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1220 results

Article

Table Washing: Why do Montessori Students Spend So Much Time Washing Tables?

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 27, no. 2

Pages: 8-11

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Article

Students Thrive Amidst Comfort Dogs at Five Oaks Academy

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Montessori Leadership, vol. 25, no. 1

Pages: 14-17

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Language: English

Article

Book Review: Culturally Responsive Teaching and the Brain: Promoting Authentic Engagement and Rigor Among Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Montessori Leadership, vol. 22, no. 4

Pages: 20-21

Book reviews

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Language: English

Article

An Outline for an Anthropological Study of Place for Montessori High School Students

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Montessori Leadership, vol. 15, no. 1

Pages: 4-8

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Language: English

Article

An Aspect of Performance-Based Learning: Engaging Students in Play Performances

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Montessori Leadership

Pages: 18-19

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Language: English

Article

Traveling Abroad with Students

Available from: ISSUU

Publication: Montessori Leadership

Pages: 4-7

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Language: English

Article

The Use of Montessori-Based Salt Tray Media in Early Writing Learning for Grade I Students at SDN 46 Banda Aceh

Available from: Universitas Syiah Kuala

Publication: Elementary Education Research, vol. 8, no. 4

Pages: 277-290

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Abstract/Notes: Beginning writing learning in grade I looks not very interesting because so far the teacher only uses media in the form of textbooks which are usually readily available, this has caused many students to have not mastered initial writing skills. This is due to the lack of use of media that stimulates students' interest in learning to write the beginning. The formulation of the problem raised in this study is how to use Montessori-based Salt Tray media in learning to write beginning in grade I students at SDN 46 Banda Aceh. This study aims to describe the use of Montessori-based Salt Tray media in learning to write beginning in grade I students of SDN 46 Banda Aceh. This study uses a descriptive qualitative research method. The subjects in this study were class I teachers as homeroom teachers at the school. The data collection techniques through observation and interviews. The data collected in this study were teacher and student observation sheets and interviews with a total of 11 questions. Then the data were analyzed with 3 stages, namely data reduction, data presentation, and drawing conclusions. The results showed that the implementation of learning to write beginning using Montessori-based Salt Tray media for class I students at SDN 46 Banda Aceh went very well, and had integrated it with Montessori principles. The existence of Montessori-based Salt Tray media has helped teachers convey material, and students are also enthusiastic about learning while playing, and are more focused on the material being taught. / Pembelajaran menulis permulaan di kelas I terlihat tidakebegitu menarik karena selama ini guru hanya menggunakan media berupa buku teks yang biasanya sudahetersedia, hal tersebut menyebabkan banyak siswa yang belum menguasai keterampilan menulis permulaan. Kurangnya penggunaan media yang merangsang minat siswa dalam pembelajaran menulis permulaan menjadi alasan hal tersebut terjadi. Adapun rumusan masalah pada penelitian ini adalah bagaimana penggunaan media Salt Tray berbasis Montessori dalam pembelajaran menulis permulaan pada siswa kelas I SDN 46 Banda Aceh. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mendeskripsikan penggunaan media Salt Tray berbasis Montessori dalam pembelajaran menulis permulaan pada siswa kelas I SDN 46 Banda Aceh. Penelitian ini menggunakan metoderpenelitianekualitatif deskriptif. Subjek dalam penelitian ini adalah guru kelas I selaku guru wali kelas di sekolah tersebut. Adapun teknik pengumpulan data melalui observasi dan wawancara. Data yang dikumpulkan dalam penelitian ini yaitu lembar observasi dan wawancara dengan jumlah 11 pertanyaan. Kemudian data dianalisis dengan 3 tahapan yaitu reduksi data, penyajian data, dan penarikan kesimpulan. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan pelaksanaan pembelajaran menulis permulaan dengan menggunakan media Salt Tray berbasis Montessori pada siswa kelas I SDN 46 Banda Aceh tergolong sangat baik, dan penerapan media Salt Tray berbasis Montessori dalam pembelajaran menulis permulaan pada siswa kelas I SDN 46 Banda Aceh sudah diterapkanoguru dengan baik,sdan sudahimemadukan dengan prinsip-prinsip Montessori.

