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Article
Reports from the Field: National Public Montessori Support Network [addresses of ten public Montessori schools]
Available from: ERIC
Publication: MPSC Update [Montessori Public School Consortium (Cleveland, OH)], vol. 2, no. 2
Date: Feb 1994
Pages: 5
Americas, Montessori schools, North America, Public Montessori, United States of America
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Language: English
Article
Public Lunch Hour Addresses on Peace and Internationalism
Publication: Montessori Notes, vol. 1, no. 2
Date: Mar 1934
Pages: 6
England, Europe, Great Britain, Montessori Society (United Kingdom) - Periodicals, Northern Europe, United Kingdom
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Abstract/Notes: at Friends' House, London
Language: English
Article
Rare Rotarian [Lesley Britton addresses Rotary in Malaysia]
Publication: LM Courier
Date: Apr 1984
Pages: 5
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Language: English
Article
Hindu Educational Expert Addresses Jewish Women
Available from: National Library of Israel
Publication: Sentinel (Chicago, Illinois)
Date: Nov 14, 1913
Pages: 15
Americas, Montessori method of education, North America, Paul Chinnappa - Biographic sources, United States of America
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Language: English
Article
Montessori software?
Publication: MM: Montessori mededelingen, vol. 22, no. 4
Date: 1999
Pages: 17-20
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Language: Dutch
ISSN: 0166-588X
Article
Montessori schools as 'maximum'
Available from: Newspapers.com
Publication: Lansing State Journal (Lansing, Michigan)
Date: Nov 29, 1983
Pages: 1 (Community Edition)
Americas, Montessori schools, North America, United States of America
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Language: English
Article
Les Écoles Montessori Dans le Monde: La Diversité Interne d’un Réseau en Expansion [Montessori Schools Around the World: The Internal Diversity of an Expanding Network]
Available from: Open Edition
Publication: Revue Internationale d’Éducation de Sèvres, no. 76
Date: 2017
Pages: 51-62
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Abstract/Notes: Les écoles Montessori se multiplient dans tous les pays du monde. L’article s’appuie sur l’étude de l’auto-présentation d’une centaine d’écoles, pour montrer qu’elles sont très diverses. Dans un contexte d’accentuation du consumérisme scolaire et du développement de nouvelles classes moyennes des pays émergents soucieuses d’éducation, le succès international de cette pédagogie tient au fait qu’elle est fondée sur l’utilisation d’un matériel très concret qui la rend immédiatement compréhensible et qu’elle est, de toutes les pédagogies nouvelles, la moins subversive et la plus acceptable socialement. Surtout, cette pédagogie réussit à concilier des exigences qui semblent en partie contradictoires : en mettant à la fois l’accent sur les apprentissages académiques précoces et sur le bien-être et l’autonomie des élèves ; en se présentant aussi comme une pédagogie « de l’élite » mais accessible à tous et favorisant la réussite des plus défavorisés ; en conciliant enfin modernité et religion. [Montessori schools are multiplying in all countries of the world. The article is based on the study of the self-presentation of a hundred schools, to show that they are very diverse. In a context of accentuation of school consumerism and the development of new middle classes of emerging countries concerned with education, the international success of this pedagogy is due to the fact that it is based on the use of very concrete material which makes it immediately understandable and that it is, of all new pedagogies, the least subversive and the most socially acceptable. Above all, this pedagogy succeeds in reconciling requirements which seem in part contradictory: by emphasizing both early academic learning and the well-being and autonomy of the pupils; by also presenting itself as an “elite” pedagogy but accessible to all and promoting the success of the most disadvantaged; finally reconciling modernity and religion.]
Language: French
DOI: 10.4000/ries.6047
ISSN: 1254-4590
Article
Max: Concern with Social Skills, Language and Excessive TV Viewing in a 3 Year Old
Available from: Lippincott Wolters
Publication: Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, vol. 27, no. 6
Date: 2006
Pages: 488–492
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Abstract/Notes: Max is a 3-year-old healthy boy who was brought to the pediatrician's office by his mother for frequent temper tantrums at home. His teachers at the Montessori school are concerned about his communication skills. He is very talkative with his peers, but he constantly speaks about Thomas the Tank Engine. His peers seem to be uninterested in his repetitive stories. His teachers believe that Max has difficulty separating fantasy and reality. At home, his mother describes Max as “difficult to control.” When placed in time-out, he hits, kicks and scratches his mother. He has a large vocabulary, but mostly speaks in phrases directly from cartoons. For example, he repeats a particular phrase from a program in which the main character grows in size with fury every time he gets angry and says, “I hate it, leave me alone.” Before this exposure, the mother reports that her son had never used the word “hate.” Max watches 5 hours of children's programs on television every day; he is not exposed to any news programs. Frequently, he watches the same episode of a program many times. Max's mother believes that he can watch as much TV as he wants as long as it is “good programming,” so he only watches PBS kids shows and the Disney channel.
Language: English
DOI: 10.1097/DBP.0b013e3181d83173
ISSN: 0196-206X
Article
Maximizing Learning in Early Childhood Multiage Classrooms: Child, Teacher, and Parent Perceptions
Available from: Springer Link
Publication: Early Childhood Education Journal, vol. 28, no. 4
Date: 2001
Pages: 219-224
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Abstract/Notes: Investigated experiences in a multiage classroom, especially from the child's and parents' perspectives. Found that despite concerns, in the multiage classroom each child is allowed to progress at his or her own pace; individuality is valued; competition is lessened; and children have more time to develop relationships. (Author/SD)
Language: English
ISSN: 1082-3301, 1573-1707
Article
Providing Environmental Nutrients Which Help Maximize a Child's Potential
Available from: University of Connecticut Libraries - American Montessori Society Records
Publication: The Constructive Triangle (1965-1973), vol. 6, no. 4
Date: Spring 1971
Pages: 3-4
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Language: English
ISSN: 0010-700X