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

Advanced Search

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

715 results

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Il Periodo Indiano di Maria Montessori [The Indian Period of Maria Montessori]

Available from: Università Degli Studi Firenze

Publication: Studi sulla Formazione / Open Journal of Education, vol. 13, no. 1

Pages: 95-98

Asia, India, Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, South Asia

See More

Abstract/Notes: On Maria Montessori (1870-1952), Italian educator of the twentieth century the most successful in the world, there is, also a growing if belated, interest in more recent times also in Italy. So to confine ourselves to two thousand years, studies have appeared on his life and works of great interest, finally showing that its value is recognized beyond resistance of the idealistic and Catholic area survived for a long time. The author investigates these new frontiers of research on the Montessori starting from a new biography dedicated to her which gives attention also to the Indian period.

Language: Italian

DOI: 10.13128/Studi_Formaz-10057

ISSN: 2036-6981

Article

María Montessori y su concepto de la educación [Maria Montessori and Her Concept of Education]

Publication: Revista Infancia, vol. 77

Pages: 22-26

See More

Language: Spanish

Article

Lo que dice Maria Montessori sobre la enseñanza del Dibujo [What Maria Montessori says about teaching Drawing] [part 2]

Available from: Hemeroteca Informador

Publication: El Informador (Guadalajara, Mexico)

Pages: 2

Americas, Central America, Latin America and the Caribbean, Mexico

See More

Language: Spanish

Book

Maria Montessori, 1870-1952: Kind ihrer Zeit, Frau von Welt [Maria Montessori, 1870-1952: Child of her Time, Woman of the World]

Maria Montessori - Biographic sources

See More

Abstract/Notes: Translated from the Dutch by Verena Kiefer.

Language: German

Published: Darmstadt, Germany: Primus, 2000

ISBN: 3-89678-220-7 978-3-89678-220-5

Book Section

Der mathematische Geist nach Maria Montessori [The mathematical mind according to Maria Montessori]

Book Title: Montessori-Pädagogik das Kind im Mittelpunkt

Pages: 42-47

See More

Language: German

Published: Wien, Austria: Jugend & Volk, 2020

ISBN: 978-3-7100-4362-8 3-7100-4362-X

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

La Rete di Maria Montessori in Svizzera [The Maria Montessori Network in Switzerland]

Available from: SUPSI

Publication: Annali di Storia dell'Educazione e delle Istituzioni Scolastiche, vol. 25

Pages: 163-180

Europe, Montessori method of education, Montessori movement, Montessori organizations - Switzerland, Switzerland, Western Europe

See More

Abstract/Notes: The penetration of Maria Montessori’s ideas in Switzerland is a typical case of a pedagogical transfer process. Since 1908, when the kindergarten inspector of Canton Ticino (italianspeaking Switzerland) Teresa Bontempi came in direct contact with Maria Montessori, there was a Montessori-network based on Ticino’s kindergarten system and on the Società Umanitaria (a socialist philanthropic foundation which organised the first Montessori-kindergartens in Milan). Teresa Bontempi’s early contacts with the Società Umanitaria made possible the introduction of Montessori’s method in all kindergartens in Ticino, and allowed the Umanitaria to have a good training for its kindergarten-teachers (trained by Teresa Bontempi herself). In 1913 the Institut Jean-Jacques Rousseau (Geneva) joined the network. People moved then between different parts of the network, e.g. from the Institut Jean-Jacques Rousseau to Teresa Bontempi’s courses in Bellinzona (Ticino), or from Ticino to the Umanitaria’s kindergartens in Italy. The network extended its influence also to german-speaking Switzerland. Maria Montessori herself was in direct contact with the network; in different moments, however, her attitude towards it changed deeply. In a first time, for example, she considered Teresa Bontempi a trustful partner for the penetration of her ideas in Switzerland; later she considered her a concurrent and blamed her for not using with fidelity the Montessori method. In 1932 Maria Montessori visited Switzerland for several public lessons, totally neglecting her consolidated local network. In the same year she founded, with the help of other, more orthodox but not locally anchored people, the Swiss Montessori Association. The Montessori method, after having a big number of followers, was soon marginalized and never regained the importance it had in the period from 1908 to 1931.

