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873 results

Article

Influenza delle Condizioni di Famiglia sui Livello Intellettuale Degli Scolari [The Influence of Social Conditions on the Mental Development of Children in School]

Available from: HathiTrust

Publication: Rivista di Filosofia e Scienze Affini, vol. Anno 6, Vol. 2, no. 3-4

Pages: 234-284

Maria Montessori - Writings

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Language: Italian

Article

How Can Art Appreciation Enhance the Self-Concept of Children in the Area of Language Development? (A Montessori Approach)

Publication: The National Montessori Reporter, vol. 7, no. 4

Pages: 5

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Language: English

A Comparison of the Effects of Two Child-Centered Models of Educational Intervention on Three Selected Creative Abilities of Pre-School Children, Fluency, Originality, and Imagination

Comparative education, Creative ability in children, Creative thinking in children, Imagination in children, Montessori method of education - Evaluation, Preschool children

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Language: English

Published: Washington, D.C., 1984

Article

A Beacon in East Harlem [East Harlem Children's Center Montessori School, New York]

Publication: AMS News, vol. 2, no. 1

Pages: 2

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Language: English

ISSN: 0065-9444

Article

Listening: Its Importance in the Development of Young Children [Talk given by David Ward, February, 1985]

Publication: Montessori Quarterly, vol. 24

Pages: 7–14

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Language: English

Article

Dr. Montessori Aims to Aid Poor: Italian Educator Says Their Children Are More Eager to Learn

Available from: Chronicling America (Library of Congress)

Publication: New York Tribune (New York, New York)

Pages: 6

Americas, Margaret Naumburg - Biographic sources, Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, Montessori method of education, Montessori schools, North America, United States of America

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Abstract/Notes: "Yesterday the Dottoressa Maria Montessori held the first conference with her pupils in America. It was at the Children's House, 520 East Seventy-seventh Street. The Children's House is one of the thirty Montessori schools which have sprung up in New York during the last three years. The conference was impressive. The great Italian teacher greeted her pupils, her disciples , if you like, with delight and apparent amazement at the development of her work in New York. "This beautiful house of the children!" She cried. "You have so much here; in Italy we cannot give the children all this, we have it not to give, but little is much when children are free." Her work is growing fast in Italy. In the districts which have been devastated by the earthquakes twelve schools have been established. "I have now developed a method of educating children from five to ten years old. By it they learn reading, writing, arithmetic very easily - but especially nature, science, the languages. Then they are ready to enter the high schools, I believe you call it. Two years are saved in the school life of every child. My elementary methods have been put into sixteen schools in Italy. Signorini Maccheroni is training teachers and opening our schools in Spain." Miss Anne E. George, who introduced Dr. Montessori's work into this community, asked how Montessori teachers in the United States could learn the methods for older pupils. "Signorina Fidele might come here and supervise the elementary classes which you form." "But you, Dottoressa," exclaimed Margaret Naumberg, "why won't you stay and help us?" Dr. Montessori didn't say she would, but I noticed particularly that she didn't say she wouldn't. She is now on her way to California, where she will give a four months' course in Montessori methods in Los Angeles and San Diego. Her latest book, describing her work with older children, will be published in the fall. "Now, that is all my news, and I want to hear what you are doing. I want always to keep in close touch with you and with your work. Tell me what you are doing." Mrs. A. Reno Margulies, of 534 West 187th Street, told of her work with deaf and backward children. Miss George spoke of hers. "Ah," said Dr. Montessori, "but are you not working with the children of the well-to-do? Tell me what you are doing for the children of the poor." Miss Zoé Bateman, secretary of the Montessori Association, explained that the Children's House in which the conference was held was a free school, supported by contributions. "It is very hard to get the work taken up by the public schools," said Margaret Naumberg. "We have just secured permission to establish a class in Public School 4. It was only possible because of the enthusiasm of the principal, Simon Hirsdansky, for Dr. Montessori's work. "Until the work is developed by the Board of Education it cannot be carried very far among the poor, for teachers must live as well as teach." "It is easier to teach the children of the poor," said Dr. Montessori. "They are more eager to learn." "Oh, no" cried her pupils in chorus, "The children who have better homes, better food and better care learn much faster than the poorer children." "I had a group of poor children last winter, and a group of well-to-do children this winter," said Margaret Naumberg, "and the latter learned in six weeks more than the former learned in a year.""

Language: English

ISSN: 1941-0646

Book

Montessori Children's Project, volume 1: In the Beginning

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Language: English

Published: Cleveland Heights, Ohio: North American Montessori Teachers' Association, 1985

Volume: 1 of 3

Article

Freedom for School Children

Publication: New York Times (New York, New York)

Pages: 56

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Language: English

ISSN: 0362-4331

Article

The Role of the Sensitive Periods in the Life of Young Children

Publication: The Child and You, vol. 2

Pages: 72-74

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Language: English

Article

To the Parents of Montessori Children

Available from: Stadsarchief Amsterdam (Amsterdam City Archives)

Publication: Around the Child, vol. 10

Pages: 84-86

Montessori method of education, Parents

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Language: English

ISSN: 0571-1142

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