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928 results

Article

Montessōri kyōiku kankyō / モンテッソーリ教育環境 [The Montessori Educational Environment]

Publication: Montessori Kyōiku / モンテッソーリ教育 [Montessori Education], no. 30

Pages: 80-89

Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc.

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Language: Japanese

ISSN: 0913-4220

Report

PEARL “Emotional Empathic and Proximal Learning-Educational Environment” Project

Available from: Panevėžio r. pedagogų švietimo centras (Lithuania)

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Abstract/Notes: The Erasmus+ KA201 project PEARL “Emotional Empathic Proximal Learning-Educational Environment” (2018-1-IT02-KA201-048515) is a project that aims to develop and validate an educational model, innovative and replicable at an international level, aimed at the very first childhood, 0–6 years, which favors the growth of children through an empathic and emotional proximal learning educational environment based on group activities. With PEARL Education Model, it is aimed to develop an emotional, emphatic and proximal learning environment. In this article, The PEARL Education Model, its features and experimental design of the project is introduced. To get more information about the project, visit: https://pearl-project.org/ webpage.

Language: English

Published: Ankara, Turkey, 2021

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

The Montessori Theory in the “No Schoolbag” Model. Formativity of Materials and of the Educational Environment

Available from: Università di Bologna

Publication: Ricerche di Pedagogia e Didattica / Journal of Theories and Research in Education, vol. 16, no. 2

Pages: 93-104

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Abstract/Notes: The aim of this contribution is to show the “outdated” relevance of Montessori pedagogy in the “No Schoolbag” (Senza Zaino, or “SZ”) model. Adopting some fundamental elements of Montessori’s activism, this model advocates a school in the fullest meaning of Scholè, as a place for dialogue, development and work, otium and negotium, commitment to study and the pleasure of knowledge, where the discipline of freedom, as applied to experience and filtered by emotions, is indispensable. In doing so, it rejects the idea of school being based on educational intellectualism. Rather it is an indirect educational path in which the experience of reality, rather than empty words, shapes the child's mind, developing an inner order that originates from its external counterpart, with the result that the child feels like an active participant, belonging to a welcoming, hospitable and motivating community. Drawing on the Montessori theory, the “No Schoolbag” model positions itself as a pedagogy of our time, but endowed with an ancient, rigorous, inclusive, and supportive heart.

Language: English

DOI: 10.6092/issn.1970-2221/12199

ISSN: 1970-2221

Article

Fernhaven Studio and Montessori Educational Environments

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 6, no. 1

Pages: 7

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Language: English

Article

子どものための物理的環境とは何か [What Is a Child-Friendly Educational Environment?: A Lesson from the Children's Houses of Maria Montessori]

Available from: J-Stage

Publication: Ningen kankyōgaku kenkyū / 人間環境学研究 / Journal of Human Environmental Studies (Society for Human Environmental Studies), vol. 13, no. 1

Pages: 21-36

Classroom environments, Montessori method of education, Montessori schools, Prepared environment

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Abstract/Notes: This study aims to specify the essential nature of a child-friendly educational environment through an analysis of the Children's Houses for 3- to 6-year-old children planned by Maria Montessori whose philosophy and method have spread all over the world. Based on her theory of how children grow and develop, Montessori designed an educational method along with a unique physical environment in which to put it into practice. In the present study, an intensive content analysis of 12 Montessori's books, consisting of her own writings and dictations of her own lectures, was conducted and revealed: (1) Montessori's grand theory of child development governed her educational method and its physical environment which was essentially planned to evoke and support children's competence and autonomy, (2) The 8 properties of the physical environment, which were indispensable to the education of young children, were identified, e.g., the environment must (a) be attuned to children's body size and their physical and cognitive abilities; (b) be responsive to children's behavior; and (c) activate children's spontaneous activities, (3) These properties were surely embodied in the physical environment in all of the Montessori Children's Houses. What we can learn from Montessori, now and for the future, is discussed.

Language: Japanese

DOI: 10.4189/shes.13.21

ISSN: 1883-7611, 1348-5253

Book

The Educational Environment: Approaches to Primary Education

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Abstract/Notes: Report of an international conference held at the Froebel Educational Institute, Roehampton, London in July 1970.

