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765 results

Article

Community Living in Houses of Children

Publication: The Child and You, vol. 1

Pages: 29-33

Asia, Conferences, India, South Asia, Trainings

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Abstract/Notes: Paper presented at National Seminar, Indian Montessori Centre, Bangalore, January 1994.

Language: English

Article

The Miracle Children

Publication: Communications (Association Montessori Internationale, 195?-2008), vol. 2007, no. 1

Pages: 11–16

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Language: English

ISSN: 0519-0959

Article

The Children's Garden

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 1, no. 3

Pages: 14

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

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

✓ Peer Reviewed

Montessori et les Enfants Nomades: Forme Scolaire et Mouvement de l'Enfant [Montessori and Nomadic Children: School Form and Movement of the Child]

Available from: Open Edition

Publication: Tréma, no. 50

Child development, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Montessori schools

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Abstract/Notes: Cet article entend tenter de rendre compte du régime spatio-temporel spécifique qui est celui des enfants de maternelle Montessori, ce dernier entrant en contradiction ou en friction avec la forme scolaire traditionnelle. Ces pratiques entendent en effet modifier le centre de gravité du « travail » de l’enseignant vers l’enfant, et pour cela libérer le mouvement de ce dernier. [This article attempts to give an account of the specific spatio-temporal mode of Montessori schools, which is in conflict with the traditional “school form”. These practices intend to modify the center of gravity of the activities of the school, from the teacher towards the child, and for this to release the movement of the latter. We first propose to define what a Montessori practice might be, or to define the questions and problems that such an attempt at definition raises; we then seek to describe the primary effect that this spatio-temporal mode produces in the classroom: child walkers, or nomadic children.]

Language: French

DOI: 10.4000/trema.4309

ISSN: 1167-315X

Article

Childhood's Promised Land: Montessori Children Ages 9-12 [Lake Country School, Minneapolis, MN]

Publication: NAMTA Quarterly, vol. 8, no. 2

Pages: 22-31

North American Montessori Teachers' Association (NAMTA) - Periodicals

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Language: English

Article

National Association for Gifted Children Seminar [September, 1984]

Publication: Montessori Quarterly, vol. 22

Pages: 3–4

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Language: English

Article

A Montessorian Reviews "Grace and Courtesy: Keys for the Empowerment of Young Children" [workshop by Cathy Swan and Ginni Sackett]

Publication: Forza Vitale!, vol. 15, no. 2

Pages: 12–13

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Language: English

Article

✓ Peer Reviewed

Do Children in Montessori Schools Perform Better in the Achievement Test? A Taiwanese Perspective

Available from: Springer Link

Publication: International Journal of Early Childhood, vol. 46, no. 2

Pages: 299-311

Asia, China, Comparative education, East Asia, Montessori method of education - Evaluation, Taiwan

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Abstract/Notes: The study examines whether elementary school students in Taiwan who had received Montessori education achieved significantly higher scores on tests of language arts, math, and social studies than students who attended non-Montessori elementary programs. One hundred ninety six children in first, second, and third grade participated in the study. Children’s scores were measured by Elementary School Language Ability Achievement Test (ESLAAT), Elementary School Math Ability Achievement Test (ESMAAT), and Social Studies Ability Achievement Test (SSAAT). One-way multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) showed that students who had Montessori experience had a significantly higher score in language arts in all three grade levels. In math, first grade students scored higher but not second and third grade students. However, in social studies, students who had received Montessori education did not score significantly higher than the non-Montessori students. There was also no significant difference between the number of years spent in Montessori programs and students’ language arts, math, and social studies test scores in first, second, and third grade.

Language: English

DOI: 10.1007/s13158-014-0108-7

ISSN: 0020-7187, 1878-4658

Article

Das zweite Montessori-kinderhaus in Berlin [The second Montessori children's house in Berlin]

Available from: Atlante Montessori

Publication: The Call of Education / L'Appel de l'Éducation / La chiamata dell'Educazione: Psycho-pedagogical Journal (International Organ of the Montessori Movement), vol. 1, no. 3/4

Pages: 238

Europe, Germany, Western Europe

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Language: German

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