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Sequence 16• feeling of usefulness and an understanding of one's "many sided powers of adaptation" (Montessori,… |
Sequence 36Q. But she did. She said it. She said exactly what you said, that starting with the bacteria, each organism actually created… |
Sequence 17REFERENCES Joosten, A.M. Learning From the Child. Amsterdam: Asso- ciation Montessori lnternationale, n.d. Reprinted from… |
Sequence 2Don't get discouraged with a child. Re- member that the child that comes each morning is not the same as the one that… |
Sequence 7of childhood." We realized that everything we were learning con- trasted strongly with our traditional state training… |
Sequence 13Starting in the 1950s and continuing throughout the 1960s and the first half of the 1970s, AMI organized elementary study… |
Sequence 11This clear separation would help communication both within the adult Montessori community and also with the world at large.… |
Sequence 16Foreword by Margaret Drummond. The Italian edition isComeconobbiMaria Montessori. Rome: Vita dell'infanzia, 1956.… |
Sequence 6reference but perhaps for an underlying need of absolute certainty and structure. Like early human beings, I am a hunter and… |
Sequence 34reference but perhaps for an underlying need of absolute certainty and structure. Like early human beings, I am a hunter and… |
Sequence 122Foreword by Margaret Drummond. The Italian edition isComeconobbiMaria Montessori. Rome: Vita dell'infanzia, 1956.… |
Sequence 151This clear separation would help communication both within the adult Montessori community and also with the world at large.… |
Sequence 235Starting in the 1950s and continuing throughout the 1960s and the first half of the 1970s, AMI organized elementary study… |
Sequence 241of childhood." We realized that everything we were learning con- trasted strongly with our traditional state training… |
Sequence 5(Creating cohesion by stnlimenl with th~ads of developed WlLL) • individual • personal • parallel (by age 6 or 7) (… |
Sequence 3that he or she has the necessary capabilities to function, thrive, and contribute to the community? Can education "… |
Sequence 2Montessori speaks about to occur, we must take the next step. We must "give" this environment over to the… |
Sequence 9esteem emerge within the child. We know that the child's referring to herself and taking action is going to depend very… |
Sequence 11computer I cell phone ban. She and her father jokingly referred to the period of withdrawal that she experienced from her… |
Sequence 2EDUCATEURS SANS FRONTIERES: LIVING OUT THE VISION by Charlene S. Trochta Charlene Trochta's review of her experience of… |
Sequence 4to forty years in the field; several were not long out of training. I looked forward to revisiting Montessori's legacy… |
Sequence 3common goals that introduce real responsibilities at a younger and younger age. One may ask if this conversation is concrete… |
Sequence 1THE RIGHT USE OF INTELLIGENCE IN THE MONTESSORI ELEMENTARY CLASSROOM by Kay Baker Kay Baker carefully summarizes Montessori… |
Sequence 2The model of the school in Montessori education is also different. Rather than being modeled on the factory, a Montessori… |
Sequence 12CULTIVATING THE MONTESSORI SPIRIT THROUGH f AMILY LIFE by Gerard Leonard Looking back at his own childhood, Gerard Leonard… |
Sequence 12in every skill imaginable, sports team schedules for eight- and nine- year-olds that would put the best of us in the emergency… |
Sequence 14Montessori, Maria. The Child, Society and the World: Unpub- lished Speeches and Writings. 1979. Trans. Caroline Juler &… |
Sequence 2A diverse set of challenges faces the architect when trying to facilitate graciousness of movement for dozens, sometimes… |
Sequence 3and minute care as is given to the baby. ("Dr. Montessori's Third Lecture" 177) At adolescence we have… |
Sequence 6I return to the main question: Can the syllabus be applied in other settings? If we know what the intent is, we certainly can… |
Sequence 8also diplomatically handles complaints about menus and the balanc- ing of vegetarian and non-vegetarian food options. The… |
Sequence 8we should set forth large challenges whose fulfillment requires both the commitment and development of the individual and of… |
Sequence 2SCIENCE STUDY FOR THE ERDKINDER: PHILOSOPHICAL CONSIDERATIONS by David Ayer David Ayer's reexamination of the… |
