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Article
Chautauqua Institution: A System of Popular Education; Official Program
Available from: Chatauqua Institution
Publication: The Chautauquan Daily (Chautauqua, New York)
Date: Aug 2, 1915
Pages: 1
Americas, Chautauqua Institution, Chautauquas, Education - Study and teaching, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., North America, United States of America
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Abstract/Notes: "2:30 Lecture Series. 'Promising Educational Experiments.' 2 'Madame Montessori's Schools of Childhood.' Mr. Earl Barnes. Amphitheater."
Language: English
Article
Chautauqua Institution: A System of Popular Education; Department of Instruction: Official Program
Available from: Chatauqua Institution
Publication: The Chautauquan Daily (Chautauqua, New York)
Date: Jul 16, 1912
Pages: 1
Americas, Anne E. George - Biographic sources, Anne E. George - Speeches, addresses, etc., Chautauqua Institution, Chautauquas, Education - Study and teaching, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., North America, United States of America
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Abstract/Notes: "11:00 am LECTURE: 'Montessori Materials and Method of Presentation,' Miss Anne E. George. Hall."
Language: English
Article
Chautauqua Institution: A System of Popular Education; Department of Instruction: Official Program
Available from: Chatauqua Institution
Publication: The Chautauquan Daily (Chautauqua, New York)
Date: Jul 15, 1912
Pages: 1
Americas, Anne E. George - Biographic sources, Anne E. George - Speeches, addresses, etc., Chautauqua Institution, Chautauquas, Education - Study and teaching, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., North America, United States of America
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Abstract/Notes: "11:00 am LECTURE: 'Principles Underlying the Montessori Method,' Miss Anne E. George. Hall."
Language: English
Article
Chautauqua Institution: A System of Popular Education
Available from: Chatauqua Institution
Publication: The Chautauquan Daily (Chautauqua, New York)
Date: Aug 3, 1915
Pages: 1
Americas, Chautauqua Institution, Chautauquas, Education - Study and teaching, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., North America, United States of America
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Abstract/Notes: "2:30 Lecture Series. 'Promising Educational Experiments.' 2 'Madame Montessori's Schools of Childhood.' Mr. Earl Barnes. Amphitheater."
Language: English
Book Section
Institutionelle und bildungs theoretische Bedingungen von Montessori-Volksschulklassen [Institutional and educational theoretical conditions of Montessori elementary school classes]
Book Title: Untersuchungen und Ansätze zur Weiterentwicklung der Montessori-Pädagogik in Österreich [Investigations and approaches for the further development of Montessori pedagogy in Austria]
Pages: 75-95
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Language: German
Published: Innsbruck, Germany: Studien Verlag, 2009
Edition: 1st ed.
ISBN: 978-3-7065-4721-5 3-7065-4721-X
Series: Initiative neues Lernen
Book Section
La Formation des Jardinières d’Enfants, une Institutionnalisation Conflictuelle (1910-1931) [The Formation of Kindergartens, an Institutional Conflict (1910-1931)]
Available from: OpenEdition Books
Book Title: Éduquer dans et hors l’école: Lieux et milieux de formation. XVIIe-XXe siècle
Pages: 171-183
Europe, France, Western Europe
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Abstract/Notes: Les jardins d’enfants qui se développent en Europe au XIXe siècle selon les principes froëbeliens s’implantent plus difficilement en France où les salles d’asile, puis l’école maternelle instituée par Pauline Kergomard1, développent un accueil spécifique pour les enfants d’âge préscolaire. Néanmoins, ils bénéficient dès les années 1910 de l’essor mondial du montessorisme, et l’on constate la création de nombreux jardins d’enfants et d’écoles nouvelles jusqu’à l’orée de la seconde guerre mondiale. Les jardinières reçoivent une formation spécifique, centrée sur les méthodes actives prônées par les psychologues s’intéressant au développement de l’enfant, et délivrée dès le début du XXe siècle par des institutions privées. Cette formation est prise en charge par l’État entre les années 1921 et 1931, alors que Mlle Amieux, professeur au collège Sévigné, crée un cours pédagogique au lycée de jeunes filles de l’École normale de Sèvres. Les jardinières munies du certificat d’État sont ensuite embauchées dans les jardins d’enfants et les classes enfantines des lycées bourgeois. Cette expérience s’arrête en 1931 lorsque les lycées ne sont plus autorisés à ouvrir des classes enfantines, mettant ainsi un terme à l’existence des jardins d’enfants dans l’enceinte de l’enseignement secondaire. Nous verrons dans ce chapitre en quoi cette formation a été à la résultante, pas toujours harmonieuse, de l’institution scolaire et du mouvement en faveur de l’éducation des jeunes