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1288 results

Article

To Know the Place for the First Time: Why the Young Adolescent Benefits from the Development of the Pedagogy for the Older Adolescent

Publication: Whole School Montessori Handbook

Pages: 81–86

Americas, Montessori method of education, Montessori schools, Teacher training, Teachers, United States of America

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Abstract/Notes: reprinted from the NAMTA Journal 31.1 2006

Language: English

Article

Shopping for a Mentor? Here's What to Look for . . .

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 21, no. 2

Pages: 8–9

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Language: English

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

PROTOCOL: Montessori Education for Improving Academic and Social/Behavioral Outcomes for Elementary Students

Available from: Wiley Online Library

Publication: Campbell Systematic Reviews, vol. 12, no. 1

Pages: 1-32

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Abstract/Notes: The purpose of this review is to investigate, via a quantitative meta‐analysis, the hypothesis that the Montessori method is at least as effective as traditional education in affecting academic and social outcomes for children. The proposed meta‐analysis is completed with the intention to help the public, as well as the research community, make more informed and empirically sound decisions regarding Montessori education by collecting, codifying, synthesizing, and disseminating the current empirical research.

Language: English

DOI: 10.1002/CL2.152

ISSN: 1891-1803

Report

Nongraded Primary Programs: Possibilities for Improving Practice for Teachers. Practitioner Brief Number 4

Available from: ERIC

Classroom environments, Nongraded schools

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Abstract/Notes: In nongraded, multi-age classrooms, children have the opportunity to learn a great deal from their more proficient classmates. Children in multi-age, nongraded programs often learn that children differ, and they learn to assist each other in productive ways. The organizational scheme has the potential to remove much of the competition of traditionally graded classrooms and, for many children, the stigma of being "behind." Researchers in the Center for Research on Education, Diversity, and Excellence (CREDE) project "Appalachian Children's Academic and Social Development at Home and in Nongraded Primary Schools: Model Programs for Children of Poverty" have studied the implementation and effects of nongraded primary programs on rural and urban children of Appalachian descent in Kentucky, where a statewide, nongraded primary program has been implemented in various forms since 1990. In this practitioner brief, the authors share responses and recommendations from administrators and practitioners in the study.

Language: English

Published: Santa Cruz, California, Apr 2002

Article

La Dr. Montessori per L'Italia: L'Illustre Signora Scrivera' Una Serie di Articoli per Questo Giornale [Dr. Montessori for L'Italia: The Illustrious Lady will Write a Series of Articles for this Newspaper]

Available from: Chronicling America (Library of Congress)

Publication: L'Italia (San Francisco, California)

Pages: 4

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

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Abstract/Notes: "Siamo lieti di annunciare, ed i nostri lettori saranno certamente lietissimi di apprendere, che la illustre educatrice italiana Dottoressa Maria Montessori, ospite della nostra città e dell'Esposizione per rilevare agli insegnanti americani il di lei nuovo e genialissimo metodo d'educazione ed istruzione per i bambini ha cortesemente accettato l'invito da noi fattole di scrivere una serie di articoletti per il giornale L'ITALIA, nei quali l'eminente signora spiegherà ai profani detto metodo di educazione, che ha suscitato l'ammirazione di tutto il mondo civile. Gli articoli della Signora Montessori, scritti in italiano, saranno contemporaneamente pubblicati dal confratello americano "The Call," tradotti in inglese dal nostro Direttore Ing. Ettore Patrizi. Il primo di detti articoli apparirà sull'ITALIA e sul "Call" di sabato prossimo." / "We are pleased to announce, and our readers will certainly be delighted to learn, that the illustrious Italian educator Dr. Maria Montessori, a guest of our city and of the Exposition to reveal to American teachers her new and brilliant method of education and instruction for children. She kindly accepted the invitation we sent her to write a series of articles for the newspaper L'ITALIA, in which the eminent lady will explain to the layman this method of education, which has aroused the admiration of the whole civil world . The articles of Mrs. Montessori, written in Italian, will be simultaneously published by the American brother "The Call," translated into English by our Director Eng. Ettore Patrizi. The first of these articles will appear in ITALY and in the "Call" next Saturday."

