Search Inside Documents
Displaying results 1201 - 1300 of 2762
Sequence 3views the preservationist impulse as dogmatism. Kramer maintains that after a certain point Montessori's life work ceased… |
Sequence 1Editorial Report: Cosmic Education by Mario Montessori, Jr. Mario Montessori's book Education for Human Development dem… |
Sequence 6questions for each exercise. At the third grade level, I use McCall-Crabbs booklet A, which has ten multiple choice questions… |
Sequence 2in and of the neighborhood beyond were recorded as well as views of the temple grounds from the neighborhood. By working with… |
Sequence 3Internal space, a child's sense of his body in space, is a key to motor co- ordination. 3 But a child also constructs an… |
Sequence 4seems that the director/directress' role should involve something more than soothing hurts, settling squabbles, and… |
Sequence 16one of the most difficult tasks a teacher has to undertake. In one of my consultation groups we worked on this topic at length… |
Sequence 17Katan, Anny (1961) "Some Thoughts about the Role of Verbalization in Early Childhood." Psychoanalytic Study… |
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 13a clarity of vision. But anyone's vision can fail. How can we build in experimental controls so that we can have the same… |
Sequence 2School Design: The Children's House by Lili E. Peller Emma Plank's edited papers of Lili E. Peller (Roubiczek)… |
Sequence 1Curriculum Development: The Montessori Approach To Mathematics by Carnillo Grazzini Camillo Grazzini, prominent Montessori… |
Sequence 15Farb, P. Word Play, Knopf, New York, 1974. Gibson, E. J. Principles of Perceptual Learninl{ and Development, Appleton, Century… |
Sequence 2The Period of Acceptance Interview The practitioner's common sense in Nancy Jordon, speaks with the integrity of… |
Sequence 8obstacles such as shelves. The ends of the long section may be connected by a gently curving line, never by broken straight… |
Sequence 9Errors IIIUI T/teir Co"ectio11, T/te E1niro111fle11t, Its Amurgelflettt o,uf Moillte11011ce, Tlte Mo11tessori House of… |
Sequence 1Looking at the Individual Child Interview Emma Plank, editor of a new book On Development and Education of Young Children,… |
Sequence 2Plank: We lived right in the school at first, and then around the corner. We were in a working class district where there were… |
Sequence 1Psychoanalysis and Education by Lil.i Peller Ms. Pellers work with Anna Freud and Montessori presents an interesting blend of… |
Sequence 5pression of the interrelatedness of the Romance languages. The etymology of the names of the months can be the beginning of an… |
Sequence 5care situations. Is it a danger to prescribe a nursery school situation for unenlightened parents? What becomes of a child who… |
Sequence 19REFERENCES 'Cone/, J.L. The Brain Structure of the Newborn and Consideration of the Senile Brain. Res. Publ Ass. Nerv.… |
Sequence 44 urban school to be an acceptable compromise it will have to be organized along more traditional lines. So the task for the… |
Sequence 26 class should be created as soon as upper class nine year olds are ready to continue. The large 6-9 base then follows the… |
Sequence 5structure. On the other hand, if writing programs contain only elements of composi- tion and drill and omit the "… |
Sequence 1The Maria Montessori Farmschool/Erdkinder at Half Moon Bay (Press. release) Ursula Thrush's brave new world deserves… |
Sequence 232 rabbits, ducks and chickens; use and market their products such as eggs, milk, yogurt, cheese and wool; account for the… |
Sequence 516 empathy, the emotional identification of one person with another. One person takes the role of the other and responds… |
Sequence 1Expansion: Low Cost Expansion By Ron Ackerman, Principal Principal Ackerman achieves in one year's time an expansion… |
Sequence 1Maria Montessori, a musical play in ten scenes on the life of Maria Montessori, was written and produced by the students of… |
Sequence 2The Arts: Setting: Time: Characters: A Play on Writing a Play By Sister Mary Aloyse Gerhardstein, R.S.M. The 9-12… |
Sequence 6Ana: I really wanted to be in the morgue scene. I had some really neat ideas on how to make it really scary, but I must have… |
Sequence 8Act VII Now for the Music (The teacher is seated at the organ - or piano. Words for a possible song are on the chalk board.… |
Sequence 230 of my existence because I can't go to a concert in New York or San Francisco or Cleveland or to the theater without… |
Sequence 1Report: Opportunity for Renewal: Montessori in the Inner City by Pearl Lucas At Harlem, New York amid the tumult and… |
Sequence 1Feature: Dialogue: Jean-Jacques Rousseau meets Maria Montessori by Gordon Maas Rousseau and Montessori have a great deal in… |
Sequence 8evidently there is tremendous attraction felt by the child for the spoken word, for the way people talk. One will even acquire… |
Sequence 10Neill: l had the wrong experience- Montessori: But if you want to know what I'm doing in my old age, I'm trying to… |
Sequence 6excellence. How do we reconcile the demands of the structured curriculum, as defined by Bruner, with the significance of the… |
Sequence 1Mario M. Montessori Is Dead Chronicle of a Ceremony by Camillo Grazzini Mr. Grazzini's sensitive portrayal of the… |
Sequence 430 Not a photograph: only the eyes have seen for remembrance. The Master of Cere- monies conducts us to another room already… |
