inherent in love of the…

NAMTA Journal 26/1 11 Thirty Years in the Montessori Classroom

Sequence 7
tion, even if only sporadically at first, their achievement level will develop over the years along with their concentration.…

NAMTA Journal 26/3 14 Dr. Montessori's Third Lecture Given at the Montessori Congress in Oxford, England, 1936

Sequence 2
Yes, places can make real the human condition and the human experience, something critical in nurturing the life and ongoing…

NAMTA Journal 26/3 17 Erdkinder: The Experiment for the Experiment (Interview with Margaret Elizabeth Stephenson and A.M…

Sequence 1
exercise his mental powers. Instruction is considered the on! y goal in secondary school, but what sort of instruction? What…

NAMTA Journal 28/2 04 Redefining Who We Are: The Work of Learning Community Facing Adolescents/Facing Ourselves

Sequence 4
in the large potential of every human being. We have to decide to change in order to offer the children who live with us the…

NAMTA Journal 28/2 12 Prenatal and Perinatal Foundations of Moral Development

Sequence 7
baby to fall in Jove with one another (Uvnas-Moberg). Thus breastfeeding assists the baby in becoming pleasure tolerant and…

NAMTA Journal 29/1 16 Mario M. Montessori is Dead: Chronicle of a Ceremony

Sequence 5
The consciousness, therefore, is applied to considering the slightest movements, to controlling actions in every detail in…

NAMTA Journal 29/1 22 Camillo 26-01-04

Sequence 43
The consciousness, therefore, is applied to considering the slightest movements, to controlling actions in every detail in…

NAMTA Journal 30/2 02 Montessori: A Modern Approach to Intelligence

Sequence 1
MONTESSORI: A MODERN APPROACH TO INTELLIGENCE by Annette M. Haines Annette Haines' comprehensive review of Montessori…
Sequence 2
The English school took a huge step forward with Charles Spearman's invention of factor analysis. Using this technique,…
Sequence 13
technology, she understood the creative nature of the third plane of development. CONCLUSION Intelligence, in Montessori…
Sequence 15
We must be quick because our species, homo sapiens, having at- tained a certain level of intelligence, is now, in the words of…

NAMTA Journal 30/2 04 The Right Use of Intelligence in the Montessori Elementary Classroom

Sequence 4
In 1921, the editors of the Journal of Educational Psychology listed these characteristics of intelligence (cited in Cole…
Sequence 7
are isolated sensations and a multiplicity of sensations in the environ- ment, mental confusion prohibits the development of…

NAMTA Journal 30/2 05 How Are You Smart? Multiple Intelligences and Classroom Practices

Sequence 1
How ARE You SMART?: MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES AND CLASSROOM PRACTICES by Bruce Torff One should not address the concept of…

NAMTA Journal 30/2 08 The Wisdom of Love: A Montessori Journey of the Sea of Life

Sequence 10
ADOLESCENT: SLAVE TO THE PRE-COLLEGIATE OR INDEPENDENT LEARNER LOOKING AT THE WHOLE OF LIFE? But, having studied the…

NAMTA Journal 31/1 31 The Montessori High School for the Study of Nature and Society

Sequence 19
subplanes of parent-infant class, infant, and toddler (ages birth to three), preschool (ages three to six); lower elementary…

NAMTA Journal 33/1 06 Towards a Theory of Knowledge Framework for a Montessori High School

Sequence 9
The phrase "capacity and many-sided powers of adaptation" implies parallel skil.ls for processing…

NAMTA Journal 33/2 02 The Special Needs Child from the Montessori Perspective

Sequence 12
Montessori has many observations on this fact. Our prepared environments encourage young children's movement to use their…

NAMTA Journal 33/2 04 Learning Differences of Learning Disorders? Meeting Authentic Needs Of the Three-to-Six Child

Sequence 4
B.F. Skinner promoted a theory called opera11t conditioning or behnvior modificntion. This theory was not concerned with what…

NAMTA Journal 33/3 07 Experiences in Nature: Resolute Second-Plane Directions Toward Erdkinder

Sequence 15
book of Nnture Study (1911) is still in print today and is a great resource for teachers. 4 Both Professor Bailey's and…

NAMTA Journal 34/1 05 Indirect Preparation: Old Vision; New Perspectives

Sequence 6
conscious understanding of what he already knows. He knows that he knows. This, of course, is the beginning of self-awareness…

NAMTA Journal 34/1 10 Montessori from the Start: Foundations for Independence

Sequence 12
work was everywhere: on the tables of all sizes, on rugs on the floor, in the hallways, all displaying the children's…

NAMTA Journal 34/2 12 Just the Facts: Information Provided by the International Dyslexia Association

Sequence 20
ing) skills. Instead, oral language abilities (listening and speaking) are considered the best predictors of reading and…

NAMTA Journal 34/3 05 Teacher-Student Relationships for the Montessori Continuum

Sequence 5
Sometimes, I found, [ could not call them. Perhaps fear, like a wall behind a wall, or a dullness, like many blankets that…

