Quick Search
For faster results please use our Quick Search engine.

Advanced Search

Search across titles, abstracts, authors, and keywords.
Advanced Search Guide.

611 results

Article

The Characteristics of Affective Behavior of the First Graders from a Montessori Kindergarten Program and a Traditional Kindergarten Program / 몬테소리 프로그램 幼稚園과 일반 幼稚園 兒童의 國民學校 1學年에서의 정의적 행동특성의 비교

Available from: RISS

Publication: 아동교육 [The Korean Journal of Child Education], vol. 1, no. 1

Pages: 91-108

See More

Language: Korean

ISSN: 1226-2722

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Beobachtungen zum Spiel- und Sprachverhalten bei Jungen mit Fragilem-X-Syndrom im frühen Kindesalter [Observations on play and speech behavior in boys with Fragile X syndrome in early childhood]

Available from: Hogrefe

Publication: Zeitschrift für Kinder- und Jugendpsychiatrie und Psychotherapie, vol. 27, no. 3

Pages: 175-181

See More

Abstract/Notes: Zusammenfassung: Jungen mit Fragilem-X-Syndrom weisen im Schul- und Jugendalter charakteristische Merkmale des körperlichen Erscheinungsbildes, der Entwicklung und des Verhaltens auf. Es werden vorläufige Beobachtungen an zehn Jungen im frühen Kindesalter mitgeteilt. Im Vergleich zu den Befunden bei älteren Kindern sind schwere kognitive Behinderungen und kommunikative Auffälligkeiten seltener. Im Spielverhalten in einer Montessori-Übungssituation zeigen Jungen mit dieser genetischen Besonderheit sehr wohl die Fähigkeit zu gezieltem und kooperativem Spiel, aber weniger Ausdauer und Selbstorganisation bei zielgerichteten Tätigkeiten. Die Unterschiede sind signifikant im Vergleich zu nicht-behinderten Kindern bzw. Kindern gleichen Behinderungsgrades, aber anderer Behinderungsursache und als Merkmale des Verhaltensphänotyps bei Jungen mit fragilem-X-Syndrom zu verstehen. [Summary:Boys with Fragile X syndrome show characteristic features of physical appearance, development and behavior in school and adolescence. Preliminary observations on ten boys in early childhood are reported. Compared to the findings in older children, severe cognitive disabilities and communicative abnormalities are less common. In play behavior in a Montessori exercise situation, boys with this genetic peculiarity do show the ability for targeted and cooperative play, but less perseverance and self-organization in targeted activities. The differences are significant compared to non-disabled children or children of the same degree of disability, Play and communicative behavior in young boys with fragile-X syndrome Summary: Reports on development and behavior in boys with fragile-X syndrome support the idea of ​​a characteristic behavioral phenotype in this special population. Preliminary results are presented for 10 boys with fragile-X syndrome in early childhood. Severe mental handicaps and communicative abnormalities are observed less frequently than was expected on the basis of results reported for school-age children or adults. Boys with fragile-X syndrome show goal-directed and cooperative play behaviors in a Montessori play session, but less persistence and organization than children with normal development or a mental handicap of heterogeneous origin. Results confirmed these behavioral differences as characteristic aspects of a "behavioral phenotype" in children who already in early childhood have fragile-X syndrome.]

Language: German

DOI: 10.1024//1422-4917.27.3.175

ISSN: 1422-4917

Book Section

Die Indikation stationärer Verhaltenstherapie beim behinderten Kind [The indication of inpatient behavior therapy in disabled 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: 275-279

Children with disabilities, Conferences, International Montessori Congress (18th, Munich, Germany, 4-8 July 1977)

See More

Language: German

Published: München: Kindler, 1978

ISBN: 3-463-00716-9

Book Section

Sozial behinderte und verhaltensgestörte Kinder [Socially disabled and behavioral 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: 86-97

Children with disabilities, Conferences, International Montessori Congress (18th, Munich, Germany, 4-8 July 1977)

See More

Language: German

Published: München: Kindler, 1978

ISBN: 3-463-00716-9

Report

Behavior Patterns of Mildly Retarded Children in Open Classrooms

Children with disabilities, Developmentally disabled children, Inclusive education, People with disabilities

See More

Abstract/Notes: The classroom behavior and academic achievement of 32 educable retarded children (EMR) with a mean age of 11.24 years were studied in two types of open classrooms, graded and multi-age, and compared to that in a special education class. The three different instructional environments were found to generate characteristically different patterns of classroom behavior over a four-month interval as measured by time-sampling procedures. The results generally supported the assumption that open-space, integrated classrooms facilitate greater social interaction on the part of EMR students. The frequency of task-relevant behavior was higher in the special education class compared to that found in the two open classrooms. All three groups of EMR children made comparable gains in academic achievement. (Author)

Language: English

Published: Raleigh, North Carolina, 1973

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

The Behavioral Effects of Montessori Pedagogy on Children’s Psychological Development and School Learning

Available from: MDPI

Publication: Children (Switzerland), vol. 9, no. 2

Pages: Article 133

Child development, Cognitive development, Learning, Montessori method of education, Social development

See More

Abstract/Notes: This review examines the quantitative behavioural studies that have evaluated the effects of Montessori pedagogy on children’s psychological development and school learning. The analyses of only three “Randomized Controlled Trials—RCT” studies published to date reveal varied and contradictory effects. Firstly, these findings are discussed in the light of several methodological limitations: the absence of active control groups, small sample sizes, diversity of measures, or lack of control over the implementation fidelity of both Montessori and conventional pedagogy. Secondly, these findings are discussed in the light of what Montessori pedagogy does not emphasise in its conception of development and the role of the teacher, namely the place given to language and pretend play.

Language: English

DOI: 10.3390/children9020133

ISSN: 2227-9067

Report

Cognitive Style, Exploratory Behavior and Verbal Fluency in Montessori and Non-Montessori Trained Preschoolers [Preliminary Report]

See More

Language: English

Published: Ontario, Canada, 1971

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Teachers Observe to Learn: Differences in Social Behavior of Toddlers and Preschoolers in Same-Age and Multiage Groupings

Available from: JSTOR

Publication: YC - Young Children, vol. 61, no. 3

Pages: 70-76

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 1538-6619

Master's Thesis (Action Research Report)

Impact of Student-Driven Mathematical Assessment on Learning Behaviors in Sixth Grade Students

Available from: St. Catherine University

Action research, Americas, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., North America, Public Montessori, United States of America

See More

Abstract/Notes: This seven-week study explored the impact of student-self assessment on learning and engagement behaviors of 48 sixth graders during math classes in a public school setting. Data collection tools such as student surveys, pre-and post -self-assessments, observations, reflections, and teacher- student conferencing provided the information to inform the conclusions regarding self-efficacy. Observation confirmed that a student’s participation in using self-evaluation to contribute to their learning affected internal processes such as motivation and engagement. Assessment activities that provided evidence and feedback to inform goals specific to skill development and learner traits yielded significant results. Highly structured assessment tools and classroom routines reduced students' reliance on the teacher to interpret and use individual performance data. The use of formative assessment practices that promoted goal setting, self-assessment and self-determination practices improved engagement and learning behaviors in the classroom.

Language: English

Published: St. Paul, Minnesota, 2022

Article

Moment of Peril: Repeating Misbehavior [question]

Publication: Montessori Observer, vol. 25, no. 2

Pages: 4

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 0889-5643

Advanced Search