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Article
Teaching Permaculture in a School Garden: The Greensboro Montessori School
Publication: The Permaculture Activist, no. 53
Date: Fall 2004
Pages: 31-33
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Abstract/Notes: Greensboro, North Carolina.
Language: English
ISSN: 0897-7348
Article
School Focus: Treetops Montessori School [Darlington, Western Australia]
Publication: Montessori Matters
Date: 2002
Pages: 17–18
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Language: English
Article
Exploring Montessori Programs for the Middle School Years: Athens [GA] Montessori Middle School: A Place for the Adolescent
Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 11, no. 4
Date: 2003
Pages: 5–7
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Language: English
ISSN: 1071-6246
Article
Frans op de lagere Montessori-school [French at primary Montessori school]
Publication: Montessori Opvoeding, no. 3
Date: 1962
Pages: 23-25
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Language: Dutch
Article
Cooperation Between Parents and Preschool Institutions Through Different Concepts of Preschool Education
Available from: Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal
Publication: Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal, vol. 7, no. 4
Date: 2017
Pages: 207-226
Europe, Slovenia, Southern Europe
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Abstract/Notes: This paper analyses the importance, role, and methods of cooperation between parents and preschool institutions through the different concepts of preschool education and different educational approaches and formal frameworks. Through educational approaches, the authors analyse how cooperation affects the implementation of preschool education in alternative educational approaches, such as the Waldorf, Montessori, and Reggio Emilia approaches, and Slovenian public preschool institutions. They envisage that different educational approaches in preschool education perceive the importance and role of cooperation with parents differently and conclude that there are various models of cooperation, which can be demonstrated through a theoretical analysis of the aforementionedalternative preschool approaches. In their view, partnership promotes a shared commitment to the quality realisation of educational goals; it also develops understanding and an ethos of openness in the relationship between all actors in the process of care and education ofpreschool children.
Language: English
DOI: 10.26529/cepsj.372
ISSN: 2232-2647, 1855-9719
Article
AMI School Launches Somalian Outreach [Mater Amoris Montessori School, Ashton, MD]
Publication: AMI/USA News, vol. 6, no. 3
Date: Jun 1993
Pages: 2
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Language: English
Doctoral Dissertation
Skolans Levda Rum och Lärandets Villkor: Meningsskapande i Montessoriskolans Fysiska Miljö [The School's Living Space and the Conditions of Learning: Creating Meaning in the Montessori School's Physical Environment]
Architecture, Design, Environment, Europe, Nordic countries, Northern Europe, Scandinavia, Sweden
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Abstract/Notes: This study examines the school’s physical environment as a place of learning, and takes its starting point in the phenomenology movement, inspired both by Merleau-Ponty’s thesis of man’s physical relation to the world and by the existential analysis represented by Heidegger which implies a mutual relationship between man and the world. Such a view rejects a standpoint which describes man as being divided between a material body and a thinking soul. Instead, there emerges an embodied self which engages in meaningful interaction with its surroundings. The choice of this standpoint has implications for the design of the school’s physical environment. Montessori pedagogy is one of the activity-based pedagogies which have designed the physical environment in line with this theory. The purpose of the study is to understand, but further to visualise, the way in which the conditions for learning for children and adolescents are created in schools, from pre-school to lower secondary level, which follow the Montessori pedagogy. The material for the empirical study has been gathered from Europe and the US and from differing social contexts. The reason for this is to discover what distinguishes the prepared environment. The study also discusses the way in which the argument for a form of schooling which is based on activity, from the early 20th century to the present day, has been addressed through the architectural design of schools. The thesis shows that the rich array of didactic material in the schools observed offers pupils the opportunity to perform activities which create meaning. The organisation of the environment provides the pupils with the necessary conditions to concentrate fully on their work and to complete their tasks without interruption. I see the didactic continuity which prevails from pre-school to the lower secondary school in the Montessori schools studied as a prerequisite if the pedagogical activity is to offer meaning and create the conditions for learning in the way demonstrated by the empirical studies.
Language: Swedish
Published: Stockholm, Sweden, 2012
Article
The Montessori Land School: The Root and Branch of Lake Country School
Publication: Communications: Journal of the Association Montessori Internationale (2009-2012), vol. 2011, no. 1-2
Date: 2011
Pages: 176–184
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Language: English
ISSN: 1877-539X
Article
The Social Context of Middle School: Teachers, Friends, and Activities in Montessori and Traditional School Environments
Available from: The University of Chicago Press Journals
Publication: The Elementary School Journal, vol. 106, no. 1
Date: 2005
Pages: 59-79
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Abstract/Notes: This study compared the time use and perceptions of schools, teachers, and friends of approximately 290 demographically matched students in Montessori and traditional middle schools. We used the Experience Sampling Method (ESM) and questionnaires and conducted multivariate analyses showing that the Montessori students (a ) reported more positive perceptions of their school environment and their teachers, and (b ) more often perceived their classmates as friends while at school. ESM time estimates suggested that the 2 school environments were also organized in different ways: Montessori students spent more time engaged with school‐related tasks, chores, collaborative work, and individual projects; traditional students spent more time in social and leisure activities and more time in didactic educational settings (e.g., listening to a lecture, note taking, watching instructional videos). These results are discussed in terms of current thought on motivation in education and middle school reform.
Language: English
DOI: 10.1086/496907
ISSN: 0013-5984
Master's Thesis
The Relationship of the Montessori Method of Pre-School Education to Current Nursery School Theory and Practice in America
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Language: English
Published: Poughkeepsie, New York, 1940