Sequence 13years of creativity, experimentation, study, and refinement. That's where we are now in the adolescent work-guided by… |
Sequence 7gram at which the students spent one day a week working on a small farm. Just when we finally admitted that we couldn't… |
Sequence 11of the day students as well. Though they were sometimes not the majority in terms of numbers, the boarding students were… |
Sequence 10REFERENCES Grazzini, Camillo. "The Four Planes of Development." The Child, the Family, the Future. AMI… |
Sequence 11The adolescent project continues, as does the path of human development. Montessori says, "The intimate vocation of… |
Sequence 9REFERENCES Montessori, Maria. The Absorbent Mind. 1949. Trans. Claude A. Claremont. Oxford: Clio, 1988. Montessori, Maria.… |
Sequence 12tion in the years ahead, of this we are certain. We eagerly anticipate meeting people (practitioners and adolescents) who will… |
Sequence 12understand how something moves from one part to the next, e.g., the flow of digested material through the digestive system or… |
Sequence 91. For a successful closing of circles and the opening of new ones. 2. For them to have the necessary energy and vitality to… |
Sequence 1THE MONTESSORI POTENTIAL AT THE GROVE SCHOOL by Gena Engelfried This short article presents a composite of the… |
Sequence 7Montessori, Maxia. From Childhood to Adolescence. 1948. Trans. A.M. Joosten. Rev. ed. Oxford: Clio, 1996. Stephenson,… |
Sequence 24Emily Dickinson captures the experience of a teacher desperately attempting to encounter the human potential in each child at… |
Sequence 7REFERENCES Montessori,Maria. The Absorbent Mind. 1949. Trans. Claude A. Claremont. Oxford: Clio, 1988. Montessori, Maria.… |
Sequence 2MORE PARENT INVOLVEMENT: REFINING p ARENT EDUCATION WITH AN EMPHASIS ON ASSISTANTS TO INFANCY by Judi Orion Starting from… |
Sequence 13• They will be lifelong learners because they enjoy what they do and learn in order to envision. • They will be socialized… |
Sequence 4which ensures the purity of the sea-water and the purity of the air during the many millions of years is called life"… |
Sequence 4Rathunde, Kevin, & Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi. "Middle School Students' Motivation and Quality of… |
Sequence 2THE SCHOOLS OUR CHILDREN DESERVE: HELPING PARENTS UNDERSTAND THE RATIONALE FOR ALTERNATIVE EDUCATION by Alfie Kohn A/fie… |
Sequence 36to isolate one element out of a complex, the isolated parts and their separate behaviors never explain the associated… |
Sequence 9puppet presentations, and Total Physical Response (TPR) to intro- duce vocabulary are all recommended. Art projects, food… |
Sequence 93Cosmic Education for the Elemen- tary-aged child. Dr. Montessori researched the needs of the child under three, culminating… |
Sequence 13trees, and all life that emanates from the natural world (Montessori, From C!tildhood to Adolescence 19). This inner… |
Sequence 16On October 28, 1931, Mahatma Gandhi told Maria Montessori in a speech at the Montessori training college in London: You have… |
Sequence 20INDEPENDENCE There are other qualities developed in Montessori children that will serve them as well when it comes time for… |
Sequence 1UNIVERSAL MORAL DEVELOPMENT: THE BASIS FOR HUMAN UNITY AND PEACE by Allyn Travis Because the elementary years represent t!,e… |
Sequence 7we have had people immigrate to Wisconsin from countries where parental corporal punishment is permissible. Beating your… |
Sequence 24Kahn, David. "Montessori Erdkinder: The Social Evolution of the Little Community." Tile NAMTA journal 31.l… |
Sequence 15Louv, Richard. LnstChildi11 the Woods. Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books, 2006. Maslow, Abraham. The Fnrther Renches of H11111n11… |
Sequence 4fn this paper, I will summarize the fundamentals of current re- search-basedK-12 social, emotional, ethical, and aca-… |
Sequence 17Montessori, Maria. From Childhood to Adolesce11ce. 1948. Rev. ed. Trans. A.M. Joosten. Oxford: Clio, 1996. Montessori, Maria… |
Sequence 21We 11111st think deeply fora/I 011rchildre11 a11dfor tomorrow's world. We must clarify the essence of man, study !tow to… |
Sequence 45l ,10 T✓ t1. Tao t,· d1i11g. l r,rns. J,rn,cs Ll•ggc. lntcrrwt Cl,1s- sics \rchi, l' \1arch 25, 2008 <http://… |
Sequence 2WHOLE-SCHOOL APPROACHES TO MONTESSORI SPECIAL EDUCATION by Paula Leigh-Doyle, Jacquie Maughan, and Maura Joyce… |
