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512 results

Article

Cooking with Julia – A Montessori Child [Julia Child]

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 11, no. 4

Pages: 26–29

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Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

Dr. Montessori and the Implications of Current Brain Research (The Child's Brain/the Child's Mind)

Publication: The Alcove: Newsletter of the Australian AMI Alumni Association, no. 13

Pages: 3–5

Maria Montessori - Philosophy, Neuroscience

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Language: English

Article

What's Going on with This Child? Child Study for the 21st Century

Available from: ERIC

Publication: NAMTA Journal, vol. 42, no. 2

Pages: 249-260

North American Montessori Teachers' Association (NAMTA) - Periodicals

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Abstract/Notes: Allison Jones and Jacqueline Cossentino have taken the term child study to describe the work they do with children experiencing challenges. Their approach to child study attempts to change the typical question of "What is wrong with this child?" to "What is going on with this child?" They have created a system by which they try to pinpoint what is going on with a child (the BASE System) and then create an action plan for working with that child. It is a collaborative effort on the part of the school community, including multiple teachers and the school's instructional leader. In this work with children experiencing challenges, organizing and recording the work and progress is crucial to understanding what is effective, what is not, and ultimately in determining what is best for each individual child. [This talk was presented at the NAMTA conference titled "Children on the Edge: Creating a Path for Happy, Healthy Development," January 12-15, 2017 in New Orleans, LA.]

Language: English

ISSN: 1522-9734

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Transforming theories of childhood and early childhood education: Child study and the empirical assault on Froebelian rationalism

Available from: Taylor and Francis Online

Publication: Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, vol. 45, no. 4

Pages: 585-604

Friedrich Fröbel, Positivism

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Abstract/Notes: This article considers the possibility that one of the defining characteristics of the New Education, as it related to children in their early years, was its epistemological break with rationalist forms of knowledge and its embrace of empiricism and positivism. It considers, briefly, social theories that identify a similar process at a societal level before examining some of the polemics directed against theories of education based on rational forms of knowledge and, in particular, Froebel’s system. This theme is then pursued through a detailed consideration of the child study movement in England and its promotion of an empiricist project concerned with the production of knowledge about the child which drew upon the emergent fields of physiology, educational psychology, education and statistics. It is argued that child study helped to create the conditions for these sciences to distinguish themselves from the older philosophical currents from which they emerged. Consideration is then paid to how these transformations reacted on child study and on the Froebel movement. The article concludes that a break did indeed occur in the ways in which education was legitimised and that through the arrival of a new empirically based, scientific approach it became more closely aligned to reforming impulses. Nevertheless, the old philosophical, metaphysical foundations were not vanquished as in a violent rupture but were articulated in a new dialectical synthesis.

Language: English

DOI: 10.1080/00309230903100965

ISSN: 0030-9230, 1477-674X

Article

Montessori Milestones [Bretta Weiss; Ann Burke Neubert; Fran Hagman; Teachers' Research Network; David Roberti Child Development Center, Los Angeles, CA; Hope Child Development Center, Creve Coeur, MO; Swedish Covenant Hospital Child Care Center, Chicago]

Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 2, no. 1

Pages: 33–34

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Language: English

ISSN: 1054-0040

Article

Parent Enrollment at Model Children's House [Powder Mill Children's House, Beltsville, Maryland]

Publication: Montessori Observer, vol. 11, no. 6

Pages: 1, 4

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Language: English

ISSN: 0889-5643

Article

What Children Love . . . What Children Hate . . .

Publication: Montessori Education, vol. 8, no. 4

Pages: 34–35, 39

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Language: English

ISSN: 1354-1498

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Implementation of Montessori Concept in Educating Early Childhood (Case Study of the Role of Early Childhood Education Teachers)

Available from: Indonesian Journal of Early Childhood Education Studies

Publication: Indonesian Journal of Early Childhood Education Studies, vol. 11, no. 2

Pages: 157-164

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Abstract/Notes: As one of the leading figures of early childhood education, Montessori has provided a variety of concepts and thoughts in the development of early childhood education. The purpose of this study is to find out how to implement the concept of the role of teachers in montessori early childhood education in PAUD institutions. This research is qualitative descriptive research with this type of field research. In data collection researchers use interview, observation and documentation techniques. As for analyzing the data, researchers use three steps, namely ranging from data verification, presentation of data to drawing conclusions. The results of this study are the concept of the role of teachers respecting children, teachers respecting child development, teachers as observers, teachers preparing and maintaining the learning environment, teachers as interventions and teachers as catalysts applied by teachers through their role as educators, mentors, facilitators, organizers, evaluators and motivators for children. Keywords: role of teacher, education, early childhood, Montessori

Language: English

DOI: 10.15294/ijeces.v11i2.53018

ISSN: 2476-9584

Article

Kinder lernen auch von Kindern: zur Jahrgangsmischung an Montessori-Schulen [Children also learn from children: for a mixed-age group in Montessori schools]

Publication: Montessori: Zeitschrift für Montessori-Pädagogik, vol. 37, no. 1

Pages: 20-27

Montessori method of education, Nongraded schools

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Language: German

ISSN: 0944-2537

Book

The Child and Society: Essays in Applied Child Development

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Language: English

Published: New York, New York: Oxford University Press, 1979

ISBN: 978-0-19-502372-5 0-19-502372-2 978-0-19-502371-8 0-19-502371-4

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