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

Advanced Search

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

497 results

Article

The Socratic Seminar: An Age-Old Method Enhances the Junior Great Books Program at the Montessori School of Syracuse

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 13, no. 1

Pages: 5–6

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Article

The Montessori Method vs. the Montessori Experience

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 17, no. 3

Pages: 22, 27

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Article

The Montessori System in Theory and Practice: An Introduction to the Pedagogic Methods of Dr. Montessori [book review]

Available from: HathiTrust

Publication: The Child (London), vol. 3, no. 8

Pages: 761-762

Book reviews

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 0855-0026

Article

The Montessori Method

Available from: HathiTrust

Publication: The Child (London), vol. 3, no. 4

Pages: 363-364

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 0855-0026

Article

The Montessori Method: Scientific Pedagogy as Applied to Child Education in 'the Children's Houses' [book review]

Available from: HathiTrust

Publication: The Child (London), vol. 3, no. 4

Pages: 369-370

Book reviews

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 0855-0026

Article

Montessori Methods

Available from: HathiTrust

Publication: The Child (London), vol. 3, no. 8

Pages: 770

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 0855-0026

Article

Basic Education: The Montessori Method

Publication: Hibbert Journal, vol. 45

Pages: 70-73

Montessori method of education

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 0950-1916

Article

Is the Montessori Method to be Introduced Into Irish Schools? IV: Sensory Processes; The Language Age

Available from: Google Books

Publication: Irish Monthly, vol. 52, no. 612

Pages: 290-297

Europe, Ireland, Northern Europe

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 2009-2113

Article

The Montessori Method and Rural Kindergartens: 'A Teacher’s Diary'

Publication: MoRE Montessori Research Europe newsletter

Pages: 2-3

See More

Abstract/Notes: MORE Abstracts 2003 Only at the beginning of the 20th century was it recognised, at least at a theoretical level, that the state and public institutions should provide for the assistance and education of farmer’s children living in the countryside around Rome. However, the municipal authorities, who barely managed to keep a few primary schools running in the main rural centres, was unable to open others in more isolated areas and, above all, to set up kindergartens for pre-school age children. The creation of a basic school service in the Roman countryside, and then of kindergartens, was carried out by a committee set up within the anti-malaria campaign conducted in the Lazio region by Angelo Celli and his wife Anna, with the cooperation of the Red Cross, and which – besides the Cellis – also included the poet Giovanni Cena, the writer Sibilla Aleramo, the artist Duilio Cambellotti and the educator Alessandro Marcucci. As director of the “Schools for Farmers”, and on the basis of ministry guidelines, Marcucci drafted a teaching programme, a school calendar and timetable that would suit the particular needs of the rural population of the Roman countryside. Moreover, in his makeshift schools initially opened in village huts before any real school buildings were built, he provided for health care, school meals and, finally, the setting up of kindergartens all based on the Montessori method, of which he appreciated the innovative educational system and especially the social principles, the respect for the human person, the freedom of self-determination and the love for the harmony of things which sustained it. Marcucci devoted his whole life to spreading education among the rural proletariat, not only in the Lazio region around Rome, and managed to create a high profile school service, to train a qualified teacher class, and to build modern schools from an architectural, hygienic and furnishings point of view. Above all, he managed to increase the creation of Montessori Children’s Homes. He always managed to achieve extraordinary results even when the environmental conditions seemed to be working against them. Among the many testimonies there is a diary written by a young teacher, Irene Bernasconi, who, having just finished a Montessori course in Milan at the Umanitaria in school year 1915-16, started working with the children of farm labourers in the kindergarten of Palidoro, one of the most desolate and malaria-ridden places of the Roman countryside north of the capital.

Language: English

ISSN: 2281-8375

Article

Il Metodo Montessori in Palestina [The Montessori Method in Palestine]

Publication: La Coltura Popolare: Organo dell'Unione Italiana dell'Educazione Popolare, vol. 10

Pages: 91

Asia, Middle East, Palestine, Western Asia

See More

Language: Italian

ISSN: 0011-2801

Advanced Search