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842 results

Article

Montessori in West Bend, Wisconsin [Montessori Children's House]

Publication: Montessori Observer, vol. 7, no. 3

Pages: 1

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Language: English

ISSN: 0889-5643

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Role of Kindergarten System of Education in Developing Emotion Behavior and Self-Control in Children in Rawalpindi City

Available from: Russian Law Journal

Publication: Russian Law Journal, vol. 11, no. 5

Pages: 245-253

Asia, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Pakistan, South Asia

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Abstract/Notes: The children of the kindergarten school age between 3 - 5 are known to be a special time in the lives of children. It is a crucial stage of life in which a child develops himself/herself physically, intellectually, emotionally and socially. This study was critical analyze the “Role of Kindergarten System of Education in Developing Emotion Behavior and Self-Control  in Children in Rawalpindi City. The main objectives of the study are  (i) To analyze the role of kindergarten system in the promotion of social skills. It was descriptive type of research. The population of study was teachers of private kindergarten schools and their teachers in Rawalpindi city.  A sample of 200 teachers were taken from this known population. Random sampling technique was used to select sample for present study. The researcher was used questionnaire technique to collect data.  After polite testing the researcher were find the validity report on the basis of using Cronbach’s Alpha  which is 0.77. The main discussion that is important in this study is that there are many type of social skills which are play a vital role in the development of the students on both level, physicaly and mently. Students show attrection in begning days of their school. The conclusion of the study that many teachers said that they used friendly approach to teach children and they encouraged their students to take part in classroom activities. They said that they always encouraged their students when they asked question during lesson. The major recommendations of the study were Teachers may use group activities and team work in students of Montessori system to improve their social skills and the Kindergarten program provides children with experiences to help them learn to value and respect individual contributions as well as cultural identity and heritage.

Language: English

ISSN: 2309-8678, 2312-3605

Report

Behavior Patterns of Mildly Retarded Children in Open Classrooms

Children with disabilities, Developmentally disabled children, Inclusive education, People with disabilities

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Abstract/Notes: The classroom behavior and academic achievement of 32 educable retarded children (EMR) with a mean age of 11.24 years were studied in two types of open classrooms, graded and multi-age, and compared to that in a special education class. The three different instructional environments were found to generate characteristically different patterns of classroom behavior over a four-month interval as measured by time-sampling procedures. The results generally supported the assumption that open-space, integrated classrooms facilitate greater social interaction on the part of EMR students. The frequency of task-relevant behavior was higher in the special education class compared to that found in the two open classrooms. All three groups of EMR children made comparable gains in academic achievement. (Author)

Language: English

Published: Raleigh, North Carolina, 1973

Book Section

La scuola Montessori di religione. Dio e i bambini se la intendono [The Montessori school of religion. God and children understand each other]

Book Title: Maria Montessori, oggi: 1870-1970 [Maria Montessori, today: 1870-1970]

Pages: 176-180

Europe, Italy, Montessori method of education, Religious education, Sofia Cavalletti - Writings, Southern Europe

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Language: Italian

Published: Firenze: Giunti-Bemporad Marzocco, 1970

Article

The Children, Dante, and Montessori

Publication: Communications: Journal of the Association Montessori Internationale (2009-2012), vol. 2012, no. 1-2

Pages: 20–32

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Abstract/Notes: Paola Trabalzini gives an enlightening introduction to Maria Montessori’s Literary Experiment to introduce the poetry of Dante to children, initially to adolescents of 12-14, but later also 10-year olds embraced the study of Inferno [Hell]. Ms Trabalzini demonstrates that this lecture elucidates how the understanding of Dante's work follows a free and natural course, in which the children put forward proposals for new activities to answer their need to know; proposals which originate from the inner learning process experienced by the children with energy and enthusiasm. The essence is, as in all aspects of Montessori education, that this perfectly proves the case for auto-education.

Language: English

ISSN: 1877-539X

Article

All Children Want to Learn . . .

Publication: Montessori Courier, vol. 4, no. 3

Pages: 5–7

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Abstract/Notes: Excerpt from Montessori Play and Learn

Language: English

ISSN: 0959-4108

Article

Reflections on Parenting: Raising Successful Children

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 9, no. 1

Pages: 8

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Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Art in a Class for Mentally Retarded Children

Publication: Bulletin of Art Therapy, vol. 3

Pages: 83-93

Art, Children with disabilities, Inclusive education, People with disabilities

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Language: English

ISSN: 0163-318X

Book

Children at the Center

Available from: ERIC

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Abstract/Notes: This handbook examines practices and issues involved in the implementation of multiage programs. Data were collected through site visits at four schools with reputations for excellent multiage programs; interviews with a representative sample of parents and teachers at each school; document analysis; a survey of multiage teachers, parents, and principals at each school; and a survey of participants attending a national conference on multiage instruction. Before implementing multiage programs, six important questions should be asked regarding: the reasons for implementation, teacher roles, type of school or organizational climate, type of parent and community involvement, leadership, and factors for success that can be generalized to other settings. The following guiding principles were identified: (1) There are compelling benefits for students and teachers that justify implementing multiage organization; (2) there is no single model; (3) neither bottom-up nor top-down implementation, by itself, is effective; (4) multiage programs require major conceptual change; (5) implementation is best viewed as an evolving, long-term change at the deepest levels of teacher beliefs about how humans learn; and (6) several incremental steps can facilitate and improve the likelihood of success. A total of 17 tables and 3 figures are included. Appendices contain information on the study methodology, data collection instruments, and codebook. (LMI)

Language: English

Published: Portland, Oregon: Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory, 1994

ISBN: 0-86552-130-1

Book

The Joyful Child: Michael Olaf's Essential Montessori for Children from Birth to Three Years

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Abstract/Notes: This publication presents ideas and practical suggestions for caregivers of infants and toddlers from the Montessori Birth to Three Program and contains a catalog of recommended toys and materials for the home and child care setting. The topics discussed include parenting, the Montessori educational philosophy, child development during the first year, family life, toys, puzzles, music, language, art, plants and animals, culture, science and math, and the prepared environment. (KB)

Language: English

Published: Arcata, California: Michael Olaf Company, 1999

ISBN: 978-1-879264-05-2

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