montessori method
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Syntax Idea ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (12) ◽  
pp. 2615
Author(s):  
Iga Ayu Anggela ◽  
Heni Krisnayanti

Learning using the Montessori method is becoming popular with parents in big cities. With the Montessori method, children are given the freedom to choose materials, media, learning activities, and sitting groups according to their wishes and the role of the teacher is only as a supervisor. This study aims to determine the concept of learning the Montessori method at the early childhood level during the Covid-19 pandemic which requires learning to be carried out remotely from each student's home. This research uses a literature study method, the research sources are taken from books, international and national journals with the index of sinta. The researcher concludes that the concept of learning the Montessori method for early childhood can be done during distance learning, but adjustments must be made to several important aspects, due to the limited comfortable learning space, and the time for assisting children online learning



2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 9-23
Author(s):  
Alessandra Boscolo ◽  
Martina Crescenzi ◽  
Benedetto Scoppola

The introduction of complex mathematical concepts through perceptual and sensorial hands-on experiences is one of the most relevant aspects of the Montessori method proposal. This article aims to investigate the origins of the Montessori’s profound interest for mathematics, studying the history of the education of mathematics, after the unification of Italy, in which her school education took place. Her key concepts and beliefs about the learning of mathematics and, furthermore, the evolution of her proposal will be illustrated through the analysis of her main publications, both the generalist and the specialized ones in the field of mathematics (Psicoaritmetica and Psicogeometria), and handwritten notes about the lessons of XVI° international course, held in Rome in 1931, which the Opera Nazionale Montessori acquired from her students’ archives. Finally, an overview of the actualization of the Montessori method in the contemporary research will be explained, particularly focusing on the neuroscientific discoveries which have proved the effectiveness of the Montessori proposal to empower the cognitive processes involved in the development of mathematical thinking.



2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 73-82
Author(s):  
Rossella Raimondo

The fascination with the Montessori Method stems from a never quite exhaustive analysis of her studies, which, due to the multiplicity and complexity of its elements, continually lend themselves to readings, hermeneutic interpretations and discoveries. Following a series of “clues” that see the figure of Maria Montessori intertwined with that of Anna Freud, this article intends to enhance the interdisciplinary interweaving and the multiple links which, by relating pedagogy with psychoanalysis, favor a broader vision of the implications relating to the changes occurring during the first half of the twentieth century, in which the child is the protagonist.



2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 83-95
Author(s):  
Carla Roverselli

Giuliana Sorge (1903-1987) was one of Maria Montessori’s closest disciples. Many parts of her life are linked to the alternating vicissitudes of the spread of the Method in Italy. She is personally involved at the time of the breakdown of the relation between Maria Montessori and fascism. We find her in the immediate postwar period engaged in the reconstruction of the Montessori National Institution and in the dissemination of the Method in Italy. To do this, she weaves a network of relations with exponents of the political and ecclesiastical world assisted by the friendship of Luigia Tincani, a Catholic, Montessori’s friend, founder of what will become the Free University Maria SS. Assunta and a religious congregation. This emerges from an unpublished correspondence between these two women, which also contains interesting news relating to the hostility of prof. Aldo Agazzi towards the spread of the Montessori Method.



2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-107
Author(s):  
Brunella Serpe

The birth of Montessori’s Case dei Bambini (“Children’s Houses”) and the adoption of her innovative teaching method constitute an interesting chapter in the renewal of educational practices in Italy in the early years of the 20th century. Spreading from North to South, the biggest impact was felt where the social question was most acute. Milan, Rome and Città di Castello (the location of the Villa Montesca belonging to Leopoldo Franchetti and his wife Alice Hallgarten), together with very small communities such as those of Ferruzzano and Saccuti in the province of Reggio Calabria, were ideal contexts in which to test the assumptions of Maria Montessori’s approach to pedagogy. Specifically, this paper examines the experience of the Children’s Houses and nursery schools set up in Calabria by the Associazione Nazionale per gli Interessi del Mezzogiorno d’Italia (ANIMI, the National Association for the Interests of the Italian Mezzogiorno). The use of partly unpublished materials kept in the Association’s Historic Archive makes it possible to reconstruct the enthusiasm for the Montessori method of some teachers who were not from Calabria and to assess its positive effects on the children, who were among the country’s most neglected, often condemned to a series of privations. 



