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Maria Montessori

Maria Montessori. Mary Clare Mulhern Mary Ryan. Biography. Born in Italy in 1870, Catholic. Influenced by Rousseau (1712-1778). At age 26, she became the first woman physician in Italy’s history. First worked (successfully) with developmentally delayed children.

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Maria Montessori

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  1. Maria Montessori Mary Clare Mulhern Mary Ryan

  2. Biography • Born in Italy in 1870, Catholic. • Influenced by Rousseau (1712-1778). • At age 26, she became the first woman physician in Italy’s history. • First worked (successfully) with developmentally delayed children. • Founded the Casa Dei Bambini (Children’s House) in 1907 in the slums of Rome. • In the 1960s, her ideas became popular again.

  3. Key Terms • Sensitive Periods: “The genetically programmed blocks of time during which the child is especially eager and able to master certain tasks” (Crain 66). • Order, Details, Use of Hands, Walking, Language • Example: Umbrella on table, baby cries • Self-directed: “If the school environment contains the right materials…the children will enthusiastically work on them on their own, without adult supervision” (Crain 17). • Montessori Classroom: Child-centered instruction rather than teacher-directed.

  4. Purpose • To compare the behavior of students and the satisfaction of the teachers in a Montessori school setting and in a traditional school setting.

  5. Questions • Are children in Montessori schools more likely to be self-directed in the classroom than are children in a traditional school setting? • Are teachers more/less/equally satisfied with teaching in child-centered schools as in teacher-directed schools?

  6. Hypotheses • Montessori students will be more self-directed because of the nature of their classroom environment. • Montessori teachers will be more satisfied because they teach in a child-centered school.

  7. Methods • We observed each classroom for one hour. • We assigned a figure to each student (Examples: B1, B2, B3, and G1, G2, G3). • We put a tally mark by the student’s symbol every time he or she interacted with the teacher. • We asked the teachers to take the optional 10-question survey.

  8. Montessori Observation

  9. Traditional School Observation

  10. Comparison Montessori Chart: Traditional School Chart: Overall:

  11. Teacher Comments (Observation)

  12. Teacher Survey 1. How satisfied are you with the amount of time it takes you to prepare for class each week (make lesson plan, set up the classroom, etc.)?  2. How satisfied are you with the dedication of your fellow faculty members to help each individual student reach their full learning potential? 3. How satisfied are you with the curriculum you are required to teach? 4. How satisfied are you with parents’ reinforcing at home what you teach in the classroom? 5. How satisfied are you with your students' curiosity about subjects that go beyond what you teach them during class? 6. How satisfied are you with your students' work ethic (get their work completed on time, are eager to do what is asked of them. etc.)? 7. How satisfied are you with your students' interactions with each other (respectful, not rough, considerate, cooperative, etc.)? 8. How satisfied are you with the students' self-directedness in the classroom (they do what they're supposed to do without you having to tell them multiple times)? 9. How satisfied are you with your students' proficiency at using the materials provided for them (books, toys, art supplies, etc.)? 10. How satisfied are you with the general noise level in the classroom?

  13. Our Evaluation Scale • 1 = Could be improved • 2 = Not strongly opinionated either way • 3 = Satisfied • 4 = Very pleased!

  14. Overall…

  15. Teacher Comments (Survey)

  16. Limitations of the Study • Difficult to record accurately how many times the teacher interacted with individual students. • The classroom rotations at the traditional school shortened our observation of the same group of children. • We only received 4 responses to the teacher satisfaction survey. • We only observed at one Montessori and one traditional school.

  17. Further Implications… • For a child you care about, would you choose a Montessori or traditional school? • How would the education you chose benefit your child more than the other school? • What factors would you consider when choosing? • As a future teacher, would this information influence your approach to teaching?

  18. Nature_____*______|___________Nurture Montessori “The school must permit the free, natural manifestations of the child.” “All human victories, all human progress, stand upon the inner force.” “The method of observation is established upon one fundamental base—the liberty of the pupils in their spontaneous manifestations.”

  19. Bibliography • Crain, William C. Theories of Development: Concepts and Applications. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2000. Print. • Lillard, Angeline Stoll. Montessori: The Science Behind the Genius. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2008. Print. • Montessori, Maria. The Montessori Method. New York, NY: Schocken, 1988. Print. • Seldin, Tim. "An Interview With Angeline Stoll Lillard, Ph.D." Tomorrow's Child Fall 2006: 9-66. The Montessori Foundation. Web. 26 Nov. 2012.

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