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

10 More Things (of 101) Parents Can Do to Help Children

Publication: Montessori NewZ, vol. 35

Pages: 4

See More

Abstract/Notes: 31-40

Language: English

Conference Paper

A Comparison of Preschool Children in Observation Tasks From Two Programs: Montessori and Science - A Process Approach

Available from: ERIC

National Association for Research in Science Teaching (47th, Chicago, Illinois, April 15-18, 1974)

Conferences, Montessori method of education - Evaluation, National Association for Research in Science Teaching (47th, Chicago, Illinois, April 15-18, 1974)

See More

Abstract/Notes: The purpose of this study was to compare preschool children from classes using the Montessori method and Science-A Process Approach (S-APA) in the process skill of observation. The first stage of the study compared the programs with respect to (1) the sequential presentation, (2) the use of materials to provide sensory training, (3) practice acquired through activities, and (4) the role of the teacher. Conclusions were that because S-APA and Montessori seemed to have common elements and because both had taught the process of observation, there was a reasonable justification to compare student competence in observation. The second part of the study compared the competence on observational tasks of three groups of 25 children, ages 5 and 6. The first group received Montessori training for two years in preschool, the second group used S-APA for one year with background of another type of preschool that excluded Montessori, and the third group which served as a control had neither Montessori nor S-APA training in their two-year preschool experience. Students were tested on a set of observational tasks from the text, the Science Process Instrument. Findings showed no significant differences between the Montessori and the S-APA preschool students in regard to competence in observation. Both the Montessori and the S-APA groups scored higher than the control group. This work is based on the authors doctoral dissertation research.

Language: English

Published: Chicago, Illinois, Apr 1974

Article

Out of Africa [Waterfalls SOS Children's Village, Harare, Zimbabwe]

Publication: Montessori Courier, vol. 1, no. 6

Pages: 12–13

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 0959-4108

Article

Language Flowering, Language Empowering: 20 Ways Parents and Teachers Can Assist Young Children

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 13, no. 4

Pages: 31–35

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

On the Edge Between Digital and Physical: Materials to Enhance Creativity in Children. An Application to Atypical Development

Available from: Frontiers in Psychology

Publication: Frontiers in Psychology, vol. 11

Pages: Article 755

See More

Abstract/Notes: The 4 P’s creativity model (person, process, press, and product) underlines how creativity is strongly connected with the materials employed to conceive and realize a creative outcome. As a multiform construct, it invites a wide variety of approaches to the study of it. One of the most promising ways to address this issue is to connect it with cognitive development and related educational pathways, as creativity can be enhanced and stimulated in every child, leading to an improvement both at personal and societal level. Even if creativity is recognized and highly valued, there is still a lack of methods which can stimulate creativity in an effective way. Useful hints may come from the outstanding contributions of Piaget and Montessori who underlined that interaction with the physical world is a fundamental building block for cognitive development. In this paper, starting from these fixed points, we describe some creativity enhancing methods for children which give importance to the edge between digital and physical materials. Digital materials open new ways to the use and integration of physical materials with hybrid platforms which can be used in educational contexts. Together with this perspective we provide a description of the application of these methodologies to enhance creativity in children with Autistic Spectrum Disorder.

Language: English

DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00755

ISSN: 1664-1078

Book

Montessori Method of Teaching Hearing Children

See More

Language: English

Published: Washington, D.C.: American Association to promote the teaching of speech to the deaf, 1912

Article

The Montessori Method: How Children Develop

Available from: The Times Educational Supplement Historical Archive - Gale

Publication: The Times Educational Supplement (London, England)

Pages: 596

Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc.

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 0040-7887

Book Section

La "Casa dei Bambini" e il Metodo di Maria Montessori / The "Children's House" and the Method of Maria Montessori

Book Title: Roma 1907: La Prima Casa dei Bambini di Maria Montessori / The First Children's House of Maria Montessori

Pages: 11-36

Children's House (Casa dei Bambini), Europe, Italy, Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, Montessori method of education, Montessori schools, Southern Europe

See More

Language: English, Italian

Published: Rome, Italy: Opera Nazionale Montessori, 2006

ISBN: 88-88227-33-4

Article

10 More Things (of 101) Parents Can Do to Help Children

Publication: Montessori NewZ, vol. 33

Pages: 6

See More

Abstract/Notes: 11-20

Language: English

Article

Le Château des Enfants au Cap d'Antibes [The Children's Castle in Cap d'Antibes]

Available from: Bibliothèque Nationale de France (BNF) - Gallica

Publication: La Nouvelle éducation, no. 24

Pages: 36-37

Europe, France, Western Europe

See More

Abstract/Notes: Includes a mention of the Montessori materials used by Mrs. Davison.

Language: French

ISSN: 2492-3524

Advanced Search