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516 results

Article

Opening the "Mind-Door" on Professional Development

Publication: Montessori Matters, no. 2

Pages: 18–19

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Language: English

Article

The Developmental Potential of the Child in the First Year of Life

Publication: Montessori Matters, no. 1

Pages: 9-15

Child development, Infants

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Language: English

Article

Development Changes in Art

Publication: Montessori Matters

Pages: 7–10

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Language: English

Article

Silence and Early Childhood Development

Publication: Montessori Matters

Pages: 5–6

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Language: English

Article

Choices and Voices: A Developmental View of Guided Choice

Available from: ProQuest

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 16, no. 1

Pages: 16-20

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Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

Perceptual Training, Aesthetic Development, and Intelligence

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 2, no. 4

Pages: 9

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Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

Social Expectations vs. Developmental Needs: How Thematic Instruction Can Help with the Teacher's Dilemma

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 6, no. 3

Pages: 31–34

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Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

Dual Language Development: Making America a Multilingual Society

Publication: Infants and Toddlers, vol. 7, no. 4

Pages: 5–9, 13–17

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Language: English

Article

The Influence of Early Experiences on Brain Development

Publication: Infants and Toddlers, vol. 4, no. 1

Pages: 9–12

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Language: English

Doctoral Dissertation

When Pedagogy Matters: Insights from Montessori Education on the Development of Performance Monitoring

Available from: Université of Lausanne

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Abstract/Notes: The rapid pace of changes faced by todays young people calls for pedagogical practices that equip them not only with knowledge but also with the ability to think effectively, flexibly, and independently. This process rely on performance monitoring, a fundamental function of learning. When individuals notice something unexpected, such as an error, they tend to pause. In learning from this discrepant event, they adapt their behavior accordingly. Although performance monitoring is essential for academic learning and improves throughout childhood, its susceptibility to educational influences has not been studied. Pedagogical traditions differ on how they teach children to learn from feedback and errors. Traditional education provides children from one age group with opportunities to engage in work, and then to learn about and correct their performance later based on a teachers feedback and evaluation. By contrast, Montessori education focuses on supporting children in self-correcting in real time. It utilizes specialized materials that encourage childrens self-discovery of relevant concepts, and multi-age classes in which children discuss answers as they work. Here, we compared performance monitoring in children aged 4-15 years attending traditional or Montessori classes. Our multimodal approach (behavior, EEG, and MRI) revealed that 1) cortical regions related to performance monitoring un- dergo significant changes between the ages of 5 and 13 years; 2) children of that age do not process errors as adults do, and 3) pedagogical practices modulate both be- havior and neural responses. More specifically, the behavioral, morphometric and EEG neural data reveal significant differences in how students notice and react to errors, and in how they self-correct. fMRI analyses reveal difference in brain net- work connectivity between students from the two groups, and suggest differences in error correction strategies. Finally, higher academic performances were not at- tributable to higher executive functions, but rather differences in creativity abilities. Our work suggests that how students learn from errors reflects childhood schooling experience. Performance monitoring styles are also likely associated with youths cognitive flexibility more broadly, influencing how they react to novel or unex- pected outcomes. [Au vu du rythme effréné des changements auxquels sont confrontés les jeunes, il est essentiel que les pratiques pédagogiques ne se concentrent pas uniquement sur la transmission de connaissances, mais également sur leur capacité dapprendre de manière efficace, flexible et indépendante. L’élément central à cette entreprise est de favoriser une approche autodirigée et orientée sur les processus, dans laque- lle les élèves développent la capacité d’apprendre de leurs erreurs. Ce processus est appelé la gestion de la performance. Bien que la gestion de la performance soit essentielle aux apprentissages scolaires et se développe durant l’enfance, sa sus- ceptibilité aux influences pédagogiques n’a pas encore été étudiée. Ici, nous avons comparé la gestion de la performance chez des enfants âgés de 4 à 15 ans, issus de classes traditionnelles ou Montessori. Alors que les pratiques pédagogiques traditionnelles mettent l’accent sur le fait que les élèves apprennent à partir des commentaires des enseignants, les pratiques pédagogiques Montessori encouragent les élèves à travailler de manière autonome avec du matériel spéciale- ment conçu pour permettre de faire et dapprendre de leurs erreurs. Notre approche multimodale (comportement, EEG, IRM) nous a permis de dévoiler que 1) les ré- gions corticales liées à la gestion de la performance subissent des changements im- portants entre 5 et 13 ans; 2) les enfants de cet âge ne traitent pas l'erreur de la même manière que les adultes, et que 3) les pratiques pédagogiques modulent à la fois le comportement et les réponses cérébrales. Ce travail constitue une première étape connectant la recherche sur la gestion de la performance avec l’émergence des habitudes mentales chez les enfants dans leurs environnements scolaires, avec des implications directes pour la recherche en développement, les professionnels de l’enfance, et les politiques.]

Language: English

Published: Lausanne, Switzerland, 2020

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