enfants, et en quoi elle a été un enjeu qui reste actuel. Quelle était cette formation spécifique, quelles raisons conduisent à son arrêt en 1931 et qu’advient-il de la formation des jardinières après cette date ? Voici les questions que nous envisageons d’explorer à travers le prisme d’une éducation préscolaire envisagée dans et hors l’école, à partir de sources provenant de fonds d’archives publics2 et privés3, complétés par des ouvrages et revues pédagogiques telles La Nouvelle Éducation, la Revue universitaire, l’Éducation enfantine ou encore la Revue de l’enseignement secondaire des jeunes filles. [Kindergartens that developed in Europe in the nineteenth century according to Froëbelian principles were more difficult to establish in France where the asylum rooms, then the nursery school instituted by Pauline Kergomard, developed a specific reception for the children of preschool age. Nonetheless, they benefited from the worldwide boom in montessorism from the 1910s onwards, and many kindergartens and new schools were established until the onset of the Second World War. The gardeners receive specific training, focused on the active methods advocated by psychologists interested in the development of the child, and delivered from the beginning of the 20th century by private institutions. This training was paid for by the State between the years 1921 and 1931, when Miss Amieux, a teacher at the Sévigné college, created an educational course at the high school for young girls of the Normal School of Sèvres. The gardeners with the state certificate are then employed in the kindergartens and nursery classes of middle-class high schools. This experiment ended in 1931 when high schools were no longer allowed to open nursery classes, thus putting an end to the existence of kindergartens within the walls of secondary education. We will see in this chapter how this training was the result, not always harmonious, of the school institution and the movement in favor of the education of young children, and how it was an issue that remains current. What was this specific training, what are the reasons for its discontinuation in 1931 and what happens to the training of gardeners after that date? Here are the questions that we plan to explore through the prism of preschool education envisaged in and outside school, using sources from public2 and private3 archival funds, supplemented by educational books and reviews such as La Nouvelle Education, the University Review, Childhood Education or the Journal of secondary education for young girls.]
Language: French
Published: Rennes, France: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2018
ISBN: 978-2-7535-5561-7
Series: Histoire
Article
Chautauqua Meeting in Hollywood
Available from: Newspapers.com
Publication: Hollywood Citizen (Hollywood, California)
Date: Feb 16, 1917
Pages: 4
Americas, Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, Montessori schools, North America, United States of America
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Abstract/Notes: "...In connection with these Chautauqua activities, it will interest educationalists in Hollywood and elsewhere to learn that Dr. Maria Montessori arrived in Los Angeles last week and has opened a six-weeks' course in primary education, beginning yesterday. Dr. Montessori is the famous Italian reformer and philosopher who has practically revolutionized within the last few years the educational methods applied to children of tender age in civilized countries. Her six weeks' course of instruction is being given under the auspices of the Los Angeles Chautauqua. The Chautauqua has arranged for a further and fuller four months' course of instruction which Dr. Montessori will hold here during the months of May, June, July and August. One-half of Dr. Montessori's disciples in this hemisphere now reside in California and she has many warm friends and great admirers in Hollywood. Her visit, therefore, is of the greatest interest to local educationalists."
Language: English
Article
Bericht über eine Forschungsexkursion zur Situation der Sekundarstufe I und II in Montessori-Institutionen - Stand: Juni 1982
Publication: Montessori-Werkbrief (Montessori-Vereinigung e.V.), vol. 21, no. 3-4
Date: 1983
Pages: 68-79
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Language: German
ISSN: 0722-2513
Book Section
Montesoriška vaikų ugdymo įstaiga Lietuvoje / The children educational institution of Montessori style in Lithuania
Book Title: Lietuvos vaikų darželis: praeitis ir dabartis: jubiliejinės konferencijos medžiaga (1998, Vilnius)
Pages: 80–85
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Language: Lithuanian
Published: Vilnius, Lithuania: LRŠMM Leidybos centras, 1999
Article
The Natural Institution of the Family
Publication: NAMTA Journal, vol. 19, no. 2
Date: Spring 1994
Pages: 119–148
North American Montessori Teachers' Association (NAMTA) - Periodicals
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Abstract/Notes: includes interview by David Kahn
Language: English
ISSN: 1522-9734