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43 results

Doctoral Dissertation

American Writings on Maria Montessori: An Inquiry into Changes in the Reception and Interpretations Given to Writings on Maria Montessori and Montessori Educational Ideas 1910-1915 and 1958-1970

Available from: ProQuest - Dissertations and Theses

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Abstract/Notes: The purpose of this dissertation will be to survey and analyze American writings on Maria Montessori and her educational system, in order to show how the idea of Montessori education has interacted with some changing American ideas and social forces. These changes in social and intellectual currents can be likened to a shift from centrifugal to centripetal force; or to the expansion and then the contraction of a universe. The central metaphor is the same. It is applicable to, and illustrative of, much about the changing social and educational scene in America. The writings on Montessori, examined against this framework, should provide a new view on certain changes in American educational thinking.

Language: English

Published: Kent, Ohio, 1973

Article

Interview: AMS President Marilyn Stewart: 'We Are in a Self-Reflection Phase'

Publication: Public School Montessorian, vol. 20, no. 1

Pages: 22-23

Public Montessori

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Article

Endangered Minds: Why Children Don't Think and What We Can Do about It (Written by Jane M. Healy Ph.D.)

Publication: Montessori Matters

Pages: 15

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Abstract/Notes: book review

Language: English

Book Section

L'educazione come progetto di pace. Maria Montessori e Jane Addams

Book Title: Annuario 2003: Linee di ricerca sulla pedagogia di Maria Montessori [2003 Yearbook: Lines of research on Maria Montessori's pedagogy]

Pages: 72-94

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Language: Italian

Published: Milano, Italy: Franco Angeli, 2004

ISBN: 978-88-464-5397-6

Article

Book Review: 'Positive Discipline in the Montessori Classroom: Preparing an Environment That Fosters Respect, Kindness & Responsibility' by Jane Nelsen and Chip DeLorenzo

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Montessori Leadership, vol. 23, no. 1

Pages: 11

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Language: English

Article

Over 30 Years with Montessori Services [Jane Campbell]

Publication: Public School Montessorian, vol. 20, no. 1

Pages: 17

Public Montessori

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Article

Education as a Peace Project: Maria Montessori and Jane Addams

Publication: MoRE Montessori Research Europe newsletter

Pages: 4

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Abstract/Notes: MORE Abstracts 2003 In this contribution I wish to draw a parallel between Maria Montessori and a writer who is not well known in Italy: Jane Addams (Chicago 1860-1935), a Nobel Peace Prize winner in 1931, known in America and in the world above all as the founder of the Social Settlement Hull House, a residential social centre where educational and cultural activities were carried out for the inhabitants of a multicultural industrial suburb of Chicago. The parallel between the two writers focuses on their common way of considering the issue of peace, connected to the vital processes of the human being: social and, above all, educational ones. For both thinkers there is a close connection between the free and broad realisation of every individual and the construction of a better world, between means and ends, between education and a fair society, between moral and spiritual development and a real, profound, experience of freedom. Both writers were founders of alternative structures – Hull House and the Children’s Home – where the “users” could have a broader and deeper human experience, addressing a new curiosity to all levels of human life and that shows it has strong moral foundations rather than intellectual ones, as Addams wrote. And as Maria Montessori noted in her Children’s Homes: “we have seen children who completely changed, acquiring the love for things, while the sense of order, discipline and selfcontrol develop in them as an expression of perfect freedom. We have seen them work steadily, enhancing their energies in their work”. For both Maria Montessori and Jane Addams, peace was an essential theme of their reflection and their very lives, which in their later years they mostly devoted to their pacifist commitment. Their idea of peace, which they arrived at by delving deeply within themselves, cannot derive from pacifist propaganda or from mere intellectualist reasons, but can only be the fruit of a series of vital and psychic processes to be built up gradually and “scientifically” through education.

Language: English

ISSN: 2281-8375

Article

"Failure to Connect" by Jane Healy

Publication: Montessori Society Review, vol. 11

Pages: 22–3 4

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Abstract/Notes: Rev. of book by same title and lecture by Healy at Montessori conference, Paris, 2001

Language: English

Article

Book Review: The Natural Way to Better Babies: Preconception Health Care for Prospective Parents by Francesca Naish and Janette Roberts

Publication: Montessori Matters, no. 2

Pages: 32

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Language: English

Article

With the Teachers [Cecelia Zilliken, Jane L. Mack, Betty Hissong, Agnes De Croix, Ruth Gans, Ruth Selman]

Publication: AMS News, vol. 2, no. 3

Pages: 3

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Language: English

ISSN: 0065-9444

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