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Article
What Should We Teach Our Children?
Available from: ISSUU
Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 20, no. 4
Date: Sep 2012
Pages: 11-17
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Language: English
ISSN: 1071-6246
Article
Offering Montessori Education Online for 2½ to 5½ Year Old Children Keeping Montessori Principles Intact
Available from: The Online Journal of Distance Education and e-Learning
Publication: The Online Journal of Distance Education and e-Learning, vol. 9, no. 1
Date: Jan 2021
Pages: 125-136
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Abstract/Notes: COVID–19 has forced preschools to resort to online education. While traditional schools have got adjusted to online teaching quickly, Montessori schools could not turn to online easily. Montessori education is considered to be impossible to offer through online mode to children at home, due to the lack of the prepared classroom, didactic materials and trained parents who could support children’s development. The current research presents an action research with an aim to convert Montessori education to online mode and develop a model for offering Montessori education online to the children between 2½ and 5 ½ years of age providing activity to the hands and senses and discusses the limitations and implications.
Language: English
Book Section
Sprachanbahnung bei geistig behinderten Kindern [Language initiation for mentally handicapped children]
Book Title: Die Montessori-Pädagogik und das behinderte Kind: Referate und Ergebnisse des 18. Internationalen Montessori Kongresses (München, 4-8 Juli 1977) [The Montessori System and the Handicapped Child: Papers and Reports of the 18th International Montessori Congress (Munich, July 4-8, 1977)]
Pages: 267-274
Children with disabilities, Conferences, Developmentally disabled children, International Montessori Congress (18th, Munich, Germany, 4-8 July 1977)
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Language: German
Published: München: Kindler, 1978
ISBN: 3-463-00716-9
Book Section
Erziehungsberatung der Eltern behinderter Kinder bei ihrem Einsatz als Kotherapeuten [Educational advice for the parents of disabled children in their work as co-therapists]
Book Title: Die Montessori-Pädagogik und das behinderte Kind: Referate und Ergebnisse des 18. Internationalen Montessori Kongresses (München, 4-8 Juli 1977) [The Montessori System and the Handicapped Child: Papers and Reports of the 18th International Montessori Congress (Munich, July 4-8, 1977)]
Pages: 280-288
Children with disabilities, Conferences, International Montessori Congress (18th, Munich, Germany, 4-8 July 1977), Mentally ill children, Parents of children with disabilities, Parents of children with mental disabilities
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Language: German
Published: München: Kindler, 1978
ISBN: 3-463-00716-9
Article
Opening of the Penfield Children's Center [Milwaukee, Wisconsin]
Publication: Communications (Association Montessori Internationale, 195?-2008), vol. 1975, no. 1
Date: 1975
Pages: 17–18
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Language: English
ISSN: 0519-0959
Article
Children of Hawthorne Montessori Kindergarten Who Appeared in Christmas Programme
Available from: Historic Oregon Newspapers
Publication: Oregonian (Portland, Oregon)
Date: Jan 7, 1917
Pages: 20
Americas, Montessori schools, North America, United States of America
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Abstract/Notes: On December 20 the children of the Hawthorne Montessori Kindergarten gave their Christmas entertainment under the direction of Mrs. Louise Peddycord. The school has a German department this year and that evening the children conversed with their teacher, Mrs. Anna Huebener, a native of Germany. The little folks delighted those present.
Language: English
Article
Children Under Six
Available from: The Times Educational Supplement Historical Archive - Gale
Publication: The Times Educational Supplement (London, England)
Date: Mar 18, 1922
Pages: 128
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Abstract/Notes: Letter to the Editor
Language: English
ISSN: 0040-7887
Article
Art Expo '96: Celebrating the Creativity of Children [Maple Knoll Village retirement community, Cincinnati, Ohio]
Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 8, no. 3
Date: 1996
Pages: 29
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Language: English
ISSN: 1054-0040
Article
Dlaczego w przedszkolach Montessori dzieci pracują, a nie bawią się? / Why do Children in Montessori Kindergartens Work and Not Play?
