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Sequence 189When J think about Dr. Montessori and what manifests itself as her greatest genius, l believe it is her insight into the power… |
Sequence 26processing delays. Montessori observers should be able to recog- nize these blocks and thus support or refer for target… |
Sequence 27Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly. Flow: Tl,e Psychology of Optimal £xperie11ce.New York: Harper & Row, 1990. Davis, Ronald D… |
Sequence 28Kohn,Alfie. Scl,ools 011r C/1ildre11 Deserve.Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1999. Kranowitz, Carol Stock, & Lucy Jane… |
Sequence 53on the lookout for books with a wide variety of cultural, linguistic, and demographic populations to add to our library.… |
Sequence 54Horner, Jack. "The Extraordinary Characteristics of Dys- lexia." Perspccti,•es 011 Ln11g11nge n11d Literacy… |
Sequence 76As teachers, I believe our main goal is to bring out the best .in all children. I will leave you with a quote from Elizabeth… |
Sequence 77Books RESOURCES Chance, Paul. First Course /11 Applied Beh11vior A1wlysis. Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole Publishing, 1998… |
Sequence 78Howlin, Patricia. CJ,i/dre11 wit!, A11tis111 and Asperger Syn- dro11,e: A C11ide for Practitioners and Carers. New York:… |
Sequence 144Binocular Vision Working Group. "The Use of Tinted Lenses and Colored Overlays for the Treatment of Dyslexia and… |
Sequence 162picture) on the wall and a short list of words from the picture to be placed next to it. [t is wise to remember that creative… |
Sequence 181integrate the arts (in children's eyes). Therapeutic gardens offer innumerable opportunities for in- tegration of the… |
Sequence 182Hannaford, C. S111nrl Moves: Why Leaming ls Not All i11 Your Head. Arlington, VA: Great Ocean Publishers, 1995. Hart, R.… |
Sequence 1872009 NAMTA BASELINE SPECIAL EDUCATION SURVEY analysis by Barbara Kahn Whnt does n survey of eighty-two Montessori schools… |
Sequence 188• 18% Midwest (Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota,… |
Sequence 200classroom. In addition, there is a lower elementary class for 4 students diagnosed within the autistic spectrum. The goal is… |
Sequence 205in reading and spelling among her students with high IQs. "Some of these bright students were being thwarted… |
Sequence 224phrase meanings (semantics), sentences (syntax), longer passages (discourse), and the social uses of language (pragma ties).… |
Sequence 225Wolf, M. Proust and tile Sq11id: The Story a11d Science of the Reading Brain. New York: HarperCollins, 2007. TIie… |
Sequence 258Goertz, Donna. Childre11 Who Are Not Yet Peaceful: Prevent- ing Excl11sio11 i11 the Early Ele111e11tary Classroom. Berkeley:… |
Sequence 306l._~ ~, ~ ~ Montessori ~Institute ======= MINW Northwest Come to the beautiful Pacific Northwest for ' Montessori… |
Sequence 120projects itself into the future and is sunk in the remotest ages of the past, thereby linking the past to the present and the… |
Sequence 144a time there was a child, and the child asked why, and we told the story of why. And once upon a time there was an adolescent… |
Sequence 145Montessori, Maria. Tlte Cltild, Society a11d tlte World: Unpub- lished Speeches n11d Writings. 1979. Trans. Caroline Juler… |
Sequence 169if you ever watched the old Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons.) The Wayback Machine can take you to old sites. It's a Jot of… |
Sequence 171buried in Alexandria. Eventually the story moves into the Byzantine times, so you have the Emperor Justinian and Empress… |
Sequence 172studying Alexander's symptoms think he may have had malaria or even West Nile virus. Figure 14 represents some of the… |
Sequence 227bridge from Asia more than fourteen thousand years ago. 1 The Powhatan, the Susquehanna, the Delaware, the Cherokee, the… |
Sequence 228Pennsylvania and the Carolinas. More Dutch came, not to New York, but to Pennsylvania. The French came and settled in South… |
Sequence 245Books Celebrntio11 of the U11folding of the Cosmos. San Francisco: Harper, 1992. Darwin, Charles. The Formation of Vegetable… |
Sequence 246Atkins, Peter W. The Periodic Ki11gdo111. New York: Basic Books, 1995. Ball, Philip. The l11gredie11ts: A Guided Tour of the… |
Sequence 247Morgan, Nina. Chemistry in Actio11: The Molec11/es of Everyday Life. New York: Oxford UP, 1995. Smith, Richard F. Chemistry… |
