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Article
American Educators Recognize in Dr. Montessori's Method Certain Limitations That Bar it from Complete Acceptance
Available from: Chronicling America (Library of Congress)
Publication: The Washington Times (Washington, D.C.)
Date: Sep 16, 1915
Pages: 8
Americas, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., North America, United States of America
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Language: English
Article
Go to Greet Dr. Montessori: Capital Educators Will Welcome Teacher Back to United States
Available from: Chronicling America (Library of Congress)
Publication: Washington Evening Star (Washington, D.C.)
Date: Apr 20, 1915
Pages: 20
Americas, Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, Montessori Educational Association (USA), North America, United States of America
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Abstract/Notes: "Dr. Maria Montessori, the Italian educator, is to spend the summer in America, arriving in New York today. A number of organizers of the Washington Chapter, Montessori Educational Association, have gone to New York to greet the educator, among them being Miss Margaret Woodrow Wilson, Mrs. Adalia Hensley, Miss Anne E. George, Mrs. William Hitz, Miss Jean D. Cole and Mrs. Eldridge Roger Boyle. Dr. Montessori is to go at one to Los Angeles, Cal., where she is to conduct a training course for teachers, beginning May 1. She also is to address several educational and scientific bodies holding conventions on the Pacific coast during the time the exposition is in progress."
Language: English
Doctoral Dissertation (Ph.D.)
Critical Montessori Education: Centering BIPOC Montessori Educators and their Anti-Racist Teaching Practices
Available from: University of Maryland Libraries
Anti-bias, Anti-bias anti-racist curriculum, Anti-bias anti-racist practices, Anti-racism, Montessori method of education - Teachers, People of color, Teachers
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Abstract/Notes: While many BIPOC Montessori educators engage in anti-racist and culturally responsive teaching, Montessori education remains predominantly race-evasive. As a philosophy, it is rooted in colorblind perspectives in its focus on "all children" and lack of explicit centering of BIPOC students’ experiences. Teaching must account for race and racial lived realities in order to better support BIPOC students’ ways of knowing in culturally relevant and sustaining ways. This study seeks to center the voices of BIPOC Montessori educators and disrupt the pattern of Montessori research conducted without a critical racial lens. Framed by Critical Race Theory, this study focuses on the strengths, assets, and anti-racist teaching practices that one BIPOC educator brings to her classroom. I use critical ethnographic methods to better understand how a BIPOC Montessori teacher at a public charter Montessori school interprets and enacts the Montessori method to support BIPOC students. I consider how her racial identity informs her practices, and the structural barriers she faces at her school when enacting anti-racist and strength-based approaches. The guiding research questions of this study are: How does a Black Montessori teacher interpret the Montessori philosophy to more relevantly support her BIPOC students? How does she practice the Montessori method through culturally relevant and sustaining practices? What are the structural barriers that continue to challenge her as a Black educator doing her work? My analysis suggests that the teacher maintains her classroom space as a tangible and intangible cultural space that reflects and maintains her students' identities; that her own identity as a Black woman deeply contribute to the school's work around anti-racism and culturally responsive pedagogy; and that there are external barriers that both the teacher and the school face, that prevent them both from fully achieving culturally responsive teaching practices. At the core of the study, I seek to understand the possibilities and challenges of Montessori education from the perspective of BIPOC Montessori educators, and how we could learn from them to better support BIPOC students. I hope to begin a path toward more counter-stories in the Montessori community to specifically support BIPOC Montessori educators and understand the structural barriers they face to anti-racist teaching in Montessori programs in the United States.
Language: English
Published: College Park, Maryland, 2023
Doctoral Dissertation (Ed.D.)
Public Montessori Early Childhood Educators’ Perceptions of Psychological Needs Fulfillment
Available from: ProQuest Dissertations and Theses
Early childhood care and education, Montessori method of education, Public Montessori
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Abstract/Notes: As attrition rates of teachers remain a concern and the establishment of Montessori public schools increases in the United States, studying the needs satisfaction of Montessori public school teachers is a way to address issues of retainment. This qualitative methods study used the Self-Determination Theory framework to guide an analysis of factors that impact the levels of autonomy, relatedness, and competence within a public Montessori school teacher’s work environment. This study gave public Montessori teachers an opportunity to share their stories and provide context to the issue of work satisfaction and dissatisfaction. Findings indicated that there are several factors and experiences that impact a public Montessori school teacher’s experience with autonomy, relatedness, and competence in their daily work. Additional findings are that these factors impact Montessori teachers on different levels: personal, school, and external. In analyzing these factors and level of impact, administrators and school districts can make sure that the work environments of public Montessori teachers are conducive.
Language: English
Published: Lawrence, Kansas, 2023
Doctoral Dissertation (Ph.D.)
