Quick Search
For faster results please use our Quick Search engine.

Advanced Search

Search across titles, abstracts, authors, and keywords.
Advanced Search Guide.

769 results

Master's Thesis (M. Arch.)

Montessori School of Music for Children

Available from: Library and Archives Canada

Montessori method of education, Music - Instruction and study

See More

Abstract/Notes: The Montessori Method builds on children's natural explorative and creative nature through their learning environment. Music learning encourages participation that helps strengthen a child's educational, physical, and emotional development. This Thesis investigates the relationship between one's learning environment and processes of self discovery, which allow a child to understand and experience music through acts of play and work. Studies focus on the relationship between music and architecture, and how the quality of sound within a space can be influenced through architectural elements such as the material, structure and volume. These architectural elements, in turn, can act as tools to educate children about music. This thesis examines Architecture and the Montessori Method as means to create Music learning spaces for children. The proposed Montessori School of Music will not only be a space for experiencing music but most importantly, a place where children explore and learn. The site is in the Strathcona neighborhood in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Language: English

Published: Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, 2006

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Effects of Montessori Education on the Academic, Cognitive, and Social Development of Disadvantaged Preschoolers: A Randomized Controlled Study in the French Public-School System

Available from: Wiley Online Library

Publication: Child Development, vol. 92, no. 5

Pages: 2069-2088

Academic achievement, Cognitive development, Europe, France, Montessori method of education, Montessori method of education - Evaluation, Montessori schools, Public Montessori, Social development, Western Europe, Work periods

See More

Abstract/Notes: Previous research on Montessori preschool education is inconsistent and prone to analytic flexibility. In this preregistered study, disadvantaged preschoolers in a French public school were randomly assigned to either conventional or Montessori classrooms, with the latter being adapted to French public education. Adaptations included fewer materials, shorter work periods, and relatively limited Montessori teacher training. Cross-sectional analyses in kindergarten (N = 176; Mage = 5–6) and longitudinal analyses over the 3 years of preschool (N = 70; Mage = 3–6) showed that the adapted Montessori curriculum was associated with outcomes comparable to the conventional curriculum on math, executive functions, and social skills. However, disadvantaged kindergarteners from Montessori classrooms outperformed their peers on reading (d = 0.68). This performance was comparable to that of advantaged children from an accredited Montessori preschool.

Language: English

DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13575

ISSN: 0009-3920, 1467-8624

Article

Montessorians Want 3-Year-Olds to Begin School

Publication: The Cincinnati Enquirer

See More

Language: English

Article

Webster Montessori School Ribbon Cutting Ceremony [location not noted]

Publication: AMI/USA News, vol. 18, no. 1

Pages: 7

See More

Language: English

Article

Organisatie in de Montessori School

Available from: Stadsarchief Amsterdam (Amsterdam City Archives)

Publication: Montessori Opvoeding, vol. 9, no. 11

Pages: 92

See More

Language: Dutch

Article

Uit de School

Available from: Stadsarchief Amsterdam (Amsterdam City Archives)

Publication: Montessori Opvoeding, vol. 11, no. 1

Pages: 6-7

See More

Language: Dutch

Article

Schakels Tussen Huis en School [2]

Available from: Stadsarchief Amsterdam (Amsterdam City Archives)

Publication: Montessori Opvoeding, no. 6

Pages: 4

See More

Language: Dutch

Master's Thesis

Virtualizing Montessori: Experiences of Teachers Working in a Fully Remote Montessori Preschool

Available from: DiVA Portal

Montessori method of education - Teachers, Montessori schools

See More

Abstract/Notes: Virtual preschool seems to contradict the Montessori Method, a hands-on, sensorial-based early childhood curriculum. However, many virtual Montessori schools, borne out of the temporary need for isolation due to the Covid-19 pandemic, seek to continue this new implementation of Montessori education permanently. This qualitative study examined how eight preschool teachers in one US-based virtual Montessori program described how they made sense of implementing the Montessori curriculum in an online setting, how they understood the academic and social experiences of their preschool students, and what advantages and disadvantages they perceived for children in the enactment of Montessori education in the virtual format. Using a thematic analysis, this study found that teachers described many adaptations to Montessori education in the virtual format, including to the materials and to the class structure. They felt that their offerings generally met the academic and social needs of their students, while staying as true to the Montessori Method as possible. Teachers found various advantages in the enactment of virtual Montessori school, including the potential to reach children and families who would otherwise not have access to Montessori education in their local communities. Teachers also found various disadvantages, including the uncertainty of the future of the program, and the interference of the screen in a child’s path towards deep concentration, and did not feel that virtual Montessori preschool was an adequate stand-alone replacement for in-person Montessori preschool. Further research is needed on the effectiveness of other virtual Montessori preschools, on the experiences of children completing a full three-year cycle in the virtual Montessori Children’s House program, and on the academic and social readiness of children emerging from virtual Montessori preschool programs for both in-person Montessori and traditional elementary school.

Language: English

Published: Linköping, Sweden, 2022

Doctoral Dissertation

Comparison of the Academic Achievement of Primary School Students in Multiage and Traditional Classrooms

Available from: East Tennessee State University

See More

Abstract/Notes: The purpose of this study was to ascertain whether students in a kindergarten/first-grade multiage class achieve at a different level than students enrolled in a traditional kindergarten or first-grade class in a selected primary school in East Tennessee. The question of the interaction between gender and type of instruction was also analyzed. The causal comparative quantitative research method was used to analyze data differentiating between students enrolled in multiage and traditional classes, retrospectively. A t-test was used to determine the level of performance the students demonstrated on the BRIGANCE K Screen at the beginning of the study. The number of mastered first-grade reading skills and mathematics skills, the score on the system-wide first-grade reading test and mathematics test, and gender interaction with type of instruction in each area were analyzed using ANCOVAs. Statistically significant results (pBRIGANCE 1 Screen(ANCOVA). In 1998, the combined males scored significantly higher than the combined females. In 1999, multiage males had significantly higher means than traditional males. ANCOVA results showed statistically significant difference in the number of mastered reading skills of the multiage students in 1998 as well as with the combination of all three years. The multiage mean was the higher of the two groups all three years. For the number of mastered mathematics skills, ANCOVA results showed a statistically significant difference in 1999 with the multiage scores higher than the traditional group. ANCOVA results showed no significant difference between the groups on the standardized reading and mathematics tests analyzed. Findings indicate that kindergarten students may benefit from kindergarten classes in a multiage setting, and that first-grade students may benefit from multiage settings in mastering skills in reading and mathematics but that benefit is not necessarily demonstrated by standardized test scores.

Language: English

Published: Johnson City, Tennessee, 2001

Article

School For Me Plans Summer Program

Publication: Navajo Times, vol. 23, no. 36

Pages: 22

Americas, Indigenous communities, Indigenous peoples, Montessori schools, Navajo children, North America, United States of America

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 0470-510

Advanced Search