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

Advanced Search

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

1186 results

Article

School Focus: Plenty Valley Montessori School [Diamond Creek, Australia]

Publication: Montessori Matters

Pages: 9–10

See More

Language: English

Article

Australian Schools Allowed to Offer Montessori Classes

Publication: Montessori International, vol. 10, no. 1

Pages: 6

Australasia, Australia, Australia and New Zealand, Oceania

See More

Language: English

ISSN: 1470-8647

Article

Australian AMI Alumni Association Update

Publication: Montessori Matters, no. 2

Pages: 22

See More

Language: English

Article

Montessori and the Indigenous Communities of Australia

Publication: Montessori International, vol. 82

Pages: 18–19

Australasia, Australia, Australia and New Zealand, Indigenous communities, Indigenous peoples, Oceania

See More

Abstract/Notes: Montessori Children's Foundation

Language: English

ISSN: 1470-8647

Book Section

Early Childhood Education in Australia: Maybanke's Montessori Legacy

Available from: Sydney Community Foundation

Book Title: The Maybanke Lecture 2014: Early Childhood Education in Australia: Maybanke's Legacy in the 21st Century

Pages: 6-28

Australasia, Australia, Australia and New Zealand, Lillian de Lissa - Biographic sources, Maybanke Anderson - Biographic sources, Montessori method of education, Montessori schools, Oceania

See More

Abstract/Notes: Maybanke Anderson initiated social reforms, which have improved the lives of countless women and children in Australia. If this were the United States, by now there would have been a Hollywood feature film about Maybanke Anderson, no doubt with Meryl Streep playing the lead role. But this is Australia, so when women vote on election day they do so without knowing that at the time of Federation Maybanke's strategic intervention opened the door for Australian women to be able to vote in the new Commonwealth, nearly three decades earlier than was possible for women in the United Kingdom, for example. But votes for women was only one of the social reforms for which we can thank Maybanke Anderson, as documented in the 1997 biography by Jan Roberts.

Language: English

Published: Sydney, Australia: Sydney Community Foundation, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-646-93863-9

Series: The Maybanke Lecture

Video Recording

Lillian de Lissa and Maria Montessori: Their legacy and promise for the future of South Australia's children

Available from: YouTube

Australasia, Australia, Australia and New Zealand, Lillian de Lissa - Biographic sources, Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, Oceania

See More

Abstract/Notes: The de Lissa Oration, presented by Dr Susan Feez

Runtime: 51:51

Language: English

Published: Adelaide, Australia, Nov 20, 2013

Book Section

Record of the Kindergarten Movement in South Australia, 1905–1955

Book Title: Jubilee History of the Kindergarten Union of South Australia, 1905-1955

See More

Language: English

Published: North Adelaide, Australia: Kindergarten Union of South Australia, 1975

ISBN: 978-0-9598450-0-6

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

The Teacher Educator and the Suffragist: Lillian De Lissa and Muriel Matters' Activism in Australia and the United Kingdom

Available from: Taylor and Francis Online

Publication: History of Education, vol. 50, no. 6

Pages: 820-836

Australasia, Australia, Australia and New Zealand, Europe, Lillian de Lissa - Biographic sources, Muriel Matters - Biographic sources, Northern Europe, Oceania, United Kingdom

See More

Abstract/Notes: Focusing on the transnational circulation of ideas about suffrage and education, this article explores the work of suffragist Muriel Matters (1877–1969), and teacher educator Lillian de Lissa (1885–1967). It begins with Matters’ and de Lissa’s childhoods and education in post-suffrage Australia, and their initial work as an actress and kindergarten teacher respectively. The second section focuses on the development of their politics when Matters migrated to England in 1905 and joined the Women’s Freedom League, and de Lissa became the foundation principal of the Adelaide Kindergarten Training College in 1907. The third section discusses their engagement with Maria Montessori’s educational approach, which Matters incorporated into her socialist feminist activism during the First World War, and which led to de Lissa’s recruitment to England as a liberal feminist teacher educator in 1917. The final section highlights their advocacy for Montessori education in the United Kingdom during the interwar years.

Language: English

DOI: 10.1080/0046760X.2021.1906457

ISSN: 0046-760X, 1464-5130

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Leading 'excellence in infant work' in 1920s Australia

Available from: Taylor and Francis Online

Publication: Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, vol. 38, no. 2

Pages: 185-196

Australasia, Australia, Australia and New Zealand, Montessori method of education - History, Oceania

See More

Abstract/Notes: This article focuses on Inspector Lydia Longmore and 29 infant mistresses who were leading South Australian infant schools in the interwar year era. During 1926/1927 Longmore and each infant mistress in the state school system were interviewed by a journalist about her career path and current role, and profiles of their work featured week by week in the News, a highly regarded newspaper. These accounts provide valuable insights into the early years of schooling and constitute the data for this article. The first section merges the women educators’ life histories with the development of the state school system in South Australia. The second section profiles their careers and professional networks in 1926/1927: 23 of the infant mistresses were in the capital city of Adelaide and six in large rural townships. The third section focuses on curriculum and pedagogy in the infant schools, as gleaned from the News, curriculum documents and Longmore’s reports. In so doing, the article highlights women educators’ shared commitments to progressive education (including Montessori’s ideas) and their collective advocacy with parents in the state school system. The final section explores some connections and disconnections with the early years of schooling in contemporary times.

Language: English

DOI: 10.1080/09575146.2017.1414774

ISSN: 0957-5146

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Transnational Advocacy in Education: Maria Montessori's Connections with Australian Women

Available from: Torrossa

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

Pages: 181-196

Australasia, Australia, Australia and New Zealand, Maria Montessori - Biographic sources, Oceania

See More

Abstract/Notes: This article traces Dr Montessori's personal and professional relationships with selected Australian women from the time of her First International Training course in Rome through to contemporary times. Some studied with Montessori in Europe and others visited her and then established schools and training colleges to disseminate Montessori methods in Australia and the United Kingdom. Australian women also became her publicists in the English-speaking press. In essence, the article highlights the transnational circulation of...

Language: English

ISSN: 1723-9672, 2612-6559

Advanced Search