Early Childhood Educators' Perceptions of Kindergarten Readiness in a Southern Ohio School District: Implications for Educational Leadership
Americas, Comparative education, Kindergarten (Froebel system of education), Montessori method of education, North America, Readiness for school, United States of America
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Language: English
Published: Dayton, Ohio, 1998
Doctoral Dissertation (Ed.D.)
Early Childhood Educators' Perception of Pedagogical Training in Social Justice and Anti-Bias Training for the Classroom
Available from: California State University - ScholarWorks
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Abstract/Notes: Early childhood educators play a significant role in attending to the whole child by nurturing, caring, educating, and molding the young minds in their care. To be effective educators, early childhood educators must be well-rounded with the knowledge to attend to the children with utmost care and consideration. Early childhood teachers must be ready to prepare young children accordingly, preparing them academically while introducing a curriculum rich in values based on social justice. Teachers attend educational institutions that provide preservice teacher training programs to prepare for this critical work. This study occurred to determine what influences and limits the new early childhood educators qualified to be early childhood teachers according to the California Community Care Licensing Title 22 regulations to implement a social justice antibias curriculum in their classrooms. The findings of this study showed that teachers received inadequate preservice preparation to implement a social justice antibias curriculum in their classrooms. The California Community Care Licensing Title 22 regulations require teachers to complete only 4 college classes (12 early childhood units). It is essential to examine the minimum state qualifications.
Language: English
Published: Pomona, California, 2023
Master's Thesis (M.A. In Education)
Racial Identity Development in the Early Years: A Montessori Student/Educator’s Autoethnographic Study
Available from: ProQuest Dissertations and Theses
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Abstract/Notes: This thesis is a transformative autoethnographic study of a Montessori early childhood educator’s observational notes and personal reflections throughout their master’s program as well as their Association Montessori International Diploma Course. This work is important for the field of early childhood education as it is a study of factors contributing to racial identity development in children under the age of three. Using Critical Race Theory and Critical whiteness Studies, the researcher analyzed collected data, in the form of field notes, memos, observational notes, and developmental summaries to contribute a formula for abolitionist and protective early childhood education practices.
Language: English
Published: Los Angeles, California, 2023
Article
Montessori Will Demonstrate with L. A. School Pupils: World-Famous Teacher Will Be Met Here May 1 by Prominent Educators
Available from: Newspapers.com
Publication: Los Angeles Express (Los Angeles, California)
Date: Mar 23, 1915
Pages: 13
Americas, Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, North America, United States of America
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Abstract/Notes: World-Famous Teacher Will Be Met Here May 1 by Prominent Educators To be used by Dr. Maria Montessori in demonstrating her world-famous system of teaching, is an honor soon to befall a class of little Los Angeles children. They are too young now to understand the significance of it, but, in years to come, they will no doubt recall with pride that they were the first youngsters, outside Rome, to learn from the hands and lips of the great Italian "Dottoressa," as her friends and admirers lovingly call the inventor of the Montessori system. Miss Catherine Moore, who is conducting the arrangements for Dr. Montessori's coming May 1, is receiving letters and telegrams from prominent educators all over the country. Many of them are coming. OFFERS COOPERATION. Mrs. Alexander Graham Bell, president of the Montessori Educational Association of Washington, D. C., has just written congratulating Los Angeles and offering co-operation. The association includes Philander P. Claxton, United States Commissioner of Education; Miss Margaret Woodrow Wilson and many other members of Washington official circles. San Francisco wants the "Dottoressa," and so does San Diego. "President [Superintendent J.H.] Francis, by his early recognition and understanding of her system, is to be credited for the coming of Dr. Montessori to Los Angeles first of any city outside of Italy," said Miss Moore. "The whole country is now interested." Classes will be held at the East Seventh street school, Saint Catherine's nonsectarian school and the Hotel Maryland, Pasadena. The children of Miss Moore's class at Saint Catherine's will be used for demonstrations every Saturday during the course. ADDRESS BY LETTER. Swarms of callers, anxious to learn more of Dr. Montessori, have made it difficult for Miss Moore to carry on her public school work, and she has been forced to ask every one to address her by letter at the East Seventh street school. Miss Moore, who has long been a Montessori enthusiast, learned Italian in the Dante Alighieri night school in this city and later went to Rome, where she studied with the "Dottoressa," who, contrary to popular belief, is not an aged woman, for Montessori recently celebrated her forty-fourth birthday. TO VISIT San Diego. Dr. Montessori has accepted the invitation of the officials of the San Diego exposition to visit the exposition in July, according to Dr. Mary Paul-Jordon of 456 North Juanita street. Officials of the exposition received a cablegram from Dr. Montessori, who is still in Rome, late yesterday. This information was received by Dr. Jordon in a telegram from Duncan MacKinnon, superintendent of schools of the Southern city [San Diego], last night.
Language: English