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55 results

Doctoral Dissertation (Ed.D.)

Strategies to Support Classroom Integration Among New Elementary Montessori Students: Qualitative Case Study

Available from: ProQuest - Dissertations and Theses

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Abstract/Notes: Elementary students transferring from traditional education classrooms to a Montessori school lack executive function skills (EFS) and struggle with academic performance and disrupt classes. The specific problem is the lack of strategies and support from school administrators to address an overwhelming number of new elementary Montessori students needing EFS improvement. The purpose of this qualitative exploratory case study was to explore teachers' and school administrators' perceptions of strategies to support teachers regarding EFS development among new Montessori students in grades first through sixth in a single Southwestern Montessori school. The theoretical framework was primarily Vygotsky's social constructionism. The research question involved: What are teachers' and school administrators' perceptions regarding strategies used to support teachers in developing EFS among new Montessori students in grades first through sixth in a Southwestern Montessori school? The sample included four administrators, eight classroom teachers, and four student support teachers. Individual semi-structured interviews were conducted, and 2 focus groups were employed: 1 for administrators, and a separate 1 for teachers/support personnel. Findings indicated the need for improved vetting of potential students during the admission process, additional classroom resources, and improvements to the parental education module. Future research is needed to explore the potential for an issue-based strategic planning model to foster collaboration between school administration and teachers.

Language: English

Published: Phoenix, Arizona, 2023

Doctoral Dissertation

The Benefits And Barriers To Arts Integration: Arts Accessibility In Public Montessori

Available from: University of New England - Digital Repository

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Abstract/Notes: This mixed-method exploratory case study investigates the research question: To what extent do pre-K through eighth-grade public Montessori school teachers perceive that their professional knowledge and abilities, experiences, and resources impact their capacity to integrate arts into their general classroom curriculum? Public Montessori teachers from five public-choice Montessori schools in a school district of the suburban and urban areas of southeastern South Carolina were invited to participate. The teachers in these public Montessori schools have varied levels of education and professional development experience with the arts in education. Some participants were general education teachers prior to becoming Montessori teachers due to the transition of traditional program elementary schools to Montessori schools. Survey questions addressed themes and subthemes related to integrating the arts with core curriculum subjects including math, history, science, English language arts, and social justice and humanities. The subthemes were also designed to delineate perceptions of experience or knowledge with visual arts, music, dance, poetry, drama, and theater. Data were gathered from the participant responses and a district program description, including professional development offerings. To analyze the data, the research question themes were coded by the field annotations: abilities, knowledge, resources, benefits, and barriers. The coding involved identifying patterns and similarities in the teachers’ responses of their perceptions related to arts integration in their Montessori classrooms. The overall results indicated the teacher participants believe that students who exhibit excess energy would benefit from an increase in movement, collaboration, and music, as well as a significant increase in exposure to the arts. Largely, the teachers indicated feeling uncertain about integrating the arts into their Montessori classrooms due to barriers such as lack of resources, time, and professional development experience. Therefore, it is recommended that educational leaders create professional development opportunities through collaboration with the arts team at each school, the community arts professionals, and the district administration.

Language: English

Published: Biddeford, Maine, 2021

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Integration between the Western and Islamic Parenting Models: Content Analysis in A Literature Review

Available from: University Muhammadiyah Magelang (Indonesia)

Publication: Jurnal Tarbiyatuna, vol. 14, no. 2

Pages: 192-214

Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Parent and child, Parenting

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Abstract/Notes: Parenting as a child care practice has become the main focus in both Western psychology and Islam psychology. Each perspective is founded on different values and contributes to the development of the parenting concept. The concept of parenting from the Western psychology includes Montessori parenting, positive parenting, and religious parenting. Meanwhile, from the perspective of Islam psychology, the concept of parenting involves prophetic parenting, Islamic parenting, Qur’anic parenting, and fathanah parenting. The researcher conducted a literature review on these concepts by collecting papers using search engines, including Google, Publish or Perish, and Open Knowledge Map and collected scientific journal articles that are nationally and internationally accredited. A total of 58 journal articles published between 2013 and 2023 were found. Data sampling is adjusted to the research topic, namely the concept of parenting and early childhood parenting. Next, the researcher will interpret the meaning of each journal article using content analysis to identify the basic argument of the research. The findings show that the development of the parenting concept in the Western psychology perspective stems from phenomena in parenting, especially the religion phenomenon in parenting culture in the 21st century. On the other hand, the development of the parenting concept in the Islam psychology perspective is merely a conceptual reinterpretation that is centered in the values of al-Qur’an and hadith. Nevertheless, the researcher found two patterns in the development of the parenting concept in Islam: first, the development of the parenting conceptual framework that is integrated with interpretation method on al-Qur’an texts to explain the notion of parenting, and second, the theoretical integration between the parenting concept that is in accordance with al-Qur’an and hadith and the Western psychology’s notion on parenting. Based on the literature review, the integration between the parenting concept in Western psychology perspective and that in Islam results in the SMART parenting model which prioritizes joy, education, moral and religion, and health for the children’s growth.

