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Sequence 1Baiba Krumins and Camillo Grazzini, 2002, Paris, France l06 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 29, No. 1 • Winter 2004 |
Sequence 13sense of personal responsibility." The very first experiment of this kind, however, was the Junior Republic, founded… |
Sequence 14Landerziehungsheime or "education homes in the country." For ex- ample, the one for youths from twelve to… |
Sequence 1STUDY-CONFERENCE IN STRASBOURG, AUGUST, 1962 by Vera Gander and Camillo Grazzini This year it has been the turn of eastern… |
Sequence 12STUDY-CONFERENCE IN STRASBOURG, AUGUST, 1962 by Vera Gander and Camillo Grazzini This year it has been the turn of eastern… |
Sequence 70Landerziehungsheime or "education homes in the country." For ex- ample, the one for youths from twelve to… |
Sequence 71sense of personal responsibility." The very first experiment of this kind, however, was the Junior Republic, founded… |
Sequence 149Baiba Krumins and Camillo Grazzini, 2002, Paris, France l06 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 29, No. 1 • Winter 2004 |
Sequence 3depressed, and one may feel the need of that solace for strength when depressed. But the wine itself does not feel the need… |
Sequence 19distinction, they feel the need of learning. Then you can teach them the Commandments, religion, and things like that. And… |
Sequence 27Friel, John C., & Linda D. Friel. Tile Seven Worst Things (Good) Parents Do. Deerfield Beach, FL: Health Commu-… |
Sequence 18a couple stores in that area, and we publicized the need to remove the dam, and we gathered money to try to get it taken down… |
Sequence 6In Montessori's original Children's House, there were no toys for pretend play. Instead of dressing and undressing… |
Sequence 15well together. Teachers and staff must refrain from being judgmental of parents who work long hours. The assistants must… |
Sequence 1Coming of Humans L----~--- Story of Math !Koy Lesson: Flow of Civilization (recorded hmory)I : Key IASson: Clanlcal… |
Sequence 7belonging to the history enriches the detail. The art museum might have an example of a canopic jar in which the Egyptians… |
Sequence 1THE THIRD INTERNATIONAL ADOLESCENT COLLOQUIUM: A RESPONSE FROM THE DOCUMENTER by Kathleen Allen As a longtime Montessori… |
Sequence 5pages. Uniquely, the main character describes the world completely through his olfactory experiences. Suskind is so skilled… |
Sequence 3work together, move forward in history. This is what the adolescent must experience and absorb: division of labor, the… |
Sequence 37extent and use it in our dealings with children. For the children are the inheritors and passers-on of culture. They are… |
Sequence 8Brain Gym, developed in the 1970s by Paul E. Dennison, PhD, an education specialist, is a series of twenty-six exercises using… |
Sequence 61i ~ "' 1 t:: f. i @ Antique Wooden Stamp Game This early stamp game box was manufaaured in The Hague by… |
Sequence 84A History of War and Peace "Enchance. Mademoiselle." An exercise in grace and courtesy, Paris, 1918… |
Sequence 86Factory where handicapped war veterans manufactured furniture and materials for Montessori classes, Paris, I 9 I 8 France,… |
Sequence 88Display Case Practical life and language materials from La Maison des Enfants, Sevres (Paris), France, I 930s This case… |
Sequence 90Practical Life and Language Materials, continued From 1933 to 1938, Margot Waltuch was a directress at La Maison des Enfants… |
Sequence 124Movement and Silence Walking on the line was a daily occurrence about midday-often out-oJ- doors .... The children [in Sevres… |
Sequence 126Movement and Silence, continued Children love silence and immobility and practice it spontaneously. One day [in Sevres,… |
Sequence 152Margot Waltuch and Amos, 1933 Peace and Education, continued A Time for Peace on Earth Sandwiched between two world wars,… |
Sequence 162Exploring Language, continued The alphabet in direct connection with spoken language-that is the way to achieve the art of… |
Sequence 166India, 1939 1928 The book Das Kind in der Familie, based on lectures she gave in 1923 in Vienna, is published in Germon. (… |
Sequence 1691946. Education for a New World. Adyar, Madras, India: Kalakshetra. 1948. De J'enfant a /'adolescent (From… |
Sequence 188Notes and Sources, continued Montessori in England, Scotland, and Ireland Montessori teachers have been training in London… |
Sequence 5Dr. Maria Montessori's first work, Tlte Mo11/essori Method, was published in English in New York in 1912. It was an… |
