Search Inside Documents
Displaying results 701 - 800 of 1607
Sequence 7many of the ballads are simply asking to be acted out. There's one which children - the little wretches - (heavy laughter… |
Sequence 9things you meet in your reading which you want to remember. I stress the word make. Not to use a notebook, but to prepare the… |
Sequence 464 REGISTRATION FORM Name _________________ Number in Party _____ _ Address ---------------------------- City and State… |
Sequence 1LITERATURE THROUGH HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY by Francesca Claremont Transcribed and Edited by Jim and Frances Fitzpatrick The… |
Sequence 2got used to it. If you threw a party and all your guests were in tears until about two o'clock in the morning, it was… |
Sequence 3Dock", which is eight, nine, ten in the same language. Why I do not use these is because they are actually survivals… |
Sequence 4One of the discoveries that you will make is that there will be only a few rhymes that apply to the prehistory time line, but… |
Sequence 5wage of a skilled craftsman. Their value, in Europe, was high until late in the Middle Ages when a European Cardinal received… |
Sequence 1Fantasy and Imagination by Karin Salzman In an effort to clarify the fairy tale debate, Ms. Salzman pursues the distinction… |
Sequence 6History can be given in this way. (See V.F. Hillyer's A Child's History of the World.) We cannot see history, but… |
Sequence 2Erdkinder: The Experiment for the Experiment The following is transcribed by Ann Freeman from tape recordings of a conversa-… |
Sequence 3Joosten: It is a kind of in-service training for a regular institution, so not like we have the pre-primary and primary people… |
Sequence 12adaptable than the mother. I don't even talk about the fathers. Tomorrow, if you go to Europe for three months, the… |
Sequence 5artisans working production here. We can't get this kind of highly professional- ized tabor anywhere else. Although the… |
Sequence 6neatly planted shrubs, vines and flowers with hand laid brick paths. Bert has built a farmpen near the house; the goats… |
Sequence 5say, "don't stop here." The training has given several main areas, but it is up to the teacher to work… |
Sequence 2and behaved as if he were a four year old child. He showed no interest in any food except bread and water and was described as… |
Sequence 1Looking at the Individual Child Interview Emma Plank, editor of a new book On Development and Education of Young Children,… |
Sequence 5found an old school building which was old fashioned, but spacious. We could use the building all day which was an exception… |
Sequence 1Education as Peace by Ursula Thrush Ms. Thrush reminds us that the main thrust of Montessori education takes us well beyond… |
Sequence 3cial child especially in Europe. Both Eldert and Montessori Jr. in panel discussion later that day expressed a negative view… |
Sequence 7years of age they could not walk, and they could not eat independently with a spoon. Their speech consisted of non-… |
Sequence 6unlocks leads to nothing of interest to the child. Either the door led to something that was of great interest to the teacher… |
Sequence 1The Future and Montessori by Richard Salzmann Mr. Salzmann connects scientific and educational mainstream thinking to… |
Sequence 3the next century they could require assistance equal to our entire agricultural production. Patently, that picture is bleak.… |
Sequence 19REFERENCES 'Cone/, J.L. The Brain Structure of the Newborn and Consideration of the Senile Brain. Res. Publ Ass. Nerv.… |
Sequence 2Kahn: This was the Dewey environment. Wikramaratne: Yes. One day, I made my fellow teachers furious. I challenged the idea of… |
Sequence 1The Kodaikanal Experience - Chapter II Kahn-Montessori Interview David Kahn: You once alluded to Kodaikanal as a community in… |
Sequence 232 rabbits, ducks and chickens; use and market their products such as eggs, milk, yogurt, cheese and wool; account for the… |
Sequence 9education, culminating in profound speculative study; that he should undergo a great variety of practical experience to form… |
Sequence 216 myself into training because somebody told me about them. That day I bought The Absorbent Mind and E. M. Standing's… |
Sequence 1Language, the Basis of Humanism by J.H. Pestalozzi Pestalozzi is mentioned in Montessori's early works as a principal… |
Sequence 2The Child's Nature: Mario Montessori and A.S. Neill Discuss their famous schools and their radical approaches to child… |
Sequence 8evidently there is tremendous attraction felt by the child for the spoken word, for the way people talk. One will even acquire… |
Sequence 5Japanese who he thinks are some of the world's greatest learners. After viewing hun- dreds of Chinese preschoolers. he… |
Sequence 210 estimate of how many unregistered minders operate. Much suspicion centered on the unregistered minder. For all that. what… |
Sequence 3The children led a low-level, understimulated day in unchanging. often cramped surroundings. Many did not get the love and… |
Sequence 7The average time for our sampled children was 30 hours a week at the minder's. and a third were there for 40 hours or… |
Sequence 13worker for the minded child's mother. And even if she wanted 10 be that. it is not her role. And so in some insidious way… |
Sequence 1Reminiscences and Thoughts About Montessori Day Care By Margaret Elizabeth Stephenson A reprint from a 1975 NAMTA Quarterly,… |
Sequence 1Mario M. Montessori Is Dead Chronicle of a Ceremony by Camillo Grazzini Mr. Grazzini's sensitive portrayal of the… |
Sequence 7it is not nipped in the bud when he is a child. Montessori gave a new orientation to work in school because she realized its… |
Sequence 30it is not nipped in the bud when he is a child. Montessori gave a new orientation to work in school because she realized its… |
