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Article
The Montessori Method: How Children Develop
Available from: The Times Educational Supplement Historical Archive - Gale
Publication: The Times Educational Supplement (London, England)
Date: Nov 27, 1919
Pages: 596
Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc.
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Language: English
ISSN: 0040-7887
Archival Material Or Collection
Užsiėmimai Marijos Varnienės "Vaikų nameliuose" / Activities in Marija Varnienė's "Children's Home" - 1928
Available from: ePaveldas
Date: 1928
Classroom environments, Europe, Lithuania, Marija Varnienė - Biographic sources, Montessori method of education, Montessori schools, Montessori schools - Photographs, Northern Europe
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Abstract/Notes: Fotografija. Užsiėmimai Marijos Varnienės „Vaikų nameliuose“. Nežinomas fotografas, Kaunas, 1928 m. Nespalvota, horizontalaus formato grupinė fotografija lygiais kraštais. Piešimo pamoka. Vaikai piešia įvairiomis piešimo priemonėmis. [Photography. Classes in Marija Varnienė's Children's Home. Unknown photographer, Kaunas, 1928 Black-and-white, horizontal-format group photography with smooth edges. Drawing lesson. Children draw with a variety of drawing tools.]
Language: Lithuanian
Archive: Lietuvos švietimo istorijos muziejus / Museum of Lithuanian Education History (Kaunas, Lithuania)
Article
Rescuing Our Children from the Epidemic of Obesity
Publication: Parenting for a New World (AMI/USA), vol. 16, no. 2
Date: Apr 2007
Pages: 1-4
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Language: English
Article
Living with Children: An Experiment in Process [Vancouver Montessori School, Vancouver, WA]
Publication: Forza Vitale!, vol. 15, no. 1
Date: 1995
Pages: 18–22
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Language: English
Doctoral Dissertation
Follow-up Study of Montessori and Traditional Day Care Preschool Programs for Disadvantaged Children
Comparative education, Inclusive education, Montessori method of education - Criticism, interpretation, etc., Montessori method of education - Evaluation, Poor children
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Language: English
Published: Kent, Ohio, 1976
Article
Montessori for Children with Learning Differences
Available from: ProQuest
Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 29, no. 1
Date: Spring 2017
Pages: 48-53
Children with disabilities, Inclusive education, Learning disabilities, Montessori method of education, People with disabilities
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Abstract/Notes: To help the child who learns differently, when the usual presentation is not helping a student, Montessori educators can use several techniques: * reduce the difficulty of an activity * use more tactile-kinesthetic input * create control charts * focus on the development of oral language * increase the structure for the child with impulse control difficulties, assuming the necessity to help the ADHD child to sustain attention, teaching how to make work choices and how to develop a cycle of work * combine Multisensory Structured Language techniques with Montessori Language presentations. Note: If the child is not holding the pitcher correctly, the lesson may have to become how to hold a pitcher and work up to pouring. * Dressing Frames: lesson reduced to a first presentation of untying, unbuttoning, unbuckling, etc., with each step presented in separate lessons working toward the final step of mastering the direct purpose of the lesson * Cutting bananas and bread before cutting more solid foods, like carrots * Attaching language to the name of the presentation and all of the materials used in the lesson that is at the level of the child's oral language development SENSORIAL: * Pink Tower: Reduce the number of cubes to use every other cube, beginning with the largest, thereby increasing the discrimination to a 2 cm difference. LANGUAGE: * Since oral language skills may be a weakness for many students with learning differences, it is usually necessary to add a program of oral language development assessment and instruction to enhance vocabulary and verbal expression. The MACAR Oral Language Development Manual is one such program (Pickering, 1976). * Written language, which includes reading, spelling, composition, and handwriting, requires the combination of Montessori language materials and the therapeutic techniques of a multisensory structured language (MSL) approach (e.g., Orton-Gillingham, Sequential English Education (SEE), Slingerland, Spalding, or Wilson Language). * Use additional phonological awareness shelf activities (pat out each sound in a word; place a small floral stone or disk on a picture card for each sound in a word). * Present the Sandpaper Letters in the sequence taught in the therapeutic program. * Use the decoding pattern of blending the beginning sound to the word family of short and long vowel word family words.
Language: English
ISSN: 1054-0040
Article
Developing Emotional Literacy in Children
Publication: Montessori International, vol. 66
Date: Jan 2003
Pages: 40–41
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Language: English
ISSN: 1470-8647
Article
Parents Must Play Active Role in Children's Education
Available from: Digital Library of the Caribbean
Publication: Barbados Advocate (Bridgetown, Barbados)
Date: Mar 30, 2019
Pages: 4
Americas, Barbados, Caribbean, Latin America and the Caribbean
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Abstract/Notes: Discusses Inspire Academy which purports to "blend" the curriculum "with some Montessori techniques".
Language: English
Article
The Computer Gender Gap: Children's Attitudes, Performance, and Socialization
Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 7, no. 4
Date: 1995
Pages: 33–36
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Language: English
ISSN: 1054-0040
Article
Madame Montessori's Contribution to the Education of Backward Children
Publication: Forward Trends, vol. 5
Date: 1961
Pages: 37-41
Children with disabilities, Claude Albert Claremont - Writings, Montessori method of education
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Language: English
ISSN: 0015-8658