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Sequence 71Esenin, Segey. Tl,e Heritage of R11ssia11 Verse. Ed. D. Obolensky. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1962. £very111a11. Medieval Drama… |
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 161 would therefore initiate teachers into the observation of the most simple forms of living things, with all those aids which… |
Sequence 6is the culture they construct? How does a society begin? How are societies different, yet the same? The formative questions… |
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 12Goertz, Donna. Childre11 Who Are Not Yet Peaceful: Prevent- ing Excl11sio11 i11 the Early Ele111e11tary Classroom. Berkeley:… |
Sequence 14Rexford Brown 2 described the skj[[ set necessary for a systemic understanding of the global problems of our time: • Looking… |
Sequence 14Pennsylvania and the Carolinas. More Dutch came, not to New York, but to Pennsylvania. The French came and settled in South… |
Sequence 10that we could not see. The learning process must take place inside the child, and this internal process requires time. It is… |
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 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 29Example The boys love shark stories. Great Whites have been known to be one of the most dan- gerous sea creatures in 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 3149 Allen • The Elementary Child’s Place in the Natural World prepares its environment. A marvelous, mysteri- ous, and… |
Sequence 3155 Leonard and Allen • Experiences in Nature: Resolute Second-Plane Directions Toward Erdkinder cultural pathology that… |
Sequence 10162 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 38, No. 1 • Winter 2013 What we elementary Montessori teachers have to remember is that the real… |
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 15121 Black and Davis • Montessori All Day, All Year of an environment that fully supports the child’s development, we provide… |
Sequence 656 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 41, No. 1 • Winter 2016 variations that exist in English (or any other nonphonetic language).… |
Sequence 4AMI Journal 2017 - 2018 page 89 (2) Language development takes place in a series of overlapping stages. The explosion only… |
Sequence 4AMI Journal 2017 - 2018 page 115 references Bronowski, Jacob. The Ascent of Man. Boston: Little, Brown, 1973. Fuller, R.… |
Sequence 54AMI Journal 2017 - 2018 page 115 references Bronowski, Jacob. The Ascent of Man. Boston: Little, Brown, 1973. Fuller, R.… |
Sequence 80AMI Journal 2017 - 2018 page 89 (2) Language development takes place in a series of overlapping stages. The explosion only… |
Sequence 55AMI Journal 2017 - 2018 page 115 references Bronowski, Jacob. The Ascent of Man. Boston: Little, Brown, 1973. Fuller, R.… |
Sequence 81AMI Journal 2017 - 2018 page 89 (2) Language development takes place in a series of overlapping stages. The explosion only… |
Sequence 372 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 43, No. 3 • Summer 2018 gunship, with its seventeen cannons and its ability to sail fast in… |
Sequence 776 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 43, No. 3 • Summer 2018 problems most traditional governments had been able to ignore. The… |
Sequence 6Leonard & Allen • Experiences In Nature 93 August. “How often is the soul of man—especially that of the child—… |
Sequence 19106 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 44, No. 2 • Spring 2021 106 The NAMTA Journal • Vol. 44, No. 2 • Spring 2021 REFERENCES Bailey… |
Sequence 2Belgium, the States, France and Italy. I would like to add what I have seen myself directly, or indirectly through past pupils… |
Sequence 3When plays were just developing in the early days of the Italian theater, the audience came provided with a suitable… |
Sequence 3Dock", which is eight, nine, ten in the same language. Why I do not use these is because they are actually survivals… |
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 9Working and Earning Many of the activities of Erdkinder - whether in a hostel, on the farm, or in the shop - provide… |
Sequence 12adaptable than the mother. I don't even talk about the fathers. Tomorrow, if you go to Europe for three months, the… |
Sequence 232 rabbits, ducks and chickens; use and market their products such as eggs, milk, yogurt, cheese and wool; account for the… |
Sequence 4"Community" begins to become a reality for the young child when he/she apprehends that each person has… |
Sequence 514 Cued speech is not that difficult to learn, especially for Montessori teachers. During the State hearing a member of the… |
Sequence 4Montessori: How do you feel that children can be saved from this kind of thing? Neill: Well, the first thing is to be loved. l… |
Sequence 8evidently there is tremendous attraction felt by the child for the spoken word, for the way people talk. One will even acquire… |
Sequence 1The Education of Defective Children by Dr. Maria Montessori Any contribution which we can make towards the training of… |
