Search Inside Documents
Displaying results 201 - 300 of 432
Sequence 167Cardboard Model of an old Amsterdam house made by girl 9 1/4 years of age. (1925). Call of Education, !, 229-30, (2).… |
Sequence 171173 Harmon, Thomas. (1965). The Hudson Montessori Association. Montessori Review,!, 9-11, (3). Harmon, Thomas. (1965/66… |
Sequence 172174 Hutchinson, Lily. (1924). Call of Education,!, A review of the Montessori movement in England. 68-73, (6). Ingle,… |
Sequence 175A Montessori mother. 0978). [Letter]. Communications, .!_, 34, (1). The Montessori movement in Holland. (1924). Call of… |
Sequence 179Tagore, Rabindranath. Montessori School. (1934). An address: On the opening of the Rajhat Reprinted (1961) Around the… |
Sequence 181183 Gillet, Anne Marie. (n.d.). Introduction to biology. Holland: Association Montessori Internationale. (12). Gupta,… |
Sequence 202204 Midwest training course, Chicago, Illinois. (1965). The Constructive Triangle, !, 21, (1). Montessori in America.… |
Sequence 2labelled - and libelled - as a pornographer. That is the method of character assassination, of attacking people - to take what… |
Sequence 3Professor Moritaki and Mr. Takahashi but they were more than puzzled to know what they could do to change what they saw as the… |
Sequence 12term "teacher" and why the term "director" or "directress" was preferred… |
Sequence 3@ {l!u ilnr ïs f( It ft{#flÊ . ff#. FëÊF - EKE+R].(#]ëÉ<" Ët0q ,P " i n#SËg'I!#HftqqK… |
Sequence 6house; it belongs to a friend of children.” Tt was signed with the communist emblem: the hammer and sickle. In country… |
Sequence 8112 MEINE MUTTER MARIA MONTESSORI Oktober ten einem Ruf nach Indien und halfen dort bci dcr Ausbildung von Lehrcrn. In… |
Sequence 49"The child in the elementary is learning to organize and plan his day, has more control over when he is going to do… |
Sequence 63CHAPTER 2 The Sensorial Richness of Prenatal Life The idea that nothing penetrates the uterus is definitely outmoded. The… |
Sequence 58with familiar ones at first, but the proportion of unfamiliar patterns was to be increased until the child could imitate… |
Sequence 131intensity of the Montessori vision that makes the system work; knowl- edge of the materials is bound by the interiority of the… |
Sequence 6THE BOTANICAL CARDS by Mario M. Montessori This insightful article illustrates the underlying developmental principles which… |
Sequence 11stand. They would bring this back and take another which contained other pictures to which to apply other names. Experience… |
Sequence 22THE KODAIKANAL EXPERIENCE Kahn-Montessori Interveiw From late 1942 to March, 1944, Maria Montessori was interned against her… |
Sequence 27child can experience in nature that there is something eternal, present everywhere and always, which seems to have organized… |
Sequence 141who eajoy working together in a beauti- ful, established, expanding school. Palm Harbor Montessori School is located on a 5… |
Sequence 9observe her subjects in a holistic manner; consequently, her research was naturalistic or ethnographic. From her first… |
Sequence 75A critical factor in this study is what was measured. Bereiter did not measure what the Montessori program was teaching by the… |
Sequence 81Commentary The design and execution of this study is quite acceptable, but one criticism of the study would be the small… |
Sequence 72References Banta, T.J. Tests for the evaluation of early childhood education: The Cincinnati Autonomy Test Battery (CATB). In… |
Sequence 53immediately oversee the development of these arts in the relations between the student discussants, while simultaneously… |
Sequence 55to discourse daily about virtue and self-examination. But he finally proposes a small money offering· guaranteed by his… |
Sequence 57feelings of others. Why couldn't he pursue his mission and still be accepted by others? Seems to me he'd have a… |
Sequence 58Mr. C: Well, I can accept that. But I still don't think that money, power and fame are evils, as Socrates says. Mr. B: I… |
Sequence 59Ms. A: Yes, that's why oratory would fail too. Even a speech in a grand style would fail where experience and feelings… |
Sequence 60Ms. A: Well, man does some things that don't require a body. Leader: Such as ... Ms. A: We think. And therefore thinking… |
Sequence 64seeking martyrdom by not saving himself? Or is there a real opposition between surviving in Athens and obeying the gods? In… |
