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1502 results

Article

International Day

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 25, no. 3

Pages: 18–20

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Language: English

Article

Congratulations Amelia [Amelia McTamaney elected president of International Association for Montessori Education]

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 25, no. 1

Pages: 33

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Language: English

Article

Le cerimonie di Bergamo e di Napoli: le giornate internazionali dell'OMEP [The ceremonies of Bergamo and Naples: the international days of OMEP]

Publication: Vita dell'Infanzia (Opera Nazionale Montessori), vol. 17, no. 3

Pages: 3-6

Europe, Italy, Marziola Pignatari - Writings, Organisation mondiale pour l'éducation préscolaire (OMEP), Organización Mundial para la Educación Pre-Escolar (OMEP), Southern Europe, World Organization for Early Childhood Education (OMEP)

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Language: Italian

ISSN: 0042-7241

Article

Educators Gather at Bay for International Session

Available from: California Digital Newspaper Collection

Publication: Sacramento Union (Sacramento, California)

Pages: 8

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Abstract/Notes: "Oakland, Aug. 14 - Between 4000 and 5000 delegates, including some of the leading educators of the United States and several foreign countries, are in Oakland for the world's congress of education, which will be opened in municipal auditorium at 9 o'clock Monday morning. It is expected that more than ten thousand delegates will be in attendance at the general meetings and the sessions of the forty-three organizations affiliated with the National Education Association, under auspices of which the great convention is to be held. The sessions will close August 28. Many prominent educators are already in the city. David Starr Jordan, chancellor of Stanford University and president of the National Education Association, will arrive tomorrow. Among those already here are Miss Grace C. Strachan, district superintendent of schools for the city of New York, the woman who led and won the now famous fight for 'equal pay for equal work' and candidate for the presidency of the association; Dr. Maria Montessori of Rome; Ferdinand Buirsson, commander of the legion of honor of France; Dr. Jose Swain, president of Swarthmore College, Pa.; Ernesto Nelson, director of secondary education for Argentina; C. W. Crook, vice-president of the English National Union of Teachers; Ella Flagg Young, superintendent of schools of Chicago, and a score of others from all parts of the world. Every modern phase of the education of the youth of this and coming generations will be discussed at the congress. This is the third international congress of the National Education Association."

Language: English

Book

San Francisco Invites the World: The Panama-Pacific International Exposition of 1915

Maria Montessori - Photographs, Montessori schools - Photographs, Panama-Pacific International Exposition (1915, San Francisco, California)

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Abstract/Notes: Page 72-73 includes a photo of the interior of the Montessori demonstration class ("the glass house") at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition (PPIE).

Language: English

Published: San Francisco, California: Chronicle Books, 1991

ISBN: 0-87701-838-3 978-0-87701-838-4

Article

The First International Training Class

Available from: HathiTrust

Publication: Sierra Educational News, vol. 9, no. 9

Pages: 727-729

International Montessori Training Course (1st, Rome, Italy, 1913), Katherine Moore - Biographic sources

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Language: English

Article

Dr. Montessori Coming: Noted Educator to Hold Her Third International Training School in This City in May

Available from: ProQuest - Historical Newspapers

Publication: Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles, California)

Pages: I-10

Americas, Katherine Moore - Biographic sources, Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, North America, United States of America

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Abstract/Notes: "A cablegram from Dr. Maria Montessori in , received yesterday by Miss Katherine Moore, a teacher in the East Seventh-street school, announces that the noted educator will hold her third international training class in Loa Angeles, beginning May 1. The first two classes were held in Rome in 1912 and 1914. They were attended by people from eight different countries. "Los Angeles receives this honor in preference to New York City, Washington, and other large cities of the country for two reasons," Miss Moore said yesterday. "In the first place, it was in Los Angeles that the Montessori system was first introduced into the public school system. Secondly, the invitations fro this city were especially cordial and appealing." The invitation to Dr. Montessori was signed by [Superintendent J. H. Francis, Los Angeles City Schools], [President J. F. Millspaugh, California State Normal School (Los Angeles)], [President George F. Bovard, University of Southern California], and by the heads of several civic and social organizations. The Montessori class in the East Seventh-street school, the first of its kind established in America, will be used for demonstration work at the institute. This class is taught by Miss Moore, who was a graduate of Dr. Montessori's first international training class. Principal Larkey wrote to Dr. Montessori, placing the class at her disposal."

Language: English

Article

De 14e Internationale Montessori Cursus te Londen

Available from: Stadsarchief Amsterdam (Amsterdam City Archives)

Publication: Montessori Opvoeding, vol. 12, no. 2

Pages: 9

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Language: Dutch

Article

Uit de Internationale Pers: De Drievakkenschool; Tentoonstelling Handenarbeid

Available from: Stadsarchief Amsterdam (Amsterdam City Archives)

Publication: Montessori Opvoeding, vol. 13, no. 8

Pages: 63

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Language: Dutch

Article

A Catholic Internationalisation of the Montessori Method: Two Case Studies in London and Rome (1910-1952)

Available from: CAIRN

Publication: Les Études Sociales, vol. 175, no. 1

Pages: 157-178

England, Europe, Great Britain, Italy, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Montessori method of education - History, Northern Europe, Religious education, Southern Europe, United Kingdom

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Abstract/Notes: This article aims to contribute to scholarship on the internationalisation of the Montessori Method. Training courses were central to Maria Montessori’s international impact. Two case studies of training offered by Montessori in collaboration with Catholic women religious are used to demonstrate a Catholic internationalisation of her Method. The first considers that with the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, in Rome between 1910 and 1914. The second, that with the Religious of the Assumption, in London from 1921 until Montessori’s death in 1952. More specifically, the article shows the significance of their classes as demonstration classes for Montessori’s international training courses. Participants of many nationalities and beliefs observed them, facilitating the initial and continued global implementation of the Method. The convent Superiors also achieved their own objectives. / Cet article a pour objectif de contribuer à la recherche sur le thème de l'internationalisation de la méthode Montessori. Les sessions de formation étaient au cœur de l’impact international de Maria Montessori. Deux études de cas d’une formation délivrée par Montessori, en collaboration avec des religieuses, montrent l’internationalisation dans les milieux catholiques de sa méthode. Le premier cas traite de la formation des Missionnaires Franciscaines de Marie à Rome entre 1910 et 1914. La deuxième explore celle des Religieuses de l'Assomption à Londres de 1921 jusqu'à la mort de Montessori en 1952. L'article montre la signification de ces cours comme modèle pour les formations internationales Montessori. Des participants de nationalités et croyances diverses les ont observés, facilitant la mise en œuvre globale initiale et continue de la Méthode. Les supérieures du couvent ont également atteint leurs propres objectifs.

Language: English

DOI: 10.3917/etsoc.175.0157

ISSN: 0014-2204

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