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499 results

Doctoral Dissertation

An ethnographic investigation of a teenage culture in a Montessori junior high school

Available from: ProQuest - Dissertations and Theses

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Abstract/Notes: This dissertation presents an ethnographic study of a teenage culture in a Montessori junior high school. Ethnographic research usually includes both interviews and observations. The standard methodological procedure is to first elicit from cultural participants their perceptions of meanings; then, second, this elicited information provides an analytical framework with which to identify and interpret observed enactments of patterned behavior. This study describes the first only; that is, an array of ethnographic elicitations and an analysis of them. The initial task was to develop interview procedures suitable for young people between the ages of eleven and thirteen. Three techniques were developed and employed to assemble a data base of cultural information. Analysis of that data base revealed the importance of two organizational principles in terms of which the junior high students conducted their daily cultural affairs: "personality and moods" and "trust". Their affairs took place within and between friendship groups. A friendship group consisted of those who shared various degrees of compatible "personalities and moods" and who could be variously trusted not to betray private friendship information. The students recognized a range of several types of friends from the least trusted "people you know" to the most trusted "best friends". These students daily set up situations of trust. They daily tested each other's willingness to hold information as confidential and thereby succeeded through the friendship ranks based on their mutual compatibility of "personality and moods" and on their willingness to trust and be trusted. Others who were "disliked" or hated had incompatible "personalities" and could never trust one another. They either ignored one another or had occasional fights.

Language: English

Published: Buffalo, New York, 1986

Article

Around the Schools [School news from around the U.S.]

Publication: AMS News, vol. 2, no. 3

Pages: 4–5

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Language: English

ISSN: 0065-9444

Article

Preschool String Section

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 24, no. 2

Pages: 7

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Abstract/Notes: Making guitars from shoe boxes

Language: English

Article

Impressions of an American Observer in the Montessori Schools

Publication: Journal of the Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Illinois State Teachers' Association, vol. 59

Pages: 109-116

Europe, Italy, Southern Europe

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Language: English

Article

Een Waarneming in de Montessori School

Available from: Stadsarchief Amsterdam (Amsterdam City Archives)

Publication: Montessori Opvoeding, vol. 12, no. 1

Pages: 6

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Language: Dutch

Article

Uit de School

Available from: Stadsarchief Amsterdam (Amsterdam City Archives)

Publication: Montessori Opvoeding, vol. 12, no. 15

Pages: 117-118

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Language: Dutch

Article

Challenges of Implementing Montessori English Teaching Model in Saudi Arabian Elementary Schools

Available from: The Egyptian Knowledge Bank

Publication: مجلة دراسات في المناهج وطرق التدريس [Journal of Studies in Curriculum and Teaching Methods], no. 245

Pages: 1-25 (Article 2)

Asia, Early childhood care and education, Early childhood education, Middle East, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Saudi Arabia, Western Asia

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Abstract/Notes: Montessori English Teaching Model (METM) is a unique way of instruction that uses specifically designed learning settings and approaches to nurture students' intrinsic desire to learn. English achievements for Saudi students have been for long very low. The current study aimed to investigate the real challenges of implementing Montessori English Teaching Model in Saudi Arabian elementary schools. Qualitative method, namely focus group discussion, was used. Four purposive focus groups with different educational positions and experiences were formulated, namely school supervisors (SS), school principals (SP), English teachers (ET), and English curriculum specialists (ES). The major findings of the study were that1) major challenges existed for implementing the METM in Saudi elementary schools, 2) the challenges concentrated on four categories: educational context, work ethics and environment, nature of teachers and students, and social aspects, and 3) agreements on some of the sub-themes fluctuated. Recommendations for further investigations are made for interested and educational personnel.

Language: Arabic

DOI: 10.21608/mjat.2019.101825

ISSN: 2535-213X

Article

Impressions of Some Montessori Schools

Available from: HathiTrust

Publication: Journal of Education (London), vol. 45

Pages: 385

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Language: English

Article

A Montessori School in a Chinese Holy Childhood Orphanage [Part 2] [Chusan Island, Chekiang Province]

Publication: The Montessori Magazine: A Quarterly Journal for Teachers, Parents and Social Workers (India), vol. 2, no. 1

Pages: 33-39

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Language: English

Article

Bringing Natural and Cultural Treasures from Home to School

Publication: AMI/USA News, vol. 17, no. 1

Pages: 10

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Language: English

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