Sequence 248BOOKS FOR CHILDREN Earthworms Kalman, Bobbie. The Life Cycle of n11 Enrl/1wor111. New York: Crabtree, 2004. Simon, Seymour… |
Sequence 314ma th /handbook/Teacher/ In trod uctoryExplorations / Introductory Exp I orations.asp>. Anderso11, Sherwood.… |
Sequence 315Rota, Gian-Carlo, & Fabrizio Palombi. /11discrete Thoughts. Basel, Switzerland: Birkhauser, 2008. Steen, Lynn Arthur… |
Sequence 338with the mathematics staff to take full advantage of academic syn- thesis whenever it occurs. This course also develops the… |
Sequence 384with staff in order to achieve the level of understanding that is nec- essary. Staff must present their information and… |
Sequence 60Montessori children do grow up with a great desire to change the world. Tf you want to see a group of such students gathered… |
Sequence 82Our short-term goal is building and retaining enrollment. Our long-term goal is bringing the Montessori experience to all… |
Sequence 83Eissler, Trevor. Mo11tessori Madness. Georgetown, TX: Sevenoff, 2009. Fryer, Bronwyn. "How Do Innovators Think?&… |
Sequence 97We have small business-card size tent cards with our mission and three points about our school. We give these to parents to… |
Sequence 113Berry, Thomas. "It Takes a Universe." Save the Hermitage. June 3, 2009 <https:/ /beholdnature.org/tbh… |
Sequence 142may sound unusual, but it's important to remember that prospec- tive parents aren't necessarily out to make a… |
Sequence 19that we could not see. The learning process must take place inside the child, and this internal process requires time. It is… |
Sequence 20Montessori, Maria. Tile For111ntio11 of Mn11. 1955. Oxford: Clio, 1989. Montessori, Maria. Unpublished lectures. Dr. Maria… |
Sequence 39REFERENCES Arensburg, Baruch, & Anne-Marie Tillier. "Speech and the Neanderthals." Endeavour 15.1 (… |
Sequence 58stimulated by an optimal environment, the proper connections may not be kept. This past October I read in The New York… |
Sequence 67But ... there are dangers. Any new invention, any new techno- logical development can become dangerous. Montessori says that… |
Sequence 166REFERENCES Anecdotage. April 24, 2010 <http:/ /anecdotage.com/>. Beckmann, Petr. A History of Pi. New York: St… |
Sequence 253centcr to offer this program for the Early Childhood level. The posi- tion requires excellent organization skills, ability… |
Sequence 7generation that is starting to come into its own is one cultured to the effects of war and numbed to individual violent acts… |
Sequence 62personal harmony and have the capacity to guide us toward more mutually beneficial ways of Jiving together in the world.… |
Sequence 101expansive world of rich and colorful detail in and around New York, with a diminishing world of faded places and stereotypes… |
Sequence 104help children to meet your goals: to become citizens of the world and to unite in working for peace on Earth. REFERENCES… |
Sequence 157AUTHOR'S NOTES 1. This presentation included almost one hundred slides and video clips. I have tried to make the text… |
Sequence 214CONCLUSION If Dr. Montessori's principles and ideas on education were adopted universally through group consensus, this… |
Sequence 252REFERENCES Bagot, Kathleen L. "Perceived Restorative Components: A Scale for Children." Children, Yo11th… |
Sequence 253Faber Taylor, A., & F.E. Kuo. "Children with Attention Deficits Concentrate Better after Walk in the Park.… |
Sequence 254Ago." January 10, 2010. Kaiser Family Fo1111dalio11. March 26, 2010 <http://www.kff.org/cntmcdia/entmedi-… |
Sequence 255Montessori, Maria. From Childhood to Adolescence. 1948. Trans. The Montessori Educational Resource Center. Madras:… |
Sequence 256to Natural and Urban Environments." Joumal of Envi- ro11111ental Psyclzology 11 (1991): 201-230. van den Berg, A.G… |
Sequence 25Education, in stressing the interrelatedness of everything, asserts everything in the universe has a cosmic task. In To… |
Sequence 30humans as children that lends a sense of the cosmic to Montessori's thinking. This cosmic sense pervades all of… |
Sequence 44CELEBRATING LIFE, NOT THEORIES by Sanford Jones Sa11ford Jones' article is a very perso11a/ essay (combined witlt a… |
Sequence 85and service to the earth itself. When students work in service of something larger than themselves, they feel connected. This… |
Sequence 96How did Montessori put it? Knowledge can best be given where there is eagerness to learn, so this is the period when the… |