Sequence 523. The student demonstrates automatic execution of the skill. E.g: Can you tell me how "0 Come Little Children&… |
Sequence 53Lillard, Paula Polk. (1972) Mant.essori a modern approach. New York: Schocken Books. Orem, R.C. (1974) Montessori her method… |
Sequence 14director (and occupied this charge until his deathi Branches are func- tioning in many European, Asian, and American countries… |
Sequence 49conuibuted to her being somewhat ostracized by the scientific and educational establishment and her being labeled as "… |
Sequence 61promptings of the moral self, that erects obstacles and barriers in the way of the development of intelligence, that condemns… |
Sequence 123Asians, Egyptians, Indians, Europeans, Syrians, Armenians, and Arabs. The students encounter Alexandrian mathematics, physics… |
Sequence 7EDITORIAL REINVENTING MONTESSORI: PERILS AND POSSIBILITIES by David Kahn To what degree is the fundamental test of… |
Sequence 99kitchen. Adding section by section, piece by piece, they discovered the style pattern and saw that the repeats in Malory are… |
Sequence 128by the husband. This cycle is found among the Native Americans of the eastern United States and Canada as well as among the… |
Sequence 18logical characteristics and each needs a prepared adult to help the individual help himself. The four planes of development… |
Sequence 19product of a Casa dei Bambini and a Montessori elementary class which have followed vigorously Dr. Montessori's formula… |
Sequence 25of the race. And we have the adolescent to prove otherwise to us. "If we gave the world to the small child,"… |
Sequence 55The danger of textbooks is that their similitude, their averaging of information, their limited scholarship, and their lack of… |
Sequence 58• c:: I,) 0 ;·; I,) • ... ,, c:: ·- QI 0• QI .. a. CII .: . .c= c.,•- • .ii: OCI) (J .. .... • .ii: c:: • o… |
Sequence 78The capacity to heighten significance and enlarge meaning by thinking about events "romantically" can be… |
Sequence 11of life when young people lhrive on real life experience and active involvement. And lhe adults seemed to the adolescent… |
Sequence 42This Is a wonderful profession, but It Is not easy. We must pro- vide the structure for the soclal group and have clear… |
Sequence 90Clay, M. (1991). Becoming literate: The construction of inner control. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. Clay, M. (1993). Reading… |
Sequence 96The elementary student is especially sensitive to historical context. The sense of time and duration crystallizes out of a… |
Sequence 17and Montessori teaching in the U.S. fell on hard times. Some of the new "Montessori" schools in the U.S.… |
Sequence 107the abilities of children throughout the world. As early as 1910, she resigned her lectureship at the University of Rome,… |
Sequence 48THE CASA OF SEVRES, FRANCE by Margot Waltuch Margot Waltuch's pictorial documentation and personal description of her… |
Sequence 248Meanwhile, Professor Marcel Capraru of the Casa Corpului Di- dactic (Turnu-Severin, Romania), with the assistance of the… |
Sequence 78excavating ruins and describing how to build. The techniques, the skills, the information about building and sculpting were… |
Sequence 245exploitation somewhat irrelevant. If it costs just $3 to rent a Pocahontas video, do you really care if Michael Eisner made $… |
Sequence 7"Respect This House" is Mario's anecdote about the early days of the Spanish Civil War, and it is… |
Sequence 15Child working with Botanical Cards, Laren, Holland, 1939 lO The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 23, No. 2 • Spring 1998 |
Sequence 16Laren, Holland THE BOTANICAL CARDS by Mario M. Montessori The Botanical Cards are one of the items of the Montessori… |
Sequence 23and "Where is the fruit?" Eventually we made several groups of envelopes which dealt with flowers and fruit… |
Sequence 41of creation should fashion that the e it but absorb it i h~y will feel that o lace to live in, a p ace w ere generosity… |
Sequence 47Montessori: Yes. In the olden times, Dr. Montessori had the children up to six, and then from time to time would keep children… |
Sequence 17THE INTERNATIONAL STUDY CENTRE Since Maria Montessori inaugurated the first Casa dei Bambini in 1907, Montessori schools have… |
Sequence 55Margot Waltuch, Ada Montessori, and Mario Montessori Baarn, Holland, 1963 50 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 24, No. I • Winter 1999 |
Sequence 59She was a teacher, a leader, and a charismatic personality, but she was full of humanity and fun. She felt you could not live… |