Language: Italian

ISSN: 2637-5400

Article

To Know the Place for the First Time: Why the Young Adolescent Benefits from the Development of the Pedagogy for the Older Adolescent

Publication: NAMTA Journal, vol. 31, no. 1

Pages: 251–258

North American Montessori Teachers' Association (NAMTA) - Periodicals

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Language: English

ISSN: 1522-9734

Article

A Proposal for a Training Program for Elementary Teachers

Available from: University of Connecticut Libraries - American Montessori Society Records

Publication: The Constructive Triangle (1974-1989), vol. 1, no. 1

Pages: 42-44

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Language: English

ISSN: 0010-700X

Book Section

La Formation des Jardinières d’Enfants, une Institutionnalisation Conflictuelle (1910-1931) [The Formation of Kindergartens, an Institutional Conflict (1910-1931)]

Available from: OpenEdition Books

Book Title: Éduquer dans et hors l’école: Lieux et milieux de formation. XVIIe-XXe siècle

Pages: 171-183

Europe, France, Western Europe

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Abstract/Notes: Les jardins d’enfants qui se développent en Europe au XIXe siècle selon les principes froëbeliens s’implantent plus difficilement en France où les salles d’asile, puis l’école maternelle instituée par Pauline Kergomard1, développent un accueil spécifique pour les enfants d’âge préscolaire. Néanmoins, ils bénéficient dès les années 1910 de l’essor mondial du montessorisme, et l’on constate la création de nombreux jardins d’enfants et d’écoles nouvelles jusqu’à l’orée de la seconde guerre mondiale. Les jardinières reçoivent une formation spécifique, centrée sur les méthodes actives prônées par les psychologues s’intéressant au développement de l’enfant, et délivrée dès le début du XXe siècle par des institutions privées. Cette formation est prise en charge par l’État entre les années 1921 et 1931, alors que Mlle Amieux, professeur au collège Sévigné, crée un cours pédagogique au lycée de jeunes filles de l’École normale de Sèvres. Les jardinières munies du certificat d’État sont ensuite embauchées dans les jardins d’enfants et les classes enfantines des lycées bourgeois. Cette expérience s’arrête en 1931 lorsque les lycées ne sont plus autorisés à ouvrir des classes enfantines, mettant ainsi un terme à l’existence des jardins d’enfants dans l’enceinte de l’enseignement secondaire. Nous verrons dans ce chapitre en quoi cette formation a été à la résultante, pas toujours harmonieuse, de l’institution scolaire et du mouvement en faveur de l’éducation des jeunes enfants, et en quoi elle a été un enjeu qui reste actuel. Quelle était cette formation spécifique, quelles raisons conduisent à son arrêt en 1931 et qu’advient-il de la formation des jardinières après cette date ? Voici les questions que nous envisageons d’explorer à travers le prisme d’une éducation préscolaire envisagée dans et hors l’école, à partir de sources provenant de fonds d’archives publics2 et privés3, complétés par des ouvrages et revues pédagogiques telles La Nouvelle Éducation, la Revue universitaire, l’Éducation enfantine ou encore la Revue de l’enseignement secondaire des jeunes filles. [Kindergartens that developed in Europe in the nineteenth century according to Froëbelian principles were more difficult to establish in France where the asylum rooms, then the nursery school instituted by Pauline Kergomard, developed a specific reception for the children of preschool age. Nonetheless, they benefited from the worldwide boom in montessorism from the 1910s onwards, and many kindergartens and new schools were established until the onset of the Second World War. The gardeners receive specific training, focused on the active methods advocated by psychologists interested in the development of the child, and delivered from the beginning of the 20th century by private institutions. This training was paid for by the State between the years 1921 and 1931, when Miss Amieux, a teacher at the Sévigné college, created an educational course at the high school for young girls of the Normal School of Sèvres. The gardeners with the state certificate are then employed in the kindergartens and nursery classes of middle-class high schools. This experiment ended in 1931 when high schools were no longer allowed to open nursery classes, thus putting an end to the existence of kindergartens within the walls of secondary education. We will see in this chapter how this training was the result, not always harmonious, of the school institution and the movement in favor of the education of young children, and how it was an issue that remains current. What was this specific training, what are the reasons for its discontinuation in 1931 and what happens to the training of gardeners after that date? Here are the questions that we plan to explore through the prism of preschool education envisaged in and outside school, using sources from public2 and private3 archival funds, supplemented by educational books and reviews such as La Nouvelle Education, the University Review, Childhood Education or the Journal of secondary education for young girls.]

Language: French

Published: Rennes, France: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2018

ISBN: 978-2-7535-5561-7

Series: Histoire

Master's Thesis (M.Sc.)

Occupational Therapy and Montessori Method: An Exploration of the Convergence of Their Philosophies

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Language: English

Published: Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 1983

Article

Montessori Therapy is Coming to America

Available from: Montessori Public

Publication: Montessori Public, vol. 7, no. 2

Pages: 18-19

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Language: English

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