Sequence 1Montessori and the Special Child by Jon Osterkorn Little did Dr. Montessori realize as she passed through the gates 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 5questioned the fact that a wider age range is more conducive to the child's emotional, social, and intellectual… |
Sequence 7In a homogeneous group, cooperation is mainJy on the basis of quantity: "I do this half; you do the other half.&… |
Sequence 1Introduction to The Religious Potential of the Child "I bless you, Father ... " (Matthew 11:25) by Sofia… |
Sequence 14Introduction to The Religious Potential of the Child "I bless you, Father ... " (Matthew 11:25) by Sofia… |
Sequence 22In a homogeneous group, cooperation is mainJy on the basis of quantity: "I do this half; you do the other half.&… |
Sequence 24questioned the fact that a wider age range is more conducive to the child's emotional, social, and intellectual… |
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 756 that they can do equivalence decoding. In English, at least, this is not the case. Conse- quently, some children may be… |
Sequence 864 schools. "The gains produced are less likely to deteriorate over time than those of other programs and may not… |
Sequence 923. M. Brearley ed. The Teaching of Young Children. New York: Schocken Books. 1971. 24. D. Anker, et.al. "Teaching… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 7Technology has made it all happen faster today. It took decades for word of Pestal· ozzi's accomplishments to reach all… |
Sequence 1Book Review The Religious Potential of the Child by Irene Fafalios Originally published as ll POTENZIAL RELIGJOSO DEL… |
Sequence 1Education to Wonder and the Kingdom of God by Sofia Cavalletti The following two selections are excerpted from Sofia… |
Sequence 2model to meet the objective conditions required for the continuation and expansion of Montessori elementary training. Such… |
Sequence 1Curriculum Drama by Elizabeth Flory Kelly "Anyone who i~ concerned wirh making rhearerldrama cemral 10 sociery has… |
Sequence 11new relationships, the student's feeling of drudgery, often sensed with linear learning, is swept away, and a more… |
Sequence 1Creative Drama Manifesto by Dorothy Heathcote The following is excerpred from Ms. Heathcote's wrirings and reflects her… |
Sequence 2Lili Peller and Me an interview with Margot Waltuch Kahn: Margot, tell us about your first contact with Lili Peller. Waltuch… |
Sequence 613 College. Her eagerness to bring insights of analytic psychology to teachers in practice had found an outlet. She had… |
Sequence 7Notes: 'Freud, Ernst L., ed. The Leners of Sigmund Freud. New York: Basic Books, 1960. p. 319. 'The Reiss-Davis… |
Sequence 815 1946 "Incentives to Development and Means of Early Education," The Psychoanalytic Study of rhe Child. II… |
Sequence 12concepts overboard, although for the lime being there are no observational data supporting the new concept. In the genesis of… |
Sequence 7they may find it difficult to maintain the standards set, and if they resort to methods that must be called brutal, the… |
Sequence 10until a career has begun. Princeton is a weff·to·do suburb of New York and Philadelphia and most of our families reflect this… |
Sequence 12 The bibliography, is organized by topics not by dates. In so far as possible we used large encompassing topic… |
Sequence 2Merrill, Jenny B. (1910). A neglected corner in the Montessori method. The Kindergarten-Primary Magazine, 11., 125, (1).… |
Sequence 36 Savoye, Jo Wood & Welter, Marsha Breitman. (1974). In the classroom: Brayer painting, vegetable printing, fish… |
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 12Wolf, Aline. (1976). Tutoring is caring. Altoona, PA,: Parent Child Press. Wolf, Aline. (1981). The world of the child… |
Sequence 1314 Cavaletti, Sofia. (1983). The religious potential of the child. New York: Paulist Press. 1. Communications.… |
Sequence 142. History of Education Quarterly. Burstyn, Joan. (1979). 19, 145-49, (5). 3. Journal of Teacher Education. Haberman,… |
Sequence 1516 Montessori, Maria. (1929). Child in the church: Essays on the religious education of children and the training of… |
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 1819 3. G. K' s Weekly. { 1936). 11, 404, { 1). 4. Month. (1937). 169, 182-3, (2). 5. New York Times. { 1939, August 20… |
Sequence 1920 Standing, E. Mortimer. (1959). Maria Montessorit her life and work. Fresno, California: Academy Library Guild. British… |
Sequence 20Ward, Florence Elizabeth.a (1913). The Montessori method and the American school. New York: Macmillan & Co. l.… |
Sequence 2223 Bruner, Jerome. (1982). A view of childminding. NAHTA Quarterly, 2, 9-21, (13). A dialogue about child rearing. (… |
Sequence 2425 C. Discipline/Freedom/Independence Chandra, Rangit Sekhar. (1960). Naughty Child. Around the Child, 2• 34-3 7, (4).… |
Sequence 2627 Jordan, Nancy. (1974). The malad'usted child in a Montessori settin Paper delivered at the Congress in Turin.… |
Sequence 28Montessori, Maria. (1984). Quotations from The Child in the Family. Communications,!!_, 14, (1). Montessori, Mario. (1962… |
Sequence 3031 Gupta, R. K. (1964). Consciousness and the child. Around the Child, .2_, 42-45, (4). Hillman, Rebecca. (1968, Fall… |
Sequence 3334 Usterkorn, Jon. ( 1977). MAMrA Quarterly, 1, On the significance of personality substitution. 1-15, (15). Peller,… |