Sequence 4program called Bal-A-Vis-X, overseen by an occupational therapist (seeGranke and Leigh-Doyle). This is part of our whole-… |
Sequence 7Administrators must foster a nonjudgmental environment, a community of humility, openness, receptivity to new information,… |
Sequence 20school. The fact that you serve a population under the age of five puts you into this very popular area of early childhood… |
Sequence 21Then we started the writing process. We needed to tell them in a language that they could understand, and I say this with all… |
Sequence 26This approach has also presented some challenges. One is that when we screen children across the board, we've had to be… |
Sequence 12hear a baby's cries in the next room and ignore it, saying, "Oh, babies cry. They'll outgrow it."… |
Sequence 14number lose any sense of innocence, of connection to that which is larger. But our students are not lost; they are finding… |
Sequence 15REFERENCES Blake, William." Auguries of Innocence." 1803. Blake, William. So11gs of /1111oce11ce n11d of… |
Sequence 22little doubt that that person would pause and then respond: "No- body-I taught myself." Then, many of them… |
Sequence 12Yesterday, PeterGebhardt-Seele reminded us of the way Montessori used the term Erdkinder. Our prepared environment is not a… |
Sequence 5The Montessori perspective is to get students to operationalize the ideas themselves. If we ignore their way of thinking and… |
Sequence 11quickly obsolete? Continued observation, communication, and re- search will help unravel this and other mysteries surrounding… |
Sequence 15REFERENCES Association of Secondary Teachers Ireland. Science Survey 2006. 2006. Grazzini, Camillo. "The Montessori… |
Sequence 16So what do you have? For the adolescent, it's them at the center. This is the healthy egocentrism. But it is never just… |
Sequence 19REFERENCES Brnudel, Fernand. A History of Civilizntio11s. Trans. Richard Mayne. New York: Penguin, 1993. Bruner, Jerome S.… |
Sequence 24REFERENCES Adler, Mortimer)., Robert Hutchins, et al., eds. Great Books of the Western World. 54 vols. Chicago: Encyclopredia… |
Sequence 11children are offered more and more challenge to their hand-under close supervision-we find they are capable of doing many… |
Sequence 6what her gestures mean. When a child leans on another's table, the teacher's hands patting the table mean, "… |
Sequence 10allows us to operate in freedom. Children reveal their true selves to us through their work. Choice in work allows the child… |
Sequence 1CHILD DEVELOPMENT STUDIES by Mary Reinhardt Ms. Reinhardt presents a practical article on upper ele111entary "appren… |
Sequence 2promotes various Multisensory Structured Language Programs with a long history of success, all compatible with Montessori… |
Sequence 8stem, triggered by higher hormonal reactions. Such a child may seek out a much higher level of input as his homeostasis.… |
Sequence 10barrows with resistant loads, walking the labyrinth. At Hershey, we moved our library book bin far away from the library and… |
Sequence 2A MONTESSORI APPROACH TO AUTISM by K. Michelle Lane Miclte//e Lane founded n school tltat serves c!tildren so severely… |
Sequence 3usual) talking about child development, and the beautiful way in which Montessori education meets all the needs of a child.… |
Sequence 18Montessori, Maria. Tile For111alion of Man. 1949. Trans. A.M. Joosten. Oxford: Clio, 1989. Montessori, Maria. Spo11taneo11s… |
Sequence 15ln addition to the clinic, Rivendell Preschool is an inclusion model, accepting children with a variety of learning styles and… |
Sequence 3services had there been such a thing at the time. Dr. Montessori was "the first professional who saw that retardation… |
Sequence 1PROFILE: THE COBB SCHOOL, MONTESSORI by Carolyn Conto Ross Tile Cobb School, Montessori, in Simsbury, Connectic11t,Jo11nded… |
Sequence 26certainty that every grain of information was true without a hint of falsehood. We must not be discouraged by this, instead… |
Sequence 17of its potential for shaping the teacher-student relationship. But that would be a necessary step to take if we were to… |
Sequence 16about the world that our students are about to enter. We need to expose the students to adults who believe in humanity,… |
Sequence 24Montessori, Maria. Tlte Cltild, Society a11d tlte World: Unpub- lished Speeches n11d Writings. 1979. Trans. Caroline Juler… |
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.… |