2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 37-48
Author(s):  
Daria Gabusi

This contribution is a first attempt to look at a step of the history of the diffusion of the Montessori method in Italy. It looks at a phase between 1910 and 1911, strictly connected to the evolution of Maria Montessori’s relationships with members of secular and radical-masonic elites. In particular, in April 1911 an important conference – For an Italian Method in Kindergartens – was organised in Milan: it represented the zenith of the debate on childhood pedagogy, nurtured by the experiences (within the Froebelian approach) of Agazzi and Montessori methods of education. Originally organized – probably – to promote the knowledge and diffusion of the Montessori method, the conference – in parallel with the breakup of Montessori’s relationship with the radical political movements close to the pedagogist Luigi Credaro – then took another direction, leading subsequently to very different results from the desired ones. 



2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 59-71
Author(s):  
Martino Negri ◽  
Gabriella Seveso

In the first two decades of the Twentieth Century, reflections on teacher training were particularly rich, implying the lively and significant participation of a plurality of actors. Even Maria Montessori actively participated in this debate and the meeting with the Humanitarian Society in Milan, and with Augusto Osimo primarily, proved to be very fruitful on these issues. The specialist magazine La Coltura Popolare represents a faithful and interesting mirror of this relationship and of the many reflections and initiatives arose from it, promoting the propagation of the Montessori method and offering at the same time a space for dialogue and comparison of all the most innovative and vivifying voices of the pedagogical reflection of the time. This paper proposes a first and partial reconstruction of the significant role that La Coltura Popolare played, from 1911 to 1922, in soliciting the attention of its public on the topic of teacher training, in spreading the Montessori method, in stimulating a not biased and preconceived comparison between different approaches, experiments and views on childhood.



2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 1154-1183
Author(s):  
Işıl KIRAN ◽  
Bilal MACUN ◽  
Yusuf ARGIN ◽  
İlkay ULUTAŞ


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rose Jummai MUSA ◽  
◽  
Adeyemi Abiodun ADEYINKA ◽  

The study investigated the effects of school environment and methods of teaching on language skills achievement of pre – primary school pupils in Edo State. It also investigated the interaction effects of Montessori and played methods and urban and rural environments on pupils' achievement in listening, speaking, reading and writing skills. Three urban and three rural areas which were selected from two Local Government Areas (LGAs) were used for the study. Six pre - primary schools were purposively selected for the study. A total of 228 kindergartens 2 pupils intact classes were used for the study which lasted for eight weeks. The study was a pretest, posttest, quasi- experimental control group design with independent variables as methods and school location while achievement in Language Skills Achievement Test (LSAT) was the dependent variable. Descriptive statistics and Analysis of Covariance (ANCOVA) were used to analyze the data obtained while the Multiple Classification Analysis (MCA) was used as post-hoc test for further significance. Three research questions were answered with three hypotheses, tested at 0.05 level of significance. Results showed that the Montessori Method of teaching pre –primary pupils was more effective than the play method. Similarly, urban school pupils achieved higher than their rural counterparts. There was also a significant interaction effect of methods and school location on pupils' academic achievement in Language skills. It was therefore recommended that the Nigerian Government should adopt the Montessori Method as a dominant method of teaching pre – primary school pupils and that pre – primary school owners should provide materials adequately for teaching and learning.



2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aira Jazel Y. Ang ◽  
Roberto D. Principio ◽  
Richelle Ann B. Juayong ◽  
Jaime D.L. Caro

The study aims to explore VR Serious Games as a form of therapy for people with dementia. It seeks to establish the utility of VR-based interventions with the application of Montessori Method. This study also serves as a basis for researchers, healthcare professionals, and developers who plan to incorporate VR therapy with other therapeutic approaches and to create a system that may be replicated for other illnesses via telemedicine to address the most vulnerable sectors. The main beneficiaries of this study are people with dementia and those who directly interact with them such as their doctors, caregivers, and family members of the patient.



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