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Displaying results 1601 - 1700 of 40617

NAMTA Journal 17/1 03 Language Unfolding In the Child

Sequence 23
universe can be explored, but if we make reading a technical skill, we are only giving the child the option co read maps and…
Sequence 24
Function of Words We give the child the means to classify thoughts. One way co classify words is grammar, which is the…
Sequence 25
Reading Analysis The child is shown how words have a particular place in a senrence: subjecr-predicare-objecr-clauses. She…
Sequence 26
References Goffstein, M.B. (1979). Natural history. New York. Farrar, Straus, Giroux. Goffstein, M.B. (I 984). A little…

NAMTA Journal 17/1 04 The Child and the World of Nature

Sequence 1
Tm: CHILD AND THE WORLD OF NATURE by Annecce Haines We hnve reached a critical time of our residence on earth. If we expect…
Sequence 2
This formation of the self happens during the first three years of life, a period during which we understand that the child…
Sequence 3
mysteries and equip himself with mental weapons against the terrors of ignorance. As a result of this science, we have learned…
Sequence 4
In a 1.946 lecture in London Montessori said, "Education today needs one reform. If it is to prepare man for the…
Sequence 5
names of fruits and vegetables he sees as he is being pushed along the aisle of the grocery store, or kinds of cars, or colors…
Sequence 6
books are not enough. Mario Montessori Sr. reminded us of this when he noted how difficult it is to help children understand…
Sequence 7
information is expanded through picture cards and scientific nomencla- ture material and augmented with scories, poems, games…
Sequence 8
names of different animals and plants-wonderful words like "red- winged blackbird" and "white-…
Sequence 9
the sun awakes them in the morning .... But instead of this, we anxiously ask ourselves how we can make a child sleep after…
Sequence 10
to the child to give him impressions char are good, beautiful, and just. Let us give him opportunities for coming into…
Sequence 11
References Eisley, Loren. (1964). The unexpected universe. New York. Harcou re, Brace, and World, Inc. Lorenz, Konrad. (1990…

NAMTA Journal 17/1 05 All-Day Montessori: The Human Concern

Sequence 1
ALL-DAY MONTESSORI: THE HUMAN CONCERN by Lilian Bryan Although Li/inn Bryan has self-described, old-fashioned beliefs about…
Sequence 2
my children's tears, ro laugh with rhem, choose the books we read, the music we listened to, the food they are, were all…
Sequence 3
receive free prenatal health check-ups and $ I 000 at the birch of their children. They also get six month's paid…
Sequence 4
We have the legacy of Dr. Montessori's work passed down to us like a guiding light for our mission today. Dr. Montessori…
Sequence 5
come in as surrogate grandparents, just co be there and give individual children some undivided attention for a little while.…
Sequence 6
Soft music makes this a gentle beginning ro a long and busy day at school. After cleaning their dishes, children can select…
Sequence 7
• History: After being presented a story from a wide variety of possi- bilities, children can do art projects, learn crafts,…
Sequence 8
• Outdoor Sports and Games: For the younger ones-simple balance beams, climbing structures, jump rope, hopscotch, and ball…
Sequence 9
kitchen help, which makes che school a place where our children can grow spirirually. A loving atcicude must pervade the…
Sequence 10
Afternoon activities require extensive outside environment: gardens, playground, playing field, sicring areas, a shed for…
Sequence 11
into a new age of enlightenment through our work wirh the world's chil- dren. ALL of our children are all of our children…

NAMTA Journal 17/1 06 Developing The Mathematical Mind

Sequence 1
DEVELOPING THE MATHEMATICAL MIND by Kay M. Baker Referring to contemporary developmental psychologists, Kay Baker builds a…
Sequence 2
two-year-old child is able co represent events symbolically; for example, with language. Uzgiris and Hunt conducted one of…
Sequence 3
There is an interesting complement to these studies that Mario Montessori (1948) describes: The child absorbs a language…
Sequence 4
Montessori Psychology The development of rhe human personality is a continuum which begins at conception. We will nor fully…
Sequence 5
It is useless co speak about education of the senses without coordinat- ed movement. If a child cannot hold or carry objects,…
Sequence 6
Birth of the Mathematical Mind So the child is led to organize previous sensorial experiences and attach language to these…
Sequence 7
The MathemacicaJ Mind is Synonymous with the Human Mind From this line of thought, it can be inferred char the mathematical…
Sequence 8
In its entirety, the world always repeats more or less the same elements. If we study, for example, the life of planes or…
Sequence 9
Informal Mathematics Mosr people use informal marhemarics in their daily lives narurally- organizing, classifying, numbering…
Sequence 10
Dr. Montessori on the Psychology of Mathematics In an address given to the Cambridge Education Society at Triniry College on…
Sequence 11
basic truths. But the child ... discovered truths which it had never been our intention to include within it {pp. 6-7).…
Sequence 12
References Bjorklund, D.F. ( l 989). Children's thinking: developmental function and individual differences. Pacific…