Sequence 1212 B. PoUtical and Social Change (looking at the peasant movements in Germany, France, and America; the development of unions… |
Sequence 442 Work Study Program When we began the junior high program, we knew we didn't have the resources of the country or… |
Sequence 64contact validates for parents the experience of their living child inside the womb and establishes with the child a "… |
Sequence 65The ears are structurally com- plete between the second and fifth month of pregnancy. The sounds produced with a tuning fork… |
Sequence 18this experiment with children so impoverished that two of them did not even have homes, but slept at night with their mother… |
Sequence 94This not to abandon the scientific rigors of the material to be pre- sented to the child. Montessori is quite clear in that… |
Sequence 96to accept the fact of evolution. Darwin lies beside Newton in Westmin- ster Abbey for this great contribution. His theory of… |
Sequence 499. Ehrlich, Paul R. The Mcu;kin.ery of Nature: The Living World Around Us - And How It Works (New York: Simon and Schuster,… |
Sequence 88education to the sixth year, he formulates certain principles for the education of children at home by the mothers who ought… |
Sequence 101THE THREAD OF LIFE by Monique Baudet PREFACE by Dr. R. Callee The thread of life: if it holds, it takes on a shape of its… |
Sequence 110No. 10 fr ' ~ ' .. . ' rJ (;:.-....._ . ~ f -<=-=-...... Boumlod (age 5, drawings Nos. 10, 11… |
Sequence 141CANADA SASKATOON MONTESSORI SCHOOL needs AMI directress(3to 6)forSept. '90. AMI adminis- trator; est. 1979, 2 classroom… |
Sequence 53-- -- ---------------------------- How can we provide practice? Before having co concentrate or con- trol its appropriate… |
Sequence 9psychological understanding. The Hershey School's contribution is its whole perception of the outdoors in connection with… |
Sequence 7EDITORIAL REINVENTING MONTESSORI: PERILS AND POSSIBILITIES by David Kahn To what degree is the fundamental test of… |
Sequence 48features of orality that are bon a penser. Their ability to think and learn is, in general, sophisticated, but structured… |
Sequence 64could serve an apologetic function, if needed. Descartes' physics depended on God's action at every turn. Boyle and… |
Sequence 209WYOMING MONTESSORI SCHOOL OF CASPER. Wyo- ming, now accepting applications for AMI El- ementary Guide for new class… |
Sequence 96There are dozens of words that you can pick out to give to children. Bankrupt means someone whose bench has been broken (rupto… |
Sequence 113the only one of the whole group that I ever use. Personally, I never tell any Bluebeard story in which the girl dies. On… |
Sequence 120the twenty key dates of history-1097-and you'd better put it down now and remember it if you can. 1097 is the year in… |
Sequence 140Heidegger, M. (1966). DiScourseon Thinking. New York: Harper and Row. Hirsch, E.D. (1987). Cultural Literacy. New York:… |
Sequence 166For Sale EVOLUTION MATERIALS EVOLUTION TIMELINE with 130 illus- trations. 14' X 90"$8.95 18' X 115&… |
Sequence 78The capacity to heighten significance and enlarge meaning by thinking about events "romantically" can be… |
Sequence 52in order to study medicine. At that time, a woman who went among men, and especially among naked bodies which she cut to… |
Sequence 117children will want to send their work out for publication. In our local newspaper, The St. Paul Pioneer Press, a segment of… |
Sequence 73community level where solutions need to be found for the more appro- priate management of the landscape. By beginning with… |
Sequence 16lecture extensively to wider audiences, including a combined session of the 53rd annual convention of the National Education… |
Sequence 107the abilities of children throughout the world. As early as 1910, she resigned her lectureship at the University of Rome,… |
Sequence 101games were once part of natural play, and there is nothing to replace their contribution to neurological organization for the… |
Sequence 1Vol. 21, No. 3 Summer 1996 Rediscovering the All-Day Montessori Community AD-Day Montes..orl: Notes on the HJstory of the… |
Sequence 5La Maison des Enfants, Sevres, France, 1930s. |
Sequence 48THE CASA OF SEVRES, FRANCE by Margot Waltuch Margot Waltuch's pictorial documentation and personal description of her… |
Sequence 84REFERENCES Abram, D. (1996). The spell of the sensuous. New York: Pan- theon Books. Coles, R. (1990). The spiritual life of… |
Sequence 237inclusive community, not one that divides them in order to conquer, but one that unifies them in order to set them free. I… |
Sequence 78excavating ruins and describing how to build. The techniques, the skills, the information about building and sculpting were… |
Sequence 12BEYOND BRIBES AND THREATS: How NoT TO GET CONTROL OF THE CLASSROOM by Alfie Kohn In an effort to clarify the basic… |
Sequence 66Kohn, A. (1992) No contest: The case against competition (Rev. ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin. Kohn, A. (1993). Punished by… |
Sequence 143Fried an, B. (1962). The feminine mystique. New York: Houghton Mifflin. Mann, A. (1996, August). [Untitled workshop]. In… |