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506 results

Article

Adventures in Learning at MIT [Montessori Institute of Tidewater, Virginia Beach, Virginia]

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 9, no. 3

Pages: 14

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Language: English

Article

Chinese New Year [Montessori Learning Center, Santa Monica, California]

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 9, no. 1

Pages: 4

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Language: English

Article

Group Time [Learning names]

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 5, no. 4

Pages: 7

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Language: English

Article

Montessori and Learning Disabilities

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 5, no. 2

Pages: 4

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Language: English

Conference Paper

The Application of Student Portfolios in Primary/Intermediate and Self-Contained/Multi-Age Team Classroom Environments: Implications for Instruction, Learning, and Assessment

Available from: ERIC

Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association

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Abstract/Notes: Portfolios have gained wide acceptance as a learning and assessment tool. Yet, little research has been reported on the practices of teachers who are actually using portfolios within their classrooms and how those practices are moderated by contextual variables. This research examined the instructional, learning, and assessment roles of student portfolios, and explored, from the perspective of the classroom teacher, variations in portfolio applications associated with teaching level (primary versus intermediate) and classroom environment (self-contained versus multiage/teaming). Teachers for kindergarten through grade 5 in 3 elementary schools (n=314) completed a survey questionnaire regarding the instructional and assessment uses to which portfolios are put within their classrooms. To further examine patterns of portfolio use, a subset of 44 teachers was interviewed to explore teacher perceptions about the impact of student portfolios on themselves and their students. Results suggest that these teachers make deliberate decisions regarding uses of their students' portfolios, decisions that appear heavily impacted by the maturity or skill level of the child, the purposes of the application, and the classroom environment within which the application occurs. They also depend on whether the portfolio product is in a formative state (working portfolio) or final state (performance portfolio). (Contains 7 tables and 14 references.) (Author/SLD)

Language: English

Published: Montreal, Canada, Apr 19-24, 1994

Article

Changeover: Bowling Lanes to Learning Center

Available from: Marquette University Libraries - Special Collections and University Archives

Publication: Milwaukee Journal (Milwaukee, Wisconsin)

Americas, Montessori method of education, Montessori schools, North America, United States of America, Via Marsi Montessori School (Milwaukee, Wisconsin)

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Abstract/Notes: Discusses the conversion of an old bowling alley into the Via Marsi Montessori School (Milkwaukee, Wisconsin).

Language: English

Article

Learning to Read [Letter to the Editor]

Available from: Digital Library of the Caribbean

Publication: Barbados Advocate (Bridgetown, Barbados)

Pages: 9

Americas, Barbados, Caribbean, Latin America and the Caribbean

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Abstract/Notes: Article text: In recent months we have observed a lot of concern expressed about poor literacy skills and indeed the large number of children who are unable to read even at a very basic level. Further, it has been noted that many of the young men in our prison are unable to read and therefore do not benefit from the ideas, knowledge and information which the written word can impart. Why is it that with the great increase in teacher training and with educational opportunities open to all, why is the legendary 96% literacy rate we once boasted about, now only a myth? Literacy in its broadest sense embraces a wide range of skills. The Lindawood Bell programme promotes a sensory approach to teaching Reading. This pro- gramme states: “Reading is an integra- tion of processing skills; word attack skills, sight reading, contextual fluency, oral vocabulary, and comprehension.” As an Early Childhood Education teacher, I am particularly interested in the earliest experiences of our children at home and at school as they learn to speak, to express themselves and to become literate. I opened Happy Vale Montessori School in September 1973 as a Nursery School for children from 2+ to 6 years old. In over 40 years of operating Happy Vale, we never had a child leave us unable to read at a level expected for her age. I am told by the current administrators that the same is true today. The Montessori Method is based on a phonics first approach and a sensory, hands-on approach. It consists of a step-by-step series of learning materials which ensure success. Following a thorough knowledge of phonetic words, the child is introduced to each diagraph, one by one, all using specially prepared learning material, which she can manipulate herself. There is urgent need for research to investigate our children’s experiences at school and how they are being taught to read. For several years I had interesting experiences working with young primary school children in an after-school programme at my church. Year after year, I found that every child could recite the vocal sound of each letter, but had no idea how to use this information in word recognition. They had no word attack skills and had great difficulty reading the simplest phonetic words. I notice that the Sunday Advocate of 20th September, in an article on Literacy, carried a photograph of an old bus converted to a mobile library. This is a great idea, but how do we help those children who are unable to take advantage of this service because they simply cannot read? I rest my case.

Language: English

Book Section

Fun with Learning: A Supplementary Programme

Book Title: Free Way to Learning: Educational Alternatives in Action

Pages: 104-122

England, Europe, Great Britain, Montessori method of education, Northern Europe, Poor children, United Kingdom

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Language: English

Published: Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books Ltd., 1974

ISBN: 0-14-080353-X 978-0-14-080353-2

Conference Paper

The Impact of the Montessori Method's Three-Period Lesson on the Word Learning of Students Who Are Deaf or Hard of Hearing

Available from: higherlogicdownload AWS

Children with disabilities, Deaf, Deaf children, Hearing impaired children, Inclusive education, Montessori method of education, Three-period lesson

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Abstract/Notes: Poster presentation at an undetermined conference.

Language: English

Report

The Bronx New School: Weaving Assessment into the Fabric of Teaching and Learning. A Series on Authentic Assessment and Accountability

Available from: ERIC

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Abstract/Notes: In 1987, parents and teachers from diverse neighborhoods of a local school district in New York (New York) founded the Bronx New School, a small public elementary school of choice that was meant to be learner-centered, with high standards for all. The school was organized into heterogeneous, multi-age classes and structured to encourage collaboration among faculty, students, and families. In spite of political stresses, the school's founding values have survived. This report focuses on the first 3 years of its life, a time when a comprehensive assessment system was designed and used throughout the school. The assessment system was designed to support instruction and learning through the collection of descriptive records of student growth. Teacher-kept records, student-kept records, and samples of student work in portfolios are used in combination to develop a picture of student learning. A developmental framework constructed by teachers provides a general guide for expectations of

Language: English

Published: New York, New York, Sep 1994

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