Sequence 728 I find that the triangle theme can translate rather easily into math, language, and the cultural subjects of geography,… |
Sequence 536 for food much of the day, digging roots, picking fruits, garnering seeds, and taking whatever small animals they came… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 66 tear her down in the same media that had built her up. One by one, the labels of "Super Teacher" and… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 66 tear her down in the same media that had built her up. One by one, the labels of "Super Teacher" and… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 66 tear her down in the same media that had built her up. One by one, the labels of "Super Teacher" and… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 66 tear her down in the same media that had built her up. One by one, the labels of "Super Teacher" and… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 66 tear her down in the same media that had built her up. One by one, the labels of "Super Teacher" and… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 66 tear her down in the same media that had built her up. One by one, the labels of "Super Teacher" and… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 66 tear her down in the same media that had built her up. One by one, the labels of "Super Teacher" and… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 5to observe and evaluate the emotional, academic and physical needs of a child. " This teacher is stating clearly what… |
Sequence 63. Literature and creative writing should be included in Montessori training, perhaps better integrated with grammar. 4 . A… |
Sequence 13. Literature and creative writing should be included in Montessori training, perhaps better integrated with grammar. 4 . A… |
Sequence 1A Study of College/University Accredited Montessori Teacher Training Programs by Mary Maher Boehnlein Ph.D., Introduction… |
Sequence 2Lili Peller and Me an interview with Margot Waltuch Kahn: Margot, tell us about your first contact with Lili Peller. Waltuch… |
Sequence 77 1 Personal Belongings are particularly essential when his school day is long. 1 Behavior Deviations. The child with special… |
Sequence 4II In her university years her interest in the exploration of life became more specific: She turned to the study of the child… |
Sequence 12concepts overboard, although for the lime being there are no observational data supporting the new concept. In the genesis of… |
Sequence 4BOOKS ABOUT MONTESSORI: METHOD, MOVEMENT, AND THEORY Bailey, Carolyn Sherwin. (1915). Montessori children. New York: Henry… |
Sequence 58 Chicago Board of Education. (1977). Options in Public education: a source document, Available from National… |
Sequence 69 Drummond, Margaret. (1920). Five years old or thereabouts. New York: Longmans, Green & Co, (96). Drummond,… |
Sequence 710 Frost, Joe. L. (1968). Earl childhood education rediscovered. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 78 Fynne,… |
Sequence 8Jerome Study Group. (1963). Montessori in the home. Wheaton, Ill.: Theosophical Publishing House. Jerome Study Group. (… |
Sequence 911-a Lyon, Peter. (1963). Success stor : the life and times of S. s. McClure (pp. 350-52). New York: Charles Scribner… |
Sequence 1011-b Orem, R. C. (Ed.). (1974). Montessori: Her method and the movement. What you need to know. New York: G. P. Putnam s… |
Sequence 1112 Schmid, Jeannine. (1968). Religion, Montessori and the home. New York: Benziger Brothers. Sister of Notre Dame. (1932… |
Sequence 1314 Cavaletti, Sofia. (1983). The religious potential of the child. New York: Paulist Press. 1. Communications.… |
Sequence 16Montessori, Maria. (1932). Mass explained to children. London: Sheed and Ward. l. America. (1933). 49, 572, ( 1). 2.… |
Sequence 1718 Montessori, Maria. (1964). The Montessori method. Cambridge, Mass.: Robert Bentley, Inc. 1. Stendler, Celia. (1965).… |
Sequence 2728 Dunlap, Marianne. (1985). Notes from the meeting of 9-12 teachers. EAA Newsletter, Q, 1-3, (3). Dranginis, Rita. (… |
Sequence 28Montessori, Maria. (1984). Quotations from The Child in the Family. Communications,!!_, 14, (1). Montessori, Mario. (1962… |
Sequence 4344 Claremont, Claude. of Montessori. (1949, June 3). The activity school--The purposefulness Times Educational Supplement… |
Sequence 46Long, John. (1982). NAMTA Quarterly, The elementary child, the curriculum and Montessori. 2, 10-16, (7). 47 Lucas, Ann F… |
Sequence 52Mack, Jane. (1976). Conference announcement. The Constructive Triangle, l, 5, o>. Montessori congress. (1951, May… |
Sequence 5354 Report of the Conference on New Ideals in Education Held at Oxford from August 12-19 1 1918. (1918). London: Women's… |
Sequence 6061 CULTURAL STUDIES Devi, Dipti. (1963). Festivities observed in the Montessori Shishu Bhavan. Around the Child,~. 54-58… |
Sequence 6566 Bronder, Ann Kenny. (1981). Lasting impressions: The Montessori approach. Momentum,.!±_, 36-37, (2). Brooklyn Eagle. (… |
Sequence 68Godefroy, J. C. L. (1925). Perspectives provided by the Montessori method. Call of Education, 3, 24-31, (8). Goodwin, Gary… |
Sequence 6970 Holmes, H. W. (1912). The Montessori methods. Education, 33, 1-10, (6). Holmes, Henry w. (1913). Promising points in… |
Sequence 7172 Merrill, Jenny B. (1909). A new method in infant education. The Kindergarten-Primary Magazine, 23, 106-107, (2). (… |
Sequence 7879 DISADVANTAGED Braun, Samuel. Nursery education for disadvantaged children: An historical review. (1966). In Montessori… |
Sequence 8990 Heater, Sandra Harvey. (1980). Teaching yreschool reading. Provo, UT: Brigham Young University Press. (120. (NOT… |
Sequence 92Hainstock, Elizabeth. years. New York: (1971). Teachin Montessori in the home: The school New American Library Plume ,… |
Sequence 94Didactic materials. (1919, November 6). Times Educational Supplement, p. 557, (2). Dwyer, Muriel. (1973). Operation solid… |