NAMTA Journal 17/1 07 Needs of the Elementary-Age Child: Montessori Principles, Strategies, and their Practical Implementations

Sequence 1
NEEDS OF THE ELEMENTARY-AGE CHILD MONTESSORI PRINCIPLES, STRATEGIES, AND THEIR PRACTICAL IMPLEMENTATIONS by Rajendra K.…
Sequence 2
This article is based on my analysis, insights gained through my work with children, and strategies used in implementing the…
Sequence 3
interests him from a different point of view. He is looking for what needs to be done. That is, he is beginning to become…
Sequence 4
needs, the mind of the child becomes artificially dulled, henceforth to resist imparted knowledge. Interest will no longer be…
Sequence 5
Some human establishments to which children can be exposed are: a commercial building or house under construction, telephone…
Sequence 6
ing the sight of real trees, and all the life to be found around them, in a real forest. Something emanates from those trees…
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aim such as, for example, co protect the weak and to maintain a certain moral level; here the child may make commitments or…
Sequence 8
It is at seven years that one may note the beginning of an orientation toward mora.1 questions, toward judgment of acts. One…
Sequence 9
guish good from evil (right from wrong) by his powers, and to resent limitations by arbitrary authority. In the field of…
Sequence 10
ous interaction of these rwo factors, the cencer and the periphery, the mind of che child develops, unfolds, expands, and…
Sequence 11
Freedom to Choose Freedom co choose is an essenrial element in the development of a person. The freedom to choose depends on…
Sequence 12
inhabited it. To make it clear whether or not a child has understood, we should see whether he can form a vision of it within…
Sequence 13
terns in mathematics which provide an unlimited scope for carrying out repetition interest him. Small problems are boring to…
Sequence 14
Presenting Groups of Related Facts The intellect, by its very nature, is always seeing relationships between things-whether…
Sequence 15
As Or. Montessori clearly indicates, our point of departure in presen- tations should be details not the whole. Details…
Sequence 16
I had the privilege of seeing and salvaging some of these time lines from the materials left by Dr. Momessori in India. Most…
Sequence 17
Elementary-Bergamo, Italy zoo, our goal may be the study of a class of the chordates; our goal in visiting a beach may be the…
Sequence 18
many embarrassing situations. We need to explain reasons behind these activities because we are dealing with children who wane…
Sequence 19
Area of the Classroom The area of the elementary classroom should be calculated on the basis of about 10 square feer per…
Sequence 20
The lesson table should be placed ar a spot where the director can view rhe whole class. A chalkboard ac least 3 feet by 6…
Sequence 21
desks instead of cables because of che storage space in che desks. The desks also eliminated che problem of scoring things…
Sequence 22
Group lessons are given when a number of children are ready for the presentation of a certain concept. After a group lesson,…
Sequence 23
In my understanding, the purpose of work contracts is ro help chil- dren make choices of activities char will sow the seeds of…
Sequence 24
Sample Cultural Work Lise I. Sentence analysis 11 . Eras review 2. Molecular structures 12. Prehistoric humans 3. Element…
Sequence 25
Sample Mathematics Work List 1. Division recording 11. Liquid measurement 2. S. fraction subtraction 12. Square root 3. S…
Sequence 26
It is very important to understand that the purpose of Monressori education is nor only to sprinkle seeds of culture and…
Sequence 27
scood it, we may need co give chem a new step or new application. Presentation of a concept is nor a one-time affair. Children…
Sequence 28
Rules I have observed many elementary classes run in a disorderly way: chil- dren talking loudly; children running around…
Sequence 29
need more direction in choosing and doing work from the work lists. We may need to cell chem chat they need co work on three…
Sequence 30
They might want co find the area of the room or hallway, and when they come co you with the length and width, help them figure…
Sequence 31
story which the orher children noticed right away. This gave them the idea of making up their own stories, and without anyone…
Sequence 32
The Second Subphase The second period of development is split approximately into ages 6 to 9 and 9 to 12. During each period…
Sequence 33
better ways to deaJ with this kind of situation within the framework of rhe Montessori method. Then chere are other kinds of…
Sequence 34
Children are exposed ro so many different concepts chat we cannot work in a haphazard way. Because their minds are occupied…
Sequence 35
strategies, then eventually they will provide a bridge to understanding the implementation of Montessori principles and…
Sequence 36
Footnotes 1 • Maria Montessori, To Educate the Human Potential. Madras, India. Kalakshetra Publications, 1973, p. 4. 2 •…
Sequence 37
' 9• Maria Montessori, From Childhood to Adolescence, p. 34. Ibid., p. 39. ZI. Ibid., p. 40. Ibid., p. 93. • Maria…

