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48 results

Article

Birth and Rebirth: Parallel Developmental Passages in Infancy and Adolescence

Publication: NAMTA Journal, vol. 34, no. 1

Pages: 91–123

North American Montessori Teachers' Association (NAMTA) - Periodicals

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Language: English

ISSN: 1522-9734

Article

The Possibility of Learning Written Language in Early Infancy

Publication: MoRE Montessori Research Europe newsletter

Pages: 5

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Abstract/Notes: "MORE Abstracts 2003? This work examines the early possibility of written language acquisition and describes a direct experience. In the London course of 1946, Maria Montessori said that the letters of the alphabet should be in children’s bedrooms from very early on and that she would also like to have floating letters in order to use them at children bath time. The composition of words is the precursory act of the super-language we call “reading and writing” and must not necessarily boil down to the mere writing and reading activity itself. Indeed, for Maria Montessori, “it is worth separating this act which can be clearly independent of its higher utilizations”. On the suggestion of a Montessori teacher of unquestionable experience, polished letters were presented to a one-year-old child. The great interest the child showed for this material seems to confirm the “hunger for words” that is typical of this phase, already described by Montessori and then confirmed by Nobel prize-winner John Eccles. The child we observed also showed he could use this material almost immediately to compose words like zio (“uncle”), cane (“dog”), his own name, Raul, and others besides. However, when he tried to compose the word gatto (“cat”), he found himself in insurmountable difficulty and turned to an adult saying, “No, gato no, gatto”, showing he clearly understood the sounds making up the word and thus the letters needed to compose it (gatto). This impossibility was connected to the fact that the polished letters have only one example of each letter. Therefore, a system of mobile alphabet letters was introduced so that the child could continue his fascinating work of word composition which greatly interested him. A study is being made in some child communities, in cooperation with the Montessori Studies Centre, in order to repeat this observation and to finally heed Maria Montessori’s recommendation: “Education must start at birth and the first two years are the most important for all the acquisitions of the psychic embryo”.

Language: English

ISSN: 2281-8375

Article

Assistant's Training

Publication: AMI/USA News, vol. 11, no. 1

Pages: 3

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Language: English

Article

From Infancy to Graduate School: A Sustainability Institute for All Seasons in South Africa

Available from: Association Montessori Internationale

Publication: AMI Journal (2013-), vol. 2020

Pages: 242-247

Africa, South Africa, Southern Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, Sustainability

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Language: English

ISSN: 2215-1249, 2772-7319

Master's Thesis

The Impact of Montessori-Trained Early Childhood Assistants on Child Engagement in Licensed Montessori Centers

Available from: MINDS@UW River Falls

Early childhood care and education, Early childhood education, Montessori method of education, Teachers' assistants, Three-hour work cycle, Work periods

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Abstract/Notes: This study examined the impact of Montessori training provided to Assistants in authentic Montessori schools that are operating as licensed childcare centers. The study looked at correlations between the implementation of a Montessori specific training program for Assistants and how that impacted the active engagement of the children throughout the morning work cycle. The Lead Teacher in the participating classroom was asked to take a time sampling of the students' engagement levels every 30 minutes during the morning work cycle for a 2 week period of time. This quantitative analysis was completed to determine how many children were wandering, actively engaged, disengaged or actively disengaged in their work. After the data collection period ended, Assistants were given training that focused on the Montessori method and philosophy, classroom management, and feedback/expectations in their role. Post-training, the goal was to conduct another 2 week round of time sampling to analyze if the engagement level of the children increased. However, during the training period, turnover at the participating school increased from 3% to 33%, leaving the researcher unable to fully complete the training before conducting another round of time sampling. Interviews during and after this period of time indicated that the reason for the turnover was due to an inauthentic Montessori classroom feel (55% of respondents) and/or personal reasons (45% of respondents.) With further research, the root causes of the "inauthentic classroom feel" were narrowed down to difficult child behaviors, transitions of children moving from the toddler room to the children's house room, and, overwhelmingly, a lack of Assistant training. While the original research project was unable to be completed due to the staff turnover, the root cause of the turnover pointed to the necessity of implementing an Assistant Training program in the future. Not only would this potentially decrease Teacher and Assistant turnover in the Montessori classroom, but better retention and more highly trained staff would most certainly have a positive impact on child engagement in the classroom.

Language: English

Published: River Falls, Wisconsin, 2019

Book Section

La Scuola Montessori per Assistenti all'infanzia [The Montessori School for Child Care Assistants]

Book Title: Maria Montessori, oggi: 1870-1970 [Maria Montessori, today: 1870-1970]

Pages: 172-175

Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Trainings

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Language: Italian

Published: Firenze: Giunti-Bemporad Marzocco, 1970

Article

Montessori Assistants Training Course, Thursday Island

Publication: Montessori Insights

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Language: English

Article

2006 AMI Refresher Course, Administrators' Workshop and Assistants' Workshop

Publication: The Alcove: Newsletter of the Australian AMI Alumni Association, no. 14

Pages: 16

Montessori method of education - Study and teaching, Montessori method of education - Teacher training

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Language: English

Article

Assistants Training Course Inaugurated in the Pacific Northwest

Publication: PNMA Newsletter

Pages: 10

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Abstract/Notes: Newsletter of the Pacific Northwest Montessori Association (Kirkland, Washington).

Language: English

Article

Productive Assistants: Tools and Techniques for Training [Reviews of training videos, workshops, etc.]

Publication: Public School Montessorian, vol. 16, no. 4

Pages: 20-21

Public Montessori

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

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