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987 results

Article

Orientatie-Weekend in de Montessorischool 'Waalsdorp'

Available from: Stadsarchief Amsterdam (Amsterdam City Archives)

Publication: Montessori Opvoeding, no. 5

Pages: 5

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Language: Dutch

Article

Farmschool Erdkinder [Half Moon Bay, California]

Publication: Montessori Today (London), vol. 1, no. 5

Pages: 5-7

Americas, Erdkinder, North America, United States of America, Ursula Thrush - Writings

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Language: English

ISSN: 0952-8652

Book Section

Montessori Erziehung in Familie, Kinderhaus und Schule [Montessori education in the family, children's homes, and school]

, Clara Grunwald (Author)

Book Title: Montessori Erziehung in Familie/Kinderhaus/Schule: Ein Buch für Eltern und Kinderfreunde mit vielen Bildern [Montessori education in the family, children's home and school: A book for parents and friends of children with many pictures]

Pages: 3-41

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Abstract/Notes: Distributed by the Deutsche Montessori-Gesellschaft with the October 1927 issue of their periodical "Montessori-Nachrichten".

Language: German

Published: Berlin, Germany: Deutsche Montessori-Gesellschaft, [1927]

Doctoral Dissertation (Ed.D.)

Teacher Beliefs, Attitudes, and Expectations Towards Students with Attention Disorders in Three Schools in the United Kingdom's Independent School System

Available from: ProQuest - Dissertations and Theses

Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, Attention-deficit-disordered children, Children with disabilities, England, Europe, Inclusive education, Northern Europe, Northern Ireland, Perceptions, Scotland, Teachers - Attitudes, United Kingdom

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Abstract/Notes: Scope and method of study. The purpose of this qualitative study was to investigate the connection between the beliefs, attitudes, and expectations teachers exhibit towards students who have attention challenges in three independent schools in England and the pathognomonic-interventionist continuum as identified by Jordan-Wilson and Silverman (1991), which identifies, along a scale, where teachers' beliefs lie. Teachers' sense of efficacy as they meet individual student needs was also explored as was what educators in these schools, who have limited, if any, recourse to special education assistance, do to support students who display the characteristics of attention deficit. The pathognomonic-interventionist continuum and Bandura's (1977) construct of self-efficacy were the lenses used to focus the research. The study records participants' responses and reflections about the phenomenon under study, describing what it is they do, how they perceive their responsibility towards their students, and how they support each other. Findings and conclusions. Data compiled from a sample of 10 teachers and 3 head-teachers, were disaggregated to provide a picture of how participant teachers work with attentionally challenged children in selected English independent schools. The results provide evidence that teachers whose profile identifies them with the interventionist perspective present stronger senses of self-efficacy. They are prepared to undertake prereferral-type activities to determine where the student is experiencing difficulty and are then willing to manipulate the learning environment to meet individual student needs. Teachers in these schools perceive it as their professional obligation to design teaching scenarios to benefit all students. Teacher efficacy, their sense of their ability to positively influence their students' educational performance and achievement, is unrelated to years of experience or educational background, but is related to the beliefs which they hold.

Language: English

Published: Stillwater, Oklahoma, 2006

Report

AEL Study of KERA Implementation in Four Rural Kentucky School Districts: 1993-94 Annual Report

Available from: ERIC

Nongraded schools

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Abstract/Notes: A 5-year qualitative study of implementation of the Kentucky Education Reform Act (KERA) analyzes the effects on four rural school districts of large-scale changes in state policy. This annual report of the project focuses on five key KERA "strands." First, KERA mandates that grades K-3 be replaced with an ungraded primary program characterized by seven "critical attributes." Developmentally appropriate practices was the most successfully implemented attribute, but dual-age grouping (the preferred multiage pattern of most schools) appeared to be acting as a barrier to continuous progress, a third attribute. With regard to the second strand--instruction, assessment, and accountability--major findings were that the state assessment program was the driving force behind most instructional changes, emphasis on writing had been increased, teachers had mixed reactions to this increased emphasis, and there was little school-wide planning and implementation of instructional changes. The

Language: English

Published: Charleston, West Virginia, Jun 1995

Article

An Excellent Start for Montessori Schools

Publication: Montessori Education, vol. 8, no. 6

Pages: 3

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Abstract/Notes: Government "desirable outcomes" for nurseries

Language: English

ISSN: 1354-1498

Article

The Back-to-School-Night Speech We'd Like to Hear

Publication: Tomorrow's Child, vol. 23, no. 5

Pages: 4–6

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Language: English

ISSN: 1071-6246

Article

A Montessori School in a Chinese Holy Childhood Orphanage [Part 2] [Chusan Island, Chekiang Province]

Publication: The Montessori Magazine: A Quarterly Journal for Teachers, Parents and Social Workers (India), vol. 2, no. 1

Pages: 33-39

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Language: English

Book

Schools of Thought: Pathways to Educational Reform: Conference Proceedings, Washington, D.C., February 28-March 3, 1991

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Language: English

Published: Cleveland, Ohio: NAMTA, 1991

Article

Schooling and Thoughtfulness

Publication: NAMTA Journal, vol. 15, no. 2

Pages: 77–84

North American Montessori Teachers' Association (NAMTA) - Periodicals

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Language: English

ISSN: 1522-9734

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