NAMTA Journal 17/1 08 The Montessori Adolescent: Frameworks for Invention

Sequence 1
THE MONTESSORI ADOLESCENT: FRAMEWORKS FOR INVENTION by David Kahn Extrapolating from the primary and elementary curriculum…
Sequence 2
Don't call it Montessori. If it works along Montessori lines, that is good. But there is no Montessori method for the…
Sequence 3
work of the conscious absorbent mind but it needs an environment for its action. The sensorial material of the Montessori…
Sequence 4
the earth. The origin of life on earth, of humans, farms, cities, and empires is personified in the great lessons as invention…
Sequence 5
occupation and Montessori refers to as work of the land. Dr. Montessori writes: ... therefore work on the land is an…
Sequence 6
Scl•ne. reproduction gene1ics _ DiodiYElfSlly S~ience HumanltlHIPhlfosophy adaolali<>n ovclutioo care of…
Sequence 7
Interdisciplinary Concept Model Meth-,natiCI taxMIOn e,,onomocs Science r,:=.,S:,_, ___ S_c_ie~n_c~e~------1 science…
Sequence 8
Interdisciplinary Concept Model Selene• woodland OOOIOgy kinds ot ueas Science Hum&nltlesJ'Phllosophy…
Sequence 9
Interdisciplinary Concept Model ~. -- 9~- 1 . • --(jJ. -· Tht Ans Mathematics Amel'icatl cratts =;ti~ =~~~$…
Sequence 10
viva] of the fittest demands, safeguarding tradition in order to under- stand how co achieve social and technical skills…
Sequence 11
design. Fusion is a word rhar is used in curriculum more often in these days of school resrrucruring. (I am nor sure that most…
Sequence 12
Comparloon ln .. rdloclpllnary n. Fuolon Integration Approach lmpr111lonl1tlc Chart Dtodpllno- 000 Oifdpllnes are tN&gt…
Sequence 13
Infusion points are learning-synthesizing experiences which process human potential at each plane of development. They are…
Sequence 14
ed time (example: comprehensive study of bridges includes social histo- ry, engineering, creative arts, rendering of design,…
Sequence 15
mutual service. The farm is a final acrualizarion of cosmic education. And as we have seen, farming is not just a technical…
Sequence 16
invention, it also provides the holistic, integrated basis for clarifying complex tensions between human and natural systems.…

NAMTA Journal 17/1 09 A Model of the Maturing Person

Sequence 1
A MODEL OF THE MATURING PERSON by Douglas Heath Doug/11s Heath claims that he is communicating .fi-om the fourth plane.…
Sequence 2
haps on our deathbed, bur shall use "maturing" to signifj thnt living is n continuous process of adllpting…
Sequence 3
by changing inner and external threats, muse be able co resist and recov- er our essential stability if disorganized. One…
Sequence 4
Japanese adolescents to pass their university entrance exams results in psychic collapse and hostile resistance to and Aighr…
Sequence 5
Healthy growth moves away from self- ro other- centeredness, again vastly increasing our adaptive power. Other-centeredness…
Sequence 6
Autonomy " ... the creative impulse comes from within ... the discovery is made by our- selves, the discipline is…
Sequence 7
aware that I muse monitor my left liccle finger's waywardness; I am ceaselessly typing words in new patterns; my finger…
Sequence 8
Figure 1 MODEL OF MATURING Attributes that contribute to Adapting Effectively Development Dimensions of Maturing 11 Effects…
Sequence 9
Others, like some feminists and cultural relativists, reject my hypoth- esis that a general model of healthy growth can be…

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