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272 results

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Exploring the Interplay of Age and Pedagogy in the Maturation of Error-Monitoring

Available from: Wiley Online Library

Publication: Mind, Brain, and Education, vol. 18, no. 1

Pages: 48-56

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Abstract/Notes: Error-monitoring is a crucial cognitive process that enables us to adapt to the constantly changing environment. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) plays a vital role in error-monitoring, and its prolonged maturation suggests that it can be influenced by experience-dependent plasticity. To explore this possibility, we collected morphometric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures of the ACC and error-related response-locked event-related potentials (ERPs) in 26 schoolchildren, aged 6–12 years, enrolled in either a Montessori or a traditional curriculum in Switzerland. We show that the caudal ACC undergoes significant morphometric changes during this developmental age range that seem related to error detection ERP activity. Furthermore, we observed differences in source localization activity related to error detection within the caudal ACC between Montessori and traditionally-schooled children, indicating a potential difference in the development of error-monitoring in these groups. Our study provides preliminary evidence for a potential window of opportunity to influence error-monitoring during development and calls for more work in that direction.

Language: English

DOI: 10.1111/mbe.12395

ISSN: 1751-228X

Master's Thesis

The Impact of Role-Play on the Self-Regulation of Preschoolers Following the COVID-19 Pandemic

Available from: St. Catherine University

Action research, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc.

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Abstract/Notes: This Action Research Project examined the impact of role-play on preschoolers’ self-regulation development in a Montessori primary classroom. The class consisted of 18 students; ages 3-5 years old. Four of the nine students in the intervention had delays, disruptions, or modifications to their Montessori experience, possibly due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Role-play scenarios were performed by the students for four weeks. The results show that role-play positively impacted self-regulation in the primary classroom. The average percentage of self-regulated behaviors increased by 28.5% from the pre-intervention week through the last intervention week. Modeling of self-regulated behaviors increased, and modeling of dysregulated behaviors decreased during the intervention. Role-play is a fun and engaging way to help young children learn, practice, and model self-regulated behaviors in the classroom.

Language: English

Published: St. Paul, Minnesota, 2023

Article

Get Kids Moving: Why Physical Play Must Be Part of the Formula When Kids Head Back to School

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 28, no. 2

Pages: 6-8

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Article

Have We Forgotten How to Play?

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 30, no. 2

Pages: 18-20

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Article

Treasure Baskets and Heuristic Play

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 22, no. 4

Pages: 35-36

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Article

What Message is Your Playground Giving Your Children

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Montessori Leadership

Pages: 31-32

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Language: English

Article

An Aspect of Performance-Based Learning: Engaging Students in Play Performances

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Montessori Leadership

Pages: 18-19

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Language: English

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

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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

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Pedagogy of Play

Available from: Springer Link

Publication: Topoi: An International Review of Philosophy, vol. 24, no. 2

Pages: 169-181

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Abstract/Notes: Focuses on the educational value of this field of experience, by claiming that play characterizes the two fundamental guidelines which are at the basis of education; the spontaneous and natural direction on the one side, and the intentional one on the other side. It is commonly assumed that pedagogy of play concerns only the latter of the two above-mentioned aspects of education, that is to say the design and management of playing experiences and materials with clear educational goals; instead, this discipline critically analyzes the whole playing experience, therefore trying to grasp its potentialities, its material conditions, and its overall meanings in the making of the subject. Moving from some considerations about the discovery of play as an emblematic index of the “discovery of childhood” at the beginning of Modern Age (Ariès, 1960), the first part of this essay underlines three aspects: the first concerns the investment on play as an educational device (from Locke to Montessori, up to Children’s Museums), pointing out the shift from the classic principle of ludendo docere to the modern ludendo discere. The second aspect focuses on the retrieval of the natural dimension of play, which finds in Rousseau its main source; the third takes into consideration toys and their identity both as pedagogical devices and as media. In the second part of the essay, the focus is on free play and its educational value, which is here interpreted especially as the first field of experience for children’s “political education”. The final remarks include some speculations the relationship between play and daily life, suggesting the idea that “life-long playing” could be defined as a meaningful aspect of long-life education.

Language: English

DOI: 10.1007/s11245-005-5053-5

ISSN: 1572-8749

Article

In the Home: On the Joys of Exploration, Movement, Outdoor Play, Achievement

Publication: AMS News, vol. 9, no. 2

Pages: 5

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Language: English

ISSN: 0065-9444

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