Available from: Jesuit University Ignatianum in Krakow
Publication: Edukacja Elementarna w Teorii i Praktyce / Elementary Education in Theory and Practice, vol. 13, no. 1 (whole no. 47)
Date: 2018
Pages: 69-87
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Abstract/Notes: Play and work are, besides science, two basic forms of human activity. Play is not only the basic form of the activity of a small child, but also the organization of the educational process in a kindergarten. Therefore, the purpose of the article is to answer the question of why Maria Montessori calls a child’s activity work and not play. The explanation of this issue is carried out in two stages. The first is a literature review, on the basis of which the most important issues of the contemporary understanding of the concept of play and work are formulated. The second is an analysis of M. Montessori’s views and comparing them with the assumptions about play and work. The work of a child according to M. Montessori leads to their independence, allowing them to build relationships with others and discover the meaning of their actions, as well as objects in their immediate vicinity. The intention of M. Montessori was to appreciate the child’s actions, which promote holistic and integral development. Her views can be considered as convergent with contemporary concepts in primary education, focusing on subjectivity. She created a well-prepared environment for the child to be able to choose their own activity, termed as work. / Zabawa i praca są, obok nauki, dwiema podstawowymi formami działalności ludzkiej. Zabawa jest nie tylko podstawową formą aktywności małego dziecka, ale też organizacji procesu wychowawczego w przedszkolu. Dlatego celem artykułu jest udzielenie odpowiedzi na pytanie, dlaczego Maria Montessori nazywa działalność dziecka pracą, a nie zabawą. Wyjaśnienie tego zagadnienia jest realizowane w dwóch etapach. Pierwszy to przegląd literatury, na podstawie której sformułowano najważniejsze kwestie współczesnego rozumienia pojęć zabawy i pracy. Drugi to analiza poglądów M. Montessori i porównanie ich z założeniami dotyczącymi zabawy i pracy. Praca dziecka według M. Montessori prowadzi do jego samodzielności, pozwala na budowanie więzi z innymi oraz na odkrywanie i nadawanie sensu swojemu działaniu, jak i przedmiotom znajdującym się w najbliższym otoczeniu. Intencją M. Montessori było dowartościowanie działania dziecka, które sprzyja holistycznemu i integralnemu rozwojowi. Jej poglądy można uznać za zbieżne ze współczesnymi koncepcjami edukacji dziecka, stawiającymi na podmiotowość. Włoszka tworzy odpowiednio przygotowane otoczenie do tego, by dziecko mogło dokonywać wyboru własnej aktywności, która została nazwana pracą.
Language: Polish
DOI: 10.14632/eetp.2017.13.47.69
ISSN: 1896-2327, 2353-7787
Article
The Influence of Preschool Teachers' Beliefs on Young Children's Conceptions of Reading and Writing
Available from: ScienceDirect
Publication: Early Childhood Research Quarterly, vol. 4, no. 1
Date: 1989
Pages: 61-74
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Abstract/Notes: Examines the relationship between two preschool program directors' and teachers' beliefs, instructional decisions, and preschool children's conceptions of reading and writing. Results show that preschool children's conceptions of reading and writing reflected the practices of the two programs. (Author/BB) Directors of two preschool programs were interviewed regarding their orientations toward reading and writing instruction. Ten children from each program were interviewed regarding their conceptions of reading and writing. One school was found to have a “mastery of specific skills/text-based” orientation, and the other was found to have a “holistic/reader-based” orientation. A relationship was found between preschool program's orientations toward reading and writing instruction and children's ideas about reading and writing. The relationships between preschool practices and children's conceptions are examined. Implications for the influence of preschool teacher's beliefs and instructional decisions on children's conceptions of reading and writing are discussed.
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/S0885-2006(89)90077-X
ISSN: 0885-2006, 1873-7706