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722 results

Article

NCME Welcomes Two New Teacher Education Programs [Saint Louis Center/Montessori Education; Maine Montessori Institute]

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 25, no. 4

Pages: 35

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Language: English

Article

One-Day Montessori: Thomaston Woods Montessori Program

Available from: ProQuest

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 29, no. 3

Pages: 48-51

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Abstract/Notes: The community center has a large classroom that housed a Head Start Program before that program moved to a public school. Providing for the educational and developmental needs of children in low-income housing and in neighborhoods that are economically depressed presents challenges both financial and logistical. [...]the results have been amazing! Even with the limited exposure to the Montessori environment, children have developed concentration, independence, care of self and the environment, social skills, and a love for art and music.

Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

Negotiating the Montessori Maze: Some Basic Information Every Montessori Parent Should Know

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 20, no. 4

Pages: 5-10

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Doctoral Dissertation

Freier Umgang drei bis sechsjähriger Kinder mit Montessori-Material [Free use of Montessori material by three to six year old children]

Montessori materials

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Abstract/Notes: In this discussion of the psychology of the Montessori method and Gestalt play the question is raised whether the use of Montessori material for teaching purposes represses spontaneous play with it. Observations on 84 children prove that free use differs greatly from didactic use. The Montessori psychology overlooks the genetic primacy of primitive kinds of experience, not visual, but tactile, motor, acoustic, and especially volitional and affective. It fosters an artificially precocious sensory education and intellectualization, incompatable with the psychology of the Leipzig school. Children's structural capacities develop best in a normal home with many kinds of play material, but without teaching.

Language: German

Published: Leipzig, Germany, 1939

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

A belső motivációt befolyásoló tényezők és megjelenésük a Montessori-pedagógiában [Factors influencing intrinsic motivation and their appearance in Montessori pedagogy]

Available from: Arcanum Digitális Tudománytár

Publication: Új Pedagógiai Szemle, vol. 48, no. 3

Pages: 44-54

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Abstract/Notes: Az iskolai tanulás eredményességét nemcsak a kognitív képességek, hanem az egyén motivációs háttere is meghatározza. Az intrinzik, a belső motiváció a megismerő tevékenység egyik energiaforrása, s feltétele a tartós, perspektivikus tanulási magatartás kialakulásának. A szerző azokat a tényezőket tárja fel, melyek előnyösen befolyásolják a tanulók intrinzik motivációjának fenntartását, s bemutatja ennek gyakorlati megvalósulását a Montessori-szemléletű nevelési-oktatási rendszerben. [The effectiveness of school learning is determined not only by cognitive abilities but also by the motivational background of the individual. Intrinsic, intrinsic motivation is one of the energy sources of cognitive activity and a condition for the development of lasting, perspective learning behavior. The author explores the factors that have a beneficial effect on maintaining the intrinsic motivation of students and presents its practical implementation in the Montessori-based education system.]

Language: Hungarian

ISSN: 1215-1807, 1788-2400

Article

A Study on the Prepared Environment in Montessori Education / Montessori 교육의 준비된 환경에 대한 일 연구

Publication: 유아교육연구 / Korean Journal of Early Childhood Education, vol. 8

Pages: 47-61

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Abstract/Notes: The Montesori education is for becoming normalization of child by forming the development concentration on the works by use the materials oneself who is the child to be educated in the prepared environment which is provided by the directress, the persons who make the environment for this purpose. The value of Montessori education could highly be approaised as the expectable seeking form of education which offers the selective opportunity by oneself as an esteemed independent individual. Furthermore, it could offer the development of independency to the child who is at the sensitive period with good absorbability from the surrounding environment as well as offer the responsibility of one`s own study for promotion of future study possibility and various experience. For this purpose, the prepared environmet is the precondition of education. Accordingly, for the application of this education at the educational places in our country, the following should be considered and the subjects of the way of education. 1. The real understanding and appraisal should be preceded based on full theorical examination on the Montessori education. 2. The education must be conducted by the instructors who have the license, issued by the International Montessori Association(AMI, AMS)and the specialized training institute for the Montessori instructors training should be established. 3. The adequate materials of Montessori for suitability for physical development which is acknowledged by the AMI, AMS should be manufactured and supplied for respective child. 4. The installation and furnishing fund must be presented in detail on the Montessori educational institute.

Language: Korean

ISSN: 1226-9565, 2733-9637

Senior Capstone Project

Elm City Montessori: A Public Montessori Option for New Haven

Available from: Yale University - Education Studies Program

Americas, Montessori method of education, Montessori schools, North America, United States of America

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Abstract/Notes: "Something that's unique about us, and very much because of how we were founded, is that we're really rooted in New Haven," Eliza Halsey tells me in her office. She's the Executive Director of ECMS (Elm City Montessori School) and a lifetime New Haven resident herself. In 2013, frustrated by the lack of high quality early education options in the city, Halsey and a group of parents decided to submit an application to form a local charter school. Their plan, a Montessori school serving a racially diverse group of children from age 3 through 8th grade, gained approval from both the local and state boards of education. In the fall of 2014, the school opened its doors, admitting a fraction of the 500 children who applied for seats. The parents and community members who came together to create ECMS had one goal in mind: to create a high-quality public early education option utilizing the Montessori method they had observed in Hartford. But creating a school is no easy process.

Language: English

Published: New Haven, Connecticut, 2016

Book

Modell Montessori: Grundsätze und aktuelle Geltung der Montessori-Pädagogik

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

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Language: German

Published: Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany: Herder, 1981

Edition: 2nd ed.

ISBN: 3-451-17867-2 978-3-451-17867-2

Book

Maria Montessori e il suo metodo: organizzazione dell'ente Opera Montessori

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Language: Italian

Published: Roma, Italy: [s.n.], [1947]

Article

En Rörelse i Tiden. Montessori, Montessorismen och Montessorianerna [A Movement in Time: Montessori, Montessorism and Montessorians]

Publication: ARR. Idéhistorisk Tidsskrift, vol. 33, no. 3-4

Pages: 135-147

Anna Maria Maccheroni, Anne E. George, Claude Albert Claremont, Montessori method of education - History, Montessori movement, Nazareno Padellaro, Teresa Bontempi

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Abstract/Notes: The article, an idea-historical contribution to the research on the Montessori pioneers of the early 20th century, takes a micro-historical actor perspective on the Montessori movement, which had a great impact in the inter-war educational debate, through an examination of five central actors from different countries. The focus is on their efforts for the movement, deea's driving forces and how they interpreted the liberation message of Montessorism in very different ways.

Language: Norwegian

ISSN: 0802-7005

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