Tuesday, 30 September 2014
War
Men will waste their efforts, and their wealth, they will lay themselves open to the destruction of their own achievements and run the risk of famine, simply because they have been ordered to do so.
Maria Montessori, Peace and Education, p 26
Sunday, 28 September 2014
Gaining Impressions
A child does not have the same feeling for order that we do. Experience has made us indifferent. But a child is poor and in the process of gaining impressions. He starts from nothing and feels the fatigue of creation.
Maria Montessori, The Secret of Childhood, p 58
Saturday, 27 September 2014
Scourge of War
War today is really a scourge which can have no other meaning than that of being an eternal chastisement attached to the moral errors which darken the human mind.
Maria Montessori, Peace and Education, p 26
Wednesday, 24 September 2014
Builder of Man
The child is not an empty being who owes whatever he knows to us who have filled him up with it. No, the child is the builder of man. There is no man existing who has not been formed by the child he once was. In order to form a man great powers are necessary and these powers are possessed only by the child.
Maria Montessori, The Absorbent Mind, p 19
Tuesday, 23 September 2014
Task of the Teacher
So we found that education is not what the teacher gives: education is a natural process spontaneously carried out by the human individual. It is acquired not by listening to words, but by experiencing upon the environment. The task of the teacher then becomes not one of talking, but one of preparing a series of motives of cultural activity spread in a specially prepared environment.
Maria Montessori, The Absorbent Mind, p 7
Monday, 22 September 2014
Basis of Second Plane
The three characteristics we have just isolated for examination - the child's felt need to escape the closed environment, the passage of his mind from the concrete to the abstract, and the birth in him of a moral sense - serve as the basis for a scheme of the second period.
Maria Montessori, From Childhood to Adolescence, p 7
Sunday, 21 September 2014
Second Plane of Development
The seven to twelve year old period, then, constitutes one of particular importance for moral education. The adult must be aware of the evolution that is occurring in the mind of the child at this time and adapt his methods to conform with it.
Maria Montessori, From Childhood to Adolescence, p 6
Saturday, 20 September 2014
Hindering the child
Above all it is to be noted that the child has a passionate love for order and work, possesses intellectual qualities superior by far to what might have been expected. It is very evident that, subjected to the usual education, the child has had not only to withdraw within himself, but to dissimulate his powers, in order to adapt himself to the judgement of the adult who lorded it over him.
Maria Montessori, Peace and Education, p 21
Monday, 15 September 2014
Montessori in Practice
Montessori believed that it was only by seeing the children in her classrooms that adults could understand the phenomenon of human development and how it was assisted by her educational approach.
Paula Polk Lillard, Montessori Today, p 43
Sunday, 14 September 2014
Ideas
"Children do not judge whether something is good or bad, ugly or beautiful, nice or not. They judge just and beautiful what you consider just and beautiful, you who are their group?"
Mario M. Montessori, The Human Tendencies and Montessori Education, p 44
Saturday, 13 September 2014
Graduating to the conscious
"Little by little the child becomes conscious of all the things, these form his consciousness. And so we see the path followed by the child. He acquires all unconsciously, gradually passing from unconscious to conscious, following a path of pleasure and love."
Maria Montessori, The Absorbent Mind, p36
Thursday, 11 September 2014
Moving to Abstraction
"Children show great attachment to the abstract subjects when they arrive at them through manual activity."
Maria Montessori, To Educate the Human Potential, p 13
Wednesday, 10 September 2014
Follow the Interests of the Child
"The child should love everything that he learns, for his mental and emotional growths are linked. Whatever is presented to him must be made beautiful and clear, striking his imagination. Once this love has been kindled, all problems confronting the educationist will disappear."
Maria Montessori, To Educate the Human Potential, p 25
Tuesday, 9 September 2014
Permanence
"The old spiritual values are being attacked, the new ideologies are struggling against them and against each other: nothing seems sure or permanent. It is bad enough for us, adults, who are already set in our ideas, but how much more difficult it is for most of the children! No matter how many psychologists come to their help - if conditions remain as they are, and if we educators do nothing to make it possible for the child to build for himself a basic behaviour by incarnating the stable realities hidden under the chaotic appearance, he will not find it easy to grow feeling confident in life."
Mario M. Montessori, The Human Tendencies and Montessori Education, p 17
Power of the Real
"By offering the child the story of the universe, we give him something a thousand times more infinite and mysterious to reconstruct with his imagination, a drama no fable can reveal. If imagination be educated merely by fairy tales, at most the pleasure it gives will be continued later in novel-reading, but we should never so limit its education."
Maria Montessori, To Educate the Human Potential, p16
Gift of Love
"Love is a gift of the Universal Consciousness for a special aim and purpose, as is everything lent to man by the Cosmic Consciousness. If the aim is not fulfilled, then nothing can sustain itself and all crumbles away."
Maria Montessori, The Absorbent Mind, p420
Acquisition of Consciousness
"This consciousness seems to us a great acquisition. To become conscious; to acquire a human mind! But we pay for it. Because as soon as we become conscious, every new acquisition causes hard work and fatigue."
Maria Montessori, The Absorbent Mind, p 37
Monday, 8 September 2014
Natural Hand Movements
"But let us observe the spontaneous drawings of normal children...That vertical strokes should prepare for alphabetical writing seems incredibly illogical. The alphabet is made up of curves..."
Maria Montessori, The Montessori Method, p259
Deportment
"In the 'Children's Houses' the child will not only learn to move gracefully and properly, but will come to understand the reason for such deportment."
Maria Montessori, The Montessori Method, p84
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