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569 results

Article

Kindergarten and Beyond – or Why My Children Spent Ten Years in Montessori When All I Thought I Wanted Was a Preschool!!!!

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 11, no. 2

Pages: 12–14

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Book

Let My Children Work!

Available from: Books to Borrow @ Internet Archive

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Language: English

Published: Garden City, New York: Anchor Press / Doubleday, 1974

ISBN: 0-385-00864-3

Article

Do Not Bequeath a Shamble: The Child in the Twenty First Century: Innocent Hostage to Mindless Oppression or Children as Messengers to the World

Publication: American Montessori Society Bulletin, vol. 18, no. 3

Pages: 1-10

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Abstract/Notes: Paper presented at the 20th Anniversary American Montessori Society Annual Seminar, New York, 1980.

Language: English

ISSN: 0277-9064

Article

The Barnes and Noble Guide to Children's Books

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 27, no. 3

Pages: 6

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Abstract/Notes: Review

Language: English

Master's Thesis (Action Research Report)

Cooperative Activities to Reduce Aggression in Young Children

Available from: St. Catherine University

Action research

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Abstract/Notes: I investigated the effect of introducing cooperative games during recess to reduce aggressive behaviors in preschool-age children. The action research was done at an intentionally culturally and socio-economically diverse Montessori school in St. Paul, Minnesota. The 23 children involved were all children from the three to six age group who take daily naps. I recorded every aggressive incident I saw before, during, and after the intervention. I also recorded what cooperative activities I introduced for the intervention. Once before and after the intervention I asked the children if they enjoyed recess. I recorded observational notes such as weather conditions, and what activities the children chose each day. The data did not show that the cooperative games had a significant effect on the number of aggressive incidents recorded. Many more boys than girls were involved in aggressive incidents. There was no significant change in how the children reported their enjoyment of recess. Aggressive behavior could possibly be reduced through another action research project with a longer intervention period, a conflict resolution plan, and more purposeful activities for the children outside.

Language: English

Published: St. Paul, Minnesota, 2016

Article

Counting the Pinecones: Children's Addition and Subtraction Strategies

Available from: ProQuest

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 17, no. 2

Pages: 26-28

Action research, Arithmetic, Mathematics education, Montessori method of education

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Abstract/Notes: This article discusses an approach designed for mathematics educators. Maria Montessori intended this knowledge to be shared with other teachers, increasing the Montessori community's understanding of children's thinking. A group of Montessorians has even tried to formalize this process with a program called Teachers' Research Network. Similarly, the intent is to share mathematics education research and practices. Specifically, the author would like to suggest the use of word problems to help children build a more abstract understanding of addition and subtraction. In mathematics education, researchers are examining how children invent arithmetic operations in a program called Cognitively Guided Instruction (CGI). The author describes the aspects of CGI that are similar to the Montessori tradition. Children use a variety of materials and strategies to solve problems. The role of the teacher is to modify the environment (using a variety of problem types and difficulties) to learn about each child's understanding. By observing how children pursue word problems, the researchers were able to assess what the children understood about operations, looking beyond whether or not they could perform the simple arithmetic calculations. Through quantitative and qualitative analyses, they discovered that children were indeed capable of solving complex word problems, including problems that involved more than one operation, in a variety of ways. The teacher's new understanding of the children's mathematical thinking is then used to vary the types of problems given in order to help children become more abstract thinkers. (Contains 1 table.)

Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Montessori Principles Applied in a Class of Mentally Retarded Children

Publication: Mental Retardation, vol. 5

Pages: 26-29

Children with disabilities, Developmentally disabled children, Lena L. Gitter - Writings, Montessori method of education, Special education

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Language: English

ISSN: 0047-6765

Book

Mammolina: A Story about Maria Montessori [Biography for Children]

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Language: English

Published: Minneapolis, Minnesota: Carol Rhoda Books, 1993

Conference Paper

Some conceptual considerations in the interdisciplinary study of immigrant children

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Language: English

Published: Boston, Massachusetts: AMI-USA, 2000

Pages: 103-113

Article

Giving Kenyan Children a Hand-Up Not a Hand-Out [Kipungani Schools Trust]

Publication: Montessori International, vol. 80

Pages: 20–21

Africa, East Africa, Kenya, Sub-Saharan Africa

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Language: English

ISSN: 1470-8647

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