Language: English

DOI: 10.31603/tarbiyatuna.v14i2.10584

ISSN: 2579-4981, 2086-0889

Article

AMS-NCME Integration a Reality

Available from: ProQuest

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 18, no. 4

Pages: 5

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Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

Weaving the Tapestry: A Perspective on Integration in the Elementary Curriculum

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 27, no. 4

Pages: 19-21

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Book

Intentional Parenting: A Practical Guide to Awareness Integration Theory

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Abstract/Notes: In this diverse world, parents and educators around the globe today face new challenges connecting with raising children. The Nigerian Igbo belief ‘It takes a village to raise a child’ can re-emerge as ‘It takes a multi-cultural perspective in the village that raises a child prepared for the culturally integrated world’. This book offers a multi-cultural, multi-disciplinary, and fresh, global perspective on parenting today by delving deep into the cultural, ethnic, and traditional characteristics of parenting, as well as the latest evidence-based scientific research on parenting a healthy child in every developmental stage for this era. Fascinating topics discussed here include connecting to an infant, potty training toddlers, teaching emotional regulation to preschoolers, task management of school-age children, dramatic transitions of tweens, and communicating effectively with an adolescent. Includes a section about Maria Montessori and Montessori education.

Language: English

Published: Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2022

Edition: 1st ed.

ISBN: 978-1-5275-8376-4

Master's Thesis

STEM Integration in the Montessori Early Childhood Classroom

Available from: MINDS@UW River Falls

Classroom environments, Early childhood care and education, Early childhood education, Learning environments, Montessori method of education, STEM education

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Abstract/Notes: In today’s world of education, there is a growing interest and emphasis on STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) concepts in the classroom. Montessori education is well known for its hands-on, student-direct approach to learning. STEM also encourages hands-on, active participation from students. The purpose of this action research study is to observe the effects of technology and engineering activities on the Montessori environment. More specifically, how do these supplemental materials affect student engagement with traditional Montessori materials? STEM, more specifically Technology and Engineering, materials were introduced into a Montessori Children’s House classroom over a period of five weeks. Data was gathered through parent and student surveys, observation journals and a scientific engagement checklist in which the teacher observed student engagement with classroom materials over a period of at least two minutes. The results show an increase in student engagement overall, but a decrease in engagement with Montessori-specific materials. Once the technology and engineering activities were introduced into the classroom, the students seemed to gravitate toward those materials over traditional Montessori materials. A small-scale study such as this would benefit from more time to determine if the attraction to these “new” materials in the classroom would diminish over time. However, this study could link STEM activities to higher student engagement in the classroom.

Language: English

Published: River Falls, Wisconsin, 2020

Book

Integration in a Modern Montessori Classroom

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Abstract/Notes: This is an unpublished manuscript presented at the 1990 OMEP Conference in Lahti (Finland).

Language: English

Published: [S.I.]: [s.n.], 1990

Article

Social Integration of Various Handicaps in the Montessori School

Publication: American Montessori Society Bulletin, vol. 18, no. 1/2

Pages: 18-23

Children with disabilities, Conferences, Inclusive education, International Montessori Congress (18th, Munich, Germany, 4-8 July 1977)

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Abstract/Notes: Paper presented at the 18th International Montessori Congress, Munich, Germany, 1977.

Language: English

ISSN: 0277-9064

Article

Social Integration as a Goal of Developmental Rehabilitation of Handicapped Children

Publication: Communications (Association Montessori Internationale, 195?-2008), vol. 1984, no. 1

Pages: 7–10

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Abstract/Notes: With introduction by M.E. Stephenson

Language: English

ISSN: 0519-0959

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