Language: Indonesian

ISSN: 2987-6028

Article

Students Excited About Move to New Building

Available from: ProQuest

Publication: New Pittsburgh Courier (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)

Pages: A1, A5

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Abstract/Notes: Though 22 Pittsburgh schools saw their last day June 14, students, teachers and parents in at least two of them met the day with high expectations of a new beginning. This is largely because the programs, staff and students at Miller African Centered Academy and Home-wood Montessori will remain together.

Language: English

ISSN: 1047-806X

Doctoral Dissertation (Ph.D.)

The Development of Adolescent Students’ Self-Directed Learning Skills Within a Montessori Program During COVID-19: A Longitudinal Mixed-Methods Study

Available from: ProQuest - Dissertations and Theses

Autonomy in children, COVID-19 Pandemic, Montessori method of education, Self-managed learning, Self-managed learning

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Abstract/Notes: Students who develop and apply their self-directed learning skills have advantages in school over those who do not (Betts & Knapp, 1981; Candy, 1991; Guglielmino, 1977; Schunk & Zimmerman, 2012). This is because self-directed learning (SDL) skills enable autonomous learning where students self-initiate, solve problems, develop new ideas, and monitor themselves with minimal external guidance (Knowles, 1976; Zimmerman, 2000). Despite the importance of these skills, research shows that few students consistently engage in SDL (Dent & Koenka, 2016; Zimmerman & Schunk, 2001). Because of SDL's multi-faceted and complex nature, it is difficult to discern why this is the case (Dent & Koenka, 2016; Zimmerman & Schunk, 2001). Multiple dynamic, interacting factors, including maturation, environmental supports, and historical events, likely contribute to students’ SDL development (Hoyle & Dent, 2017). As such, recent literature suggests that a relational dynamic systems (RDS) approach can help elucidate the dynamic, context-dependent patterns by which SDL skills unfold (Hoyle & Dent, 2017). According to RDS theories, development occurs within multi-level, interacting, relational systems; therefore, the bi-directional relationship between the person and their environment should be the unit of analysis (Lerner et al., 2011). This study aimed to provide a systematic investigation of the development of SDL skills, accounting for important contextual and developmental influences as well as individual pathways. Adolescence appears to be an optimal time for students to gain SDL skills (Brown, 1978; Brown et al., 1983); hence, this study focused on that developmental period. Also, because the Montessori educational approach is conducive to SDL skill development (Lillard, 2017; Rathunde, 2009, 2014), it was used as the school backdrop for this study. Furthermore, during data collection, a global pandemic caused by COVID-19 impacted school environments and was also included as a developmental context in this study. Specifically, this study utilized a longitudinal convergent mixed methods design to (1) identify patterns of SDL skill development across adolescence, (2) illustrate the reasons for those changes, and (3) illuminate the indirect effect of COVID-19 on students’ SDL. Emergent themes from student interviews conducted over four years augmented growth curve analysis results from an accelerated longitudinal design utilizing student surveys to address the research questions. Descriptive, correlational, multi-level model (MLM), and repeated-measures ANOVA analyses of student survey responses across four years (4 waves) of data collection with students grades 7 through 12 (n = 284) were applied to address the quantitative research questions. Emergent themes, derived through thematic analysis of 29 interviews, or 11 cases of students with a range of SDL skills (average, above average, and below average), addressed the qualitative research questions. Finally, quantitative results and qualitative findings were combined and compared to investigate convergence, divergence, and expansion areas that addressed integrative research questions. Findings shed important light on the development of adolescent students’ SDL skills across adolescence. Quantitative results and qualitative analyses were combined to address the research question: Do adolescent students’ SDL skills increase, decrease, or remain stable throughout middle school and high school? Findings resulted in areas of convergence and divergence across methods. Despite some diverging quantitative results, namely a non-significant growth model, other quantitative results, a non-significant no-growth model and descriptive plots, converged with qualitative findings from student interviews to suggest that within and between students, SDL skill development can include a combination of growth, decline, or stability over time. Findings from this study also suggest that each SDL skill can develop on its own timetable. Also, findings suggest a developmental pattern whereby SDL skills vary more in middle school than in high school. These findings have begun to disentangle contradictory results of earlier SDL research (e.g., Heater, 2005; Pajares & Valiante, 2002; Reio & Ward, 2005). From a practice perspective, the findings imply that it may benefit students to have tailored interventions that meet them where they are developmentally, considering each SDL skill individually and all together. The second integrative research question that was addressed in this study was: What roles do factors like grade level and the Montessori learning environment play in SDL development? Quantitative results and qualitative findings converged to suggest that students' SDL skills develop, at least in part, as a factor of the length of time a student has been immersed in the Montessori program. The findings also show that a student’s maturation may play a role in SDL skill development, especially when environmental contexts are supportive. In addition, qualitative interviews with students identified features of the Montessori program, such as open work time, scaffolded opportunities to be self-directed, autonomy support, and supportive teachers that aided students in their SDL development, which also aligns with the literature (Zumbrunn et al., 2011). This finding strengthens prior research, which found cursory evidence for how Montessori schools support the development of SDL skills (Ervin et al., 2010). In addition, quantitative results and qualitative findings diverged for the third overarching research question: Have changes in the learning environment associated with COVID-19 shaped the development of students’ SDL skills? If so, how? Although the quantitative results from this study failed to detect any indirect effects of the impact of COVID-19 on students’ SDL, qualitative findings found that changes in their learning environment as a result of COVID-19 impacted students’ SDL both negatively and positively. Research has also found that the global pandemic drastically impacted the school environment, so it is most likely that the quantitative measure failed to detect an effect (Huck & Zhang, 2021; Tarkar, 2020). Furthermore, in the interviews, most students reported a combination of negative experiences (e.g., more distractions at home, lowered motivation, fewer social interactions, higher stress, and missing in-school learning) as well as positive experiences (e.g., increased time management, access to resources, multi-tasking, organization, ability to shut out distractions, and time to sleep) that impacted their SDL abilities. Qualitative findings from this study extend prior research by providing student accounts of their experiences, including silver linings (Wilson et al., 2020). Despite its limitations, this study revealed important exploratory findings about how students’ SDL skills can develop across adolescence. Areas of convergence across qualitative and quantitative methodologies underscore the reliability of the study findings. There were also unique quantitative and qualitative findings that extend prior research and provide important implications for future research and practice.