Language: English

ISSN: 1723-9672, 2612-6559

Book

Maria Montessori citoyenne du monde [Maria Montessori, citizen of the world]

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

See More

Language: French

Published: Rome, Italy: Comité italien de l'OMEP, 1967

Article

Maria Montessori, die Neupädagogin [Maria Montessori, the new pedagogue]

Available from: Europeana Newspaper Archive

Publication: Berliner Tageblatt (Berlin, Germany)

Pages: 17

See More

Language: German

ISSN: 0340-1634

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Maria Montessori: Penser l'Éducation des Jeunes Enfants [Maria Montessori: Thinking About Early Childhood Education]

Available from: Open Edition

Publication: Revue Internationale d'Éducation de Sèvres, no. 79

Pages: 139-147

See More

Abstract/Notes: Maria Montessori est entrée dans l’histoire avec l’élaboration d’une méthode qui s’appuie sur une vision de l’éducation comme ensemble de pratiques basées sur les ressources de l’élève et son élan vers l’exploration et la compréhension du monde. Cette éducation, capable, d’une part, de répondre aux besoins spécifiques et aux centres d’intérêts de l’enfant et, d’autre part, de respecter son rythme de développement, suppose de repenser entièrement les rôles traditionnels d’enseignant et d’élève. Quelles sont les conditions historiques et culturelles qui ont favorisé l’émergence de la pédagogie montessorienne? Quels obstacles ont rencontré la circulation de la méthode montessorienne et sa mise en œuvre dans les écoles? Quelle est la contribution de l’approche montessorienne à l’idée contemporaine d’éducation et d’école? L’article explore l’expérience montessorienne et son héritage, afin de proposer quelques réponses à ces questions. [Maria Montessori went down in history with the development of a method that is based on a vision of education as a set of practices based on the student's resources and his drive towards the exploration and understanding of world. This education, capable, on the one hand, of meeting the specific needs and centers of interest of the child and, on the other hand, of respecting its pace of development, involves completely rethinking the traditional roles of teacher and student. What are the historical and cultural conditions that favored the emergence of Montessorian pedagogy? What obstacles have encountered the circulation of the Montessorian method and its implementation in schools? What is the contribution of the Montessorian approach to the contemporary idea of ​​education and school? The article explores the Montessorian experience and its heritage, in order to offer some answers to these questions.]

Language: French

DOI: 10.4000/ries.7162

ISSN: 1254-4590

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Maria Montessori e gli ambienti milanesi dell'Unione Femminile e della Società Umanitaria [Maria Montessori and the Milanese circles of the Women's Union and the Humanitarian Society]

Available from: Unione Femminile Nazionale

Publication: Annali di storia dell'educazione e delle istituzioni scolastiche, vol. 25

Pages: 8-26

Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, Società Umanitaria (The Humanitarian Society)

See More

Abstract/Notes: This article aims to reconstruct the role played by the Società Umanitaria (Humanitarian Society), based in Milan, for the widespread of the Montessori’s Method. The studied period spans from 1908, which is the year of the initial mediation of the Women’s Union’s members for the creation of the first Children’s Houses in the Humanitarian Society’s district, until 1923, which is the year of Augusto Osimo’s death, the general secretary of this institution. In particular, through the analysis of Maria Montessori and Augusto Osimo’s letters exchange, the complex plot of their fruitful collaboration will be highlighted, which was carried out through the organization of Montessori training courses by the Humanitarian Society. Their cooperation was further reinvigorated by a common cause, which was the intervention in favor of children victims of the war, up till the project of a Montessori law secondary school for young adolescents. This last project was never realized because of Osimo’s severe illness occurred in 1920.

Language: Italian

ISSN: 1723-9672, 2612-6559

Advanced Search