Sequence 103I once asked some students, "What is the function of a brick? What does it do? What is its job?" Some said… |
Sequence 145REFERENCES Einstein,Albert. "Autobiography." In P. Schilpp, Ed.,Albert Ei11stei11: Philosopher-Scie11tist.… |
Sequence 158And this is all essential for reading. I know that reading has taken over in many schools as the most important subject-you… |
Sequence 180world and take part in revolutions of creative change, the obvious connections between Montessori and true productive learning… |
Sequence 188OUTCOMES Dr. Montessori provides this optimistic description, "the whole life of the adolescent should be organized… |
Sequence 205Montessori observed the power of concentration to transform children's temperament and ul tima tel y their personalities… |
Sequence 206Carver, Charles & Scheier, Michael. "Themes and Issues in Self-Regulation of Behavior." Perspectives… |
Sequence 207tion Regulation, Adjustment, and Socialization in Child- hood." Hn11dbook of Self-Reg11/ntio11: Resenrch, Theory nnd… |
Sequence 208Kahn, David. "Normalization and Normality across the Planes of Development." Tlte NAMTA Jo11r11a/ 22.2 (1997… |
Sequence 209Morf, Carolyn. C. & Mischel, Walter. "Epilogue: Self- Regulation, Vulnerability, and Implications for Mental… |
Sequence 210ity Develop111e11t. Eds. Daniel. K. Mroczek & Todd. D. Little. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2006. 109-128… |
Sequence 226Smith. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991. 126-152. Arbuckle, T. Y., Vanderleck, V. F., Harsany, M., & Lapi… |
Sequence 232INITIATION TO THE KNOWLEDGE THAT Is THE PRIDE OF OUR CIVILIZATION by Donald C. Goertz Don Goertz's nccount of his… |
Sequence 234to go home and defend her borders, she left behind a rich reposi- tory of artistic, political, and architectural artifacts.… |
Sequence 237Julius Ceasar assassination site What difference, we ask, might it have made in the fortune and fate of Rome had Caesar lived… |
Sequence 268hand were two 50 Euro bills, the equivalent of about $145, which he quietly handed her. I turned away so he would not see that… |
Sequence 45Science and Sociely: The Woman Question 31 of the nineteenth century (Kramer believes that Montessori and Besant actually… |
Sequence 83Proposal.for a Sciemific Pedagogy 7 M. Montessori,// Me1odo de/la Pedagogia Scienlijica. Ecli=ione cri1ica. p.159. K Ibid. p.… |
Sequence 117103 Chapter I On the Move with the "New Child" 1.1 Beyond the Pillars of Hercules "At 8 o'… |
Sequence 120106 Part Two - For a Science o.fthe Formation of Man teaching setting and care for physical life, while criticism focused on… |
Sequence 124110 Part Two - For a Science of the Formation of Man character-building. [ ... ] And this must be developed in our country,… |
Sequence 130116 Part Two - For a Science of the Formation of Man materials; playful and expressive activities, with particular regard lo… |
Sequence 132118 Chapter II School, Family and Society 11.1 Let's save the children! San Diego, 1917: "Last summer I went… |
Sequence 146132 Part Two - For a Science o.f the Formation of Man Luigi Sturzo. in exile there. It was Sturzo himself who recalled this… |
Sequence 149School, Family and Society 135 Montessori as an honorary member of the Fascist party. Over the last few years many scholars… |
Sequence 217Maria Montessori Through the Seasons of the ''Method" 203 child education in the Children's llouses… |
Sequence 41REFERENCES Bronson, Po & Ashley Merryman. N11r/11res!tock: New TJ,i11ki11g About CJ,i/dre11. New York: Hatchette Book… |
Sequence 42Pink, Daniel. A Wl,o/e New Mind. New York: Riverhead Books, 2005. Ramachandran, V.S. A Brief Tour of Humnn Co11scio11s11ess… |
Sequence 91THE SEARCH FOR A NEW DEFINITION OF CREATIVITY by Guadalupe Borbolla Begin11ing with traditional definitions of creativity,… |
Sequence 109CHILDREN THE MAKERS OF CULTURE: THE ARTIST WITHIN by Olga Dantus Olgn Da11t11s writes 11 refreshing, impressionistic view of… |
Sequence 121bubble) and common space (don't break anybody else's bubble). In this exercise, we can move our bodies in many… |
Sequence 219in isolation to solve one problem), it might not be so bad to sit and think of your seminar question for an entire hour!… |
Sequence 220Schaefer, Lawrence." A Montessori Vision of Adolescence." Tl,e NAMTA Journal 18.3 (1993, Summer): 73-84.… |
Sequence 269Qualified applicants will be AMI or AMS Montessori credentialed for 3-6 and must be highly quali- fied under NCLB (No Child… |