Sequence 61ing fourteen leaf-shaped insets with wooden frames. The study of leaves launched the children into a detailed and particular… |
Sequence 64several languages. His genuine kindness attracted them all. He under- stood the immense importance of their inner power, their… |
Sequence 147better still, to the value of work in general, "with its wide social connotations of productiveness and earning power… |
Sequence 124-------------------------------- --~ we are attempting to do with the Erdkinder project in Cleveland is to bring farm and… |
Sequence 21Silver polishing, Laren, Holland, 1948 16 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 25, No. I • Winter 2000 |
Sequence 63Some of you may remember those early days of WM! when the course and office were at 3000 Connecticut Avenue,opposite the Zoo… |
Sequence 166• human settlement and needs of settlement, including impact studies • evolution of the environment in relation to human… |
Sequence 250READERS RESPOND TO THE WHOLE-SCHOOL MONTESSORI HANDBOOK; INSPIRES ADMINISTRATOR-TEACHER RETREAT The scope, organization… |
Sequence 25But as well as this material territory to be exposed to the child, with the ways in which man has come into contact with other… |
Sequence 106The four planes of development, as recognized by Dr. Montessori, are four stages, relatively equal in length, in the formation… |
Sequence 107Houses and Montessori elementary schools increase around the world, there will probably come about an increasing demand for… |
Sequence 114the stone gatherers and their geological discoveries, through the food gatherers and their botanical discoveries, through the… |
Sequence 121for humanity only if he is recognized as being the product of two earlier planes of development. Dr. Montessori recognized… |
Sequence 103PROTOTYPE YEAR J (HUMANITIES IN DIRECT CONTACT WITH FARM OCCUPATIONS) Architectural Principles in Buildings and Bridges… |
Sequence 104in our 1998 report on the project to the AMI Peda- gogical Committee, "The goal for us this year is to… |
Sequence 10emerged with prominent Montessori educators of the suburbs and cities deciding to move into the "third plane"… |
Sequence 19ing examples of spontaneous discipline through visiting ex- isting Montessori adolescent programs, consolidating past… |
Sequence 187-Independent interdisciplinary study is begun in accordance with student's interest following the excursion. It would be… |
Sequence 211A NEW EDUCATION FOR THE SECONDARY SCHOOL A PUBLIC LECfURE GIVEN AT UTRECHT, JANUARY 18, 1937 (ORIGINAL IN FRENCH) by Maria… |
Sequence 231ERDKINDER: THE EXPERIMENT FOR THE EXPERIMENT Interview with Margaret E. Stephenson and A.M. Joosten The followi11g… |
Sequence 235tessori children, to one day be able to have a Montessori Erdkinder. But be very active. It is better to do something than… |
Sequence 247Joosten: You say that the first-year children may not be able to manage more than four and a half days. You also are a mother… |
Sequence 249good as its criteria and the controls and the people executing the experiment must have clarity of vision. But anyone's… |
Sequence 250Joosten: I don't think there is a yes or a no. Is it either or? There is a blend. We can't go outside to an… |
Sequence 278The education of young people in a commu- nity that is not isolated but only separated from the larger society entails… |
Sequence 279The first objective is reached through experience with music, language, and "travaux artistiq11es" (drawing… |
Sequence 281MONTESSORI HIGH SCHOOL by H.J. Jordan Dr. Jordan, a collaborator with Maria Montessori, speaks of his conceptual framework… |
Sequence 308and Holland, where the interest was greatest, Montessori told her followers that she wasn't yet ready to discuss this… |
Sequence 342critics. I think in this case the Right was right, that eventually our capitalist system would create so many goods and… |
Sequence 438appearances. Jim provided on the farm support as farm manager. We keptthe focus pretty directed, with student choices… |
Sequence 439find their own identities as emerging social beings? Did conscious- ness create a bridge between how communities of people… |
Sequence 446In some ways, it started with our election study, when two people were invited to each represent the views of Gore and Bush on… |
Sequence 447was magical. Even for the most reticent students-who were very reluctant to get up and do it-it was a moment of triumph when… |