Language: English

Published: Claremont, California, 2023

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

The Effect of Montessori Teaching Method on Self-Concept and Motivation in Elementary First- Grade Students of Tabriz

Available from: Journal of Instruction and Evaluation

Publication: Journal of Instruction and Evaluation / Amuzish va Arzishyabi, vol. 12, no. 45

Pages: 31-50

Asia, Iran, Middle East, South Asia

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Abstract/Notes: The aim of this study was to determine the effect of teaching Montessori Method on self–concept and motivation of elementary first-grade students in Tabriz. Information was collected on the basis of semi-experimental pretest-posttest research with control group. The population consists of all elementary first grade male students of Tabriz which were 665 schools in 2015-2016 school years. The sample includes 40 primary school pupils (20 in the experimental group and students 20 in the control group) who were selected by multistage cluster random sampling. To collect data, self-motivation Liu, Wang and Parkyn’s questionnaire was used to assess self-concept and motivation for preschool and elementary school age groups. The Montessori method teaching sessions (40 sessions) were conducted on the experimental group and the control group was exposed to traditional and traditional education. After holding Montessori classes sessions and analyzing data with Covariance method, results showed that teaching Montessori Method has been effective on self-concept and motivation of elementary school students. And this method has been able to boost self-image and increase motivation in male students.

Language: Persian

DOI: 10.30495/JINEV.2019.665916

ISSN: 2345-6299, 2476-5627

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