NAMTA Journal 35/1 04 Enrollment Strategies for Weathering the Storm

Sequence 4
Tn addition, the school could offer a tuition credit for families that make a referral that results in an enrollment. Tuition…

NAMTA Journal 35/2 12 A Mathematician Explores the Gap Between Stories and Statistics, Logic, and Language

Sequence 12
Recognition of common stereotypes and knowledge of recur- ring stereotyped situations-restaurant behavior, retail purchasing…

NAMTA Journal 36/1 05 How Science and History Lead to Community Service

Sequence 8
of nature with the same reverence and joy that he experiences when he wakes in the morning to find his world blanketed with…

NAMTA Journal 36/1 09 Origins and Theory of the Three-Period Lesson

Sequence 11
The third period of the child's work may be observed in the "aha" reaction. A light bulb goes on. The…

NAMTA Journal 36/1 14 Initiation to the Knowledge that Is the Pride of Our Civilization

Sequence 3
Of the many cultures of humankind, of the plenitude of history's eras and their mass of pivotal artifacts, we reasoned…

NAMTA Journal 37/1 05 Revolutions in Curriculum: Tenth Grade as a Turning Point and a Challenge at Montessori High School

Sequence 12
ready. importantly, the tenth grader is also asked to commit to a cause beyond her individual needs (those being the primary…

NAMTA Journal 38/1 11 Sowing the Seeds of the Sciences: Our Gift to the Future

Sequence 3
101 Sillick • Sowing the Seeds of the Sciences: Our Gift to the Future Biology, set within an ecological framework, includes…

NAMTA Journal 38/2 03 Practical Life: The Keystone of Life, Culture, and Community

Sequence 5
51 Ramani • Practical Life: The Keystone of Life, Culture, and Community he do this? Any action is an expression of a thought…

NAMTA Journal 38/2 05 The Significance of the Hand for the Elementary Years

Sequence 18
84 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 38, No. 2 • Spring 2013 Provide Enough Time for the Child to Work The greatest obstacle that…

NAMTA Journal 38/2 09 Sacred Second

Sequence 2
128 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 38, No. 2 • Spring 2013 things like, “He never sat still in class, and he was never tired” or “…

NAMTA Journal 39/2 02 Montessori All Day: Gracious Living with Children beyond the Hours of a Typical School Day

Sequence 10
38 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 39, No. 2 • Spring 2014 Rather, we have set up circumstances where children are on site for long…

NAMTA Journal 39/3 04 Following the Child for Real

Sequence 10
100 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 39, No. 3 • Summer 2014 out the car window. “Like a leaf.” Huh? “Margin,” she replied, “like of…

NAMTA Journal 40/1 05 Grace and Courtesy in the Elementary Community

Sequence 1
Grace and courteSy in the elementary community by Elise Huneke-Stone Don’t be fooled by Elise Huneke-Stone’s disarming…

NAMTA Journal 40/1 10 Children: A Different Way of Being Christians

Sequence 7
165 Excerpt • Like Leaven by Patricia Coulter 2) God’s life is within us (Christ, the light). It is so powerful that it…

NAMTA Journal 41/1 06 The Hungry Mind: From the Casa dei Bambini to Cosmic Education

Sequence 11
101 Krumins Grazzini • The Hungry Mind of thinking and understanding as well as with action and physical work. In this way,…

NAMTA Journal 41/2 08 Technology and the Prepared Environment for the Third-Plane Child

Sequence 6
136 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 41, No. 2 • Spring 2016 needs of the adolescent through the needs of the third-plane child by…

NAMTA Journal 41/3 04 Becoming a Scientific Observer

Sequence 11
143 MacDonald • Becoming a Scientific Observer these physical “therapies” intended to alter their child’s physical…

NAMTA Journal 41/3 09 Observation

Sequence 9
237 Kripalani • Observation disbelief or being caught in the trap of old techniques of teaching rather than directing the…

NAMTA Journal 41/3 20 Lecture 19: May 17, 1921

Sequence 2
374 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 41, No. 3 • Summer 2016 these objects which the child will need. It is not sufficient for her to…

NAMTA Journal 42/2 03 Strategies to Support Concentration

Sequence 12
56 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 42, No. 2 • Spring 2017 For the elementary child, Cosmic Education itself is the hook. Maria…

NAMTA Journal 42/2 14 Helping Children with Attentional Challenges in a Montessori Classroom: The Role of the Physician

Sequence 59
413 Massie • Appendix D: ADHD Questionnaire 4. WhaT liMiTaTions have you felT on succeeding in WhaT you Wish To do? Mary:…

NAMTA Journal 42/3 06 High School Frameworks at Clark Montessori

Sequence 3
83 Blase and Donahoe • High School Frameworks at Clark Montessori the adolescent’s ability to find one’s place in society,…

NAMTA Journal 43/1-2 17 Science and the Montessori Casa dei Bambini, 1999

Sequence 4
AMI Journal 2017 - 2018 page 109 and soil; how the roots reach down into the earth and the leaves turn upwards towards the…