Sequence 47The time in the past is gone when Rome and Greece were mixed with the memories, sometimes justly unsympathetic memories, of… |
Sequence 48past, condemning one to waste time on issues that already have been solved or, at least, issues that have been put in some… |
Sequence 49young man is supposed to wear to the chariot races as well as what exercises will mold attractive feet and biceps to excite… |
Sequence 14or what we perceive something to be, we open the world of possibility with endless boundaries. ln a speech delivered in South… |
Sequence 16PSYCHOLOGICAL SUPPORT THROUGH INCLUSION We have also to be aware that emotional problems can delay or damage the learning… |
Sequence 1EXPERIENCES IN NATURE: RESOLUTE SECOND-PLANE DIRECTIONS TOWARD ERDKINDER by Gerard Leonard and Kathleen Allen Gerard… |
Sequence 6guide our practice and where it is all going? The times that L have been privileged to do that kind of staff education at our… |
Sequence 9erism at a grand scale and new forms of freedom possible, industrial- ization also caused new inequalities and poverty, and… |
Sequence 6is the culture they construct? How does a society begin? How are societies different, yet the same? The formative questions… |
Sequence 14· Origin of the city; comparison of Mesopotamian (anxiously walled in) and Egyptian (calm, ceremonial) cities; · Alexandria,… |
Sequence 12problems are very, very treatable. If babies are squinting or if their eyes are misaligned, encourage the parents to get the… |
Sequence 19Kohn,Alfie. Scl,ools 011r C/1ildre11 Deserve.Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1999. Kranowitz, Carol Stock, & Lucy Jane… |
Sequence 5This is why the Montessori method, which was devised for a typical child, needs some adaptation for a child on the spectrum.… |
Sequence 1MONTESSORI APPROACHES TO THE CLASSICS FOR ELEMENTARY STUDY: THE KEEPERS OF ALEXANDRIA by Kathleen Allen Kathleen Allen… |
Sequence 2of study. As I travel through, I'll give you some hints about how we've done it with children. When r asked John… |
Sequence 4to keep track of all these scrolls. Each book might have multiple scrolls, and they all had to be numbered and organized.… |
Sequence 5• Claudius Ptolemy • Philip of Macedon • Eratosthenes • Parmenius • Solon • Julius Caesar • Pythagoras • Aeschylus •… |
Sequence 6Latin, the significance of which was prominent when the culture was a literary culture, is not as essential today. [ts… |
Sequence 7There is also a scroll, which we'll see later. There is another book called The Art of History, which travels through the… |
Sequence 8setting, bringing a thousand winters and summers over the land and waters .... Fate left a deathless three-headed dog to… |
Sequence 9l:f you wish to learn of Alexandria and the Scroll and the lighthouse, you too must become their keeper. Along with me, you… |
Sequence 10Figure 5. Illustration of Alexandria, from The Great Tale. is teaching a group of eighteen children in Alexandria how to read… |
Sequence 11to how parts of it worked or didn't work. This approach was very successful because we could tweak it as we went along.… |
Sequence 12Human beings understand that from the brain and only from the brain arise our pleasures, laughter, and I ightheartcdness, as… |
Sequence 14learn to read a Latin piece and memorize it. The piece Apollonius uses is a section from Virgil's Aeneid, and it is… |
Sequence 18PHARI GENTES QUfNQUE AETHJ6Prcos v ALOE AMABANT. FAMfLIA ERAT BEATA QU6AD FORT0NA MORTALJBUS RARO CONCEDAT. In the story… |
Sequence 20For the teacher, this is the syntactical analysis. For each word in that short sentence you have what part of speech it is and… |
Sequence 22Pro1101111s Adverbs Co11ju11ctio11s Sepnrnte se11te11ces to trnnslnte: Latin to English; English to Latin N11111bers:… |
Sequence 23if you ever watched the old Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons.) The Wayback Machine can take you to old sites. It's a Jot of… |
Sequence 24head slightly titled. Some scientists now believe that Alexander suffered from a disorder called ocular torticollis. It may… |
Sequence 25buried in Alexandria. Eventually the story moves into the Byzantine times, so you have the Emperor Justinian and Empress… |
Sequence 26studying Alexander's symptoms think he may have had malaria or even West Nile virus. Figure 14 represents some of the… |
Sequence 27OTHER COMPONENTS The next component of this work is the model. We do have a miniature environment-pretty big actually, it… |