Language: English

Published: London, England: World Education Fellowship and Montessori Society in England, 1971

Book Section

The Materials for Development: The Isolation of a Single Quality in the Material; Fundamental Qualities Common to Everything in the Educational Environment Surrounding a Child

Book Title: The Discovery of the Child

Pages: 101-108

Maria Montessori - Writings

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Abstract/Notes: Formerly entitled The Montessori Method: Scientific Pedagogy as Applied to Child Education in the Children's Houses. This book was first published in 1909 under the title 'Il Metodo della Pedagogia Scientifica Applicato all'Educazione Infantile nelle Case dei Bambini' ('The Montessori Method: Scientific Pedagogy as Applied to Child Education in the Children's Houses) and was revised in 1913, 1926, and 1935. Maria Montessori revised and reissued this book in 1948 and renamed it 'La Scoperta del Bambino'. This edition is based on the 6th Italian edition of 'La Scoperta del Bambino' published by the Italian publisher Garzanti, Milan, Italy in 1962. M. J. Costelloe, S. J. translated this Italian version into the English language in 1967 for Fides Publishers, Inc. In 2016 Fred Kelpin edited this version and added many footnotes. He incorporated new illustrations based on AMI-blueprints of the materials currently in use.

Language: English

Published: Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Montessori-Pierson Publishing Company, 2017

ISBN: 978-90-79506-38-5

Series: The Montessori Series , 2

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Visual Environmental Scale: Analysing the Early Childhood Education Environment

Available from: SpringerLink

Publication: Early Childhood Education Journal, vol. 47, no. 1

Pages: 43-51

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Abstract/Notes: Although children’s physical environments play an important role in their development, there have been few empirical studies on the interior design of early childhood centres. This is partly due to a lack of adequate methods and instruments for the systematic spatial investigation of educational environments. In light of this, the following paper presents a qualitative method for such systematic investigation, which we shall call visual environment analysis. It also presents the results of the application of this method to ten early childhood centre environments, which can be ranged between the two extremes of restraint and expressiveness. The analysis shows that early childhood centre environments may be shaped by partly conflicting aims, such as giving children as much freedom as possible on the one hand and providing them with a stimulating atmosphere on the other. The paper therefore discusses both visual environment analysis as a method and, in applying this method, the interior design of a number of educational environments.

Language: English

DOI: 10.1007/s10643-018-0914-x

ISSN: 1082-3301, 1573-1707

Article

Can the Physical Environment Have an Impact on the Learning Environment?

Available from: OECD Library

Publication: CELE Exchange, Centre for Effective Learning Environments, no. 2010/13

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Abstract/Notes: How can designers create more innovative and sustainable learning environments? This paper argues in favour of challenging best practice” generally accepted by the architectural profession by embracing a responsive design approach. Such an approach accepts that the environment shapes the learner, and that learners influence their environment... [Also available in French]

Language: English

DOI: 10.1787/5km4g21wpwr1-en

Article

How the Montessori Upper Elementary and Adolescent Environment Naturally Integrates Science, Mathematics, Technology, and the Environment

Available from: ERIC

Publication: NAMTA Journal, vol. 41, no. 2

Pages: 83-97

North American Montessori Teachers' Association (NAMTA) - Periodicals, Upper elementary

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Abstract/Notes: John McNamara shares his wisdom and humbly credits Camillo Grazzini, Jenny Höglund, and David Kahn for his growth in Montessori. Recognizing more than what he has learned from his mentors, he shares the lessons he has learned from his students themselves. Math, science, history, and language are so integrated in the curriculum that students comment they don't even think whether they are doing science or math. A schedule that allows time for students to follow a query to a conclusion is vital to the kinds of discoveries John's students make, such as a shortcut for multiplying binomials or reconfiguring cubing materials that made even John marvel at student independence and innovation. A bibliography is included. [This paper was presented at the NAMTA conference titled "A Montessori Integrated Approach to Science, Mathematics, Technology, and the Environment" in Portland, OR, Mar 31-Apr 3, 2016.]

Language: English

ISSN: 1522-9734

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