NAMTA Journal 43/1-2 30 Professional Biography of Annette Haines

Sequence 60
AMI Journal 2017 - 2018 page 109 and soil; how the roots reach down into the earth and the leaves turn upwards towards the…

NAMTA Journal 43/1-2 31 Reflections by Colleagues on the AMI Editorial Board

Sequence 61
AMI Journal 2017 - 2018 page 109 and soil; how the roots reach down into the earth and the leaves turn upwards towards the…

NAMTA Journal 45/1 11 Experiences in Nature: Resolute Second-Plane Directions Toward Erdkinder

Sequence 5
92 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 44, No. 2 • Spring 2021 The following writing is excerpted from a longer piece where the girl…
Sequence 6
Leonard & Allen • Experiences In Nature 93 August. “How often is the soul of man—especially that of the child—…

NAMTA Quarterly 02/3 07 Or Readiness for School

Sequence 13
Nursery schools also find it useful to inform parents, individually or in groups, how the school curriculum assists children…

NAMTA Quarterly 07/1 02 The Perfectibility of Intellect

Sequence 1
The Perfectibility of Intellect By Jerome S. Bruner Jerome Bruner's complex view of mental life is derived from a…
Sequence 3
gist's nonsense syllables, for example), but for the most part organization is a far more active process of imposing…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 14, Number 1, 1988, Fall-Winter

Sequence 65
THE ACTIVITY AND ART OF READING by Mortimer Adler and Charles Van Doren Dr. Adler's cw.ssicrendering of the thinking…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 14, Number 2, 1989, Winter-Spring

Sequence 30
4-A,C,D. To facilitate as leader is not to make difficult subjects easy but to make it easier for participants to initially…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 15, Number 1, 1990, Fall-Winter

Sequence 91
Negative Education Rousseau says, "let him be disposed to respect the individual, butl to despise the multitude&…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 16, Number 1, 1990, Fall-Winter

Sequence 54
Its function and the objects it needs change, however, with the characteristics of the successive phases in the development of…
Sequence 56
a great and essential part. The exact movements of the hand as it uses the sensorial apparatus repeatedly in as exact and…
Sequence 57
Last, the hand should not be forgotten or banished when the intel- ligence starts building its very own construction - culture…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 17, Number 1, 1991, Fall-Winter

Sequence 72
names of different animals and plants-wonderful words like "red- winged blackbird" and "white-…
Sequence 170
casks in terms of the adaptive actitudes and skills chat he believes every person should master, including industry, identity…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 17, Number 3, 1992, Summer

Sequence 96
"We should not pretend to understand the world only by the intel- lect; we apprehend it just as much by…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 18, Number 1, 1993, Winter

Sequence 121
questions, and methods worth thinking about. These are the necessary intel- lectual conditjons of sound in-service programs.…
Sequence 129
teachers to work with administrators on a plan for released time distribution and an in-service schedule for the system.…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 20, Number 3, 1995, Summer

Sequence 33
quantity of water acquires a motor force which, for instance, may be utilized for the production of electricity. Any teacher…

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

Sequence 8
think of multiple talents, potentialities, or manifestations of intelli- gence than a fragmented intelligence." With…
Sequence 37
How ARE You SMART?: MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES AND CLASSROOM PRACTICES by Bruce Torff The question "How are you smart…
Sequence 55
Praxis refers to the different uses of words. Praxis involves aware- ness of different parts of speech, for example,open the…
Sequence 72
manifestations of intelligence than a fragmented intelligence. I still believe in a cosmic intelligence, of which we are all…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 22, Number 1, 1997, Winter

Sequence 254
Supportive administration as well as primary and lower elementary staff. Small class size, beautiful cam- pus setting,…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 24, Number 1, 1999, Winter

Sequence 21
Mario Montessori was unique in a very special way. He was highly intel- ligent, wise, naughty, and great fun. He was…
Sequence 215
Howard Gardner's work and the present state of his Theory of Multiple Intelligences, which debunks traditional notions of…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 25, Number 2, 2000, Spring

Sequence 231
High U) w C, z w .J .J ~ :c 0 Low SKILLS High Figure 1 itself. One situation that does often produce flow is…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 25, Number 3, 2000, Summer

Sequence 34
given special gifts as he had a unique part to play in the drama of life. Those special gifts were intellect and love, reason…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 26, Number 1, 2001, Winter

Sequence 147
Implicit in love of the environment are the awe and wonder of discovering the world. Another element inherent in love of the…
Sequence 193
tion, even if only sporadically at first, their achievement level will develop over the years along with their concentration.…

The NAMTA Journal, Volume 26, Number 3, 2001, Summer

Sequence 183
Yes, places can make real the human condition and the human experience, something critical in nurturing the life and ongoing…
Sequence 216
exercise his mental powers. Instruction is considered the on! y goal in secondary school, but what sort of instruction? What…

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Maria Montessori's Life and Work
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