Maria Montessori

Dr. Montessori’s Own Handbook

  • eliza7shkhas quoted10 months ago
    The functions to be established by the child fall into two groups: (1) the motor functions by which he is to secure his balance and learn to walk, and to coordinate his movements; (2) the sensory functions through which, receiving sensations from his environment, he lays the foundations of his intelligence by a continual exercise of observation, 7 comparison and judgment.
  • eliza7shkhas quoted10 months ago
    As the child’s body must draw nourishment and oxygen from its external environment, in order to accomplish a great physiological work, the work of growth, so also the spirit must take from its environment the nourishment which it needs to develop according to its own “laws of growth.”
  • Anna Shestopalhas quoted2 years ago
    (1) the motor functions by which he is to secure his balance and learn to walk, and to coordinate his movements; (2) the sensory functions through which, receiving sensations from his environment, he lays the foundations of his intelligence by a continual exercise of observation, 7 comparison and judgment. In this way he gradually comes to be acquainted with his environment and to develop his intelligence.
  • Anna Shestopalhas quoted2 years ago
    inner work of his autoformation. He is working to make a man, and to accomplish this it is not enough that the child’s body should grow in actual size; the most intimate functions of the motor and nervous systems must also be established and the intelligence developed.
  • Thomas Øbrohas quoted5 years ago
    Many new social institutions have sprung up and have been perfected with the object of assisting children and protecting them during the period of physical growth.
  • fanynasutionhas quoted7 years ago
    The organization of the work,
  • fanynasutionhas quoted7 years ago
    man’s inner life, and of his higher functions. The bread that we are dealing with is the bread of the spirit, and we are entering into the difficult subject of the satisfaction of man’s psychic needs.
  • fanynasutionhas quoted7 years ago
    Now, in our case, we are dealing with a far 119 deeper need––the nourishment of
  • fanynasutionhas quoted7 years ago
    It cannot be denied, however, that nourishment will be an essential factor in obtaining goodness, in the sense that it will eliminate all the evil acts, and the bitterness caused by lack of bread.
  • fanynasutionhas quoted7 years ago
    this reason, an educational method, which cultivates and protects the inner activities of the child, is not a question which concerns merely the school or the teachers; it is a universal question which concerns the family, and is of vital interest to mothers.
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