Sequence 28An important note here is that there is only one building on this model that we kept from year to year, and that is the… |
Sequence 31Figure 14. David Kahn, John Wyatt, Kathleen Allen. Alexandria was a center for embalming. Bodies were brought in from all… |
Sequence 14Pennsylvania and the Carolinas. More Dutch came, not to New York, but to Pennsylvania. The French came and settled in South… |
Sequence 2chological observations, and with a certain pragmatism that seems to have been central to her plan for study and work for the… |
Sequence 13REFERENCES By-laws of the Association Montessori lnternalio,rnle. Am- sterdam: AMI. AMI Strategic P/a,1 2008-2012. Amsterdam… |
Sequence 10France as "this new, angry empire of light and reason" that sought to tear down "all the pleasing… |
Sequence 20CONCLUSION Fundamental to the Montessori approach to learning are the three respects-respect for self, respect for others (… |
Sequence 1MONTESSORI ELEMENTARY EDUCATION: PATHWAYS TO GLOBAL UNDERSTANDING by Phyllis Pettish-Lewis Phyllis Pottish-Lewis has… |
Sequence 20world and take part in revolutions of creative change, the obvious connections between Montessori and true productive learning… |
Sequence 8110 Part Two - For a Science of the Formation of Man character-building. [ ... ] And this must be developed in our country,… |
Sequence 1118 Chapter II School, Family and Society 11.1 Let's save the children! San Diego, 1917: "Last summer I went… |
Sequence 6School, Family and Society 123 Moreover, in 1918 Montessori had been received in private audience with pope Benedict XV,… |
Sequence 8School, Fami(I' and Society 125 his dignity and sensibility. With The Child in the Fami~1·. Montcssori's… |
Sequence 3Figure 1. The world map of scientific discovery. and how the syllabus provides a vehicle for integrated science instruction.… |
Sequence 246Montessori National Curriculum for the Third Plane of Development from Twelve to Fifteen/Sixteen Years Second, in order to… |
Sequence 285Montessori National Curriculum for the Third Plane of Development from Twelve to Fifteen/Sixteen Years History and the… |
Sequence 3319. Maria Montessori, Autoeducazione (Milan: Garzanti, 1970), 83. (Translator's note: See note 3 above.) 20. Franz Marc… |
Sequence 515 Montessori • The House of Children Returning to the topic of the House of Children, everything was all right except the… |
Sequence 836 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 38, No. 1 • Winter 2013 does miss something. The more all “perishable” items, anything that can… |
Sequence 3155 Leonard and Allen • Experiences in Nature: Resolute Second-Plane Directions Toward Erdkinder cultural pathology that… |
Sequence 1the adolescent: taKinG on the tasK of huManity— conductinG the dialoGue between nature and suPranature by Laurie Ewert-… |
Sequence 5247 Mazzetti • The Ecology of the Mind Courtesy of Vanessa Toinet, Ecole Montessori du Morvan, Bard-le-Regulier, Burgundy,… |
Sequence 7285 O’Shaughnessy • Epilogue: The Child and the Environment The greatest gift we can give this spontaneous explorer is time… |
Sequence 7285 O’Shaughnessy • Epilogue: The Child and the Environment The greatest gift we can give this spontaneous explorer is time… |
Sequence 9287 O’Shaughnessy • Epilogue: The Child and the Environment the children feel a sense of pride and accomplish- ment. Dr.… |
Sequence 9287 O’Shaughnessy • Epilogue: The Child and the Environment the children feel a sense of pride and accomplish- ment. Dr.… |
Sequence 28 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 39, No. 1 • Winter 2014 Dr. Montessori understood and appreciated the importance of community in… |
Sequence 848 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 39, No. 1 • Winter 2014 the roots. My eyes would contemplate the cockleweeds without searching… |
Sequence 949 Chawla • The Natural World as Prepared Environment adolescents can live at all times of day and night, in all weathers,… |
Sequence 2351 Black • Montessori All Day cal Library, 1978. Reprinted in The NAMTA Journal 21.3 (1996, Summer): 8-23. Verschuur, Mary… |
Sequence 1Feature reflecTions: a life’s work in monTessori by Mary B. Verschuur Mary Verschuur writes about coming to America in 1962… |
Sequence 3219 Verschuur • Reflections and practical life items. Working with our hands we made what we needed and the work served me… |
Sequence 696 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 40, No. 2 • Spring 2015 Baghdad, and The Spice Road from the Moluccas through South India to… |