'Communications - 2001/1'

'Communications' is the journal of the Association Montessori Internationale. This publication includes articles by Dr Montessori as well as scholarly papers on Montessori and related topics. Currently, two issues are published each year. AMI also produces a newsletter 'The AMI Bulletin' which is published three times a year and features Montessori news and articles from around the world. 'Communications' and the 'Bulletin' are sent to all members of AMI. Click here to become a member of AMI. Please note: AMI membership is open to individuals only.

 Listing of AMI 'Communications' 

Highlights from 'Communications 2008/2'

Contents

Editorial
Harald Ludwig

Empirical Research and Observation

Montessori and Empirical Research—an Introduction
Harald Ludwig
The author details how Maria Montessori set up an early research project at three Roman schools that was mainly anthropologically driven. It includes vivid descriptions of how Montessori implements anthropological methodologies. Observation also plays an important role.

Some Suggestions and Remarks upon Observing Children
Maria Montessori
Montessori elaborates on the crucial role of Observation. The article is the synthesis of two lectures on the 1921 London course.

Researching Montessori: What Matters and Why
Jacqueline Cossentino
Focusing on the United States, the article discusses two recent influential studies. The author makes a strong plea for new and broad research across various disciplines.

Recent Empirical Research on Montessori Education in Italy
Clara Tornar
Some recent pilot projects in Italy are discussed, among which “The Identity of the Montessori School” and “Learning to Learn in Montessori Schools.”

Recent Empirical Research on Montessori Education in Germany
Harald Ludwig
With an introduction to VERA 2004, a comparative research project in German. The article also includes a summary of a study into furthering creativity through Montessori education.

The Scientific Topicality of the Montessori Model
Clara Tornar
This article offers a precise description on the how’s and why’s of the Montessori model.

Cosmic Education

Cosmic Education, Fourth Lecture
Maria Montessori (1936)
Montessori talks extensively about sea life, continuing her descriptions of the interconnectedness of all organisms on earth, however small, and revels in the wonder of coral reefs and their creation.

Theory & Practice

Question and Answer: Observation in the Elementary Classroom
Kay Baker
An article filled with suggestions on how to develop observation habits in the elementary classroom.

Montessori and Tools for Life
An Interview with Henk Barendregt, chair of chair of Foundations of Mathematics and Computer Science at Nijmegen University – and Montessori student from 4-17.

The Absorbent Mind
Paul Pillai
The author shares with use the cosmic elements of Montessori’s achievements, and tells an inviting story on man’s reasoning power, and the intelligence of the mind.

Photographs and illustrations in this issue courtesy of Henk Barendregt, Juergen Gebhard, Clara Tornar, AMI Archives

Editorial

To Maria Montessori it was self-evident that her approach to education had a scientific base: it clearly shows from the title of her first book on pedagogy (1909), which termed her work as Pedagogia Scientifica*; moreover, if we realize that she had been trained for many years as a physician, scientist and anthropologist, we will know that she “grew up” on empirical methods. Empirical research bases its findings on direct or indirect observation to help describe and interpret reality.

Methodical observation is the pivotal element, and the key to science—the gathering of empirical knowledge. The researcher and scientist attempt to describe as faithfully as possible what interactions, what behaviours, what phenomena are being observed. Montessori always argued that she did not test preconceived ideas, but rather deducted her ideas from what was observed again and again. On the other hand, she emphasized that she would not have been able to understand the observed phenomena without her theoretical training**. In her early years she preferred the classical methods of exact measuring. Later she more and more turned to methods of understanding observation. She would encourage the new teachers to be scientists: the teacher should not lay a matrix over a classroom and expect the children to fit snugly into a mould. Instead, observation and interpretation of the individual child should always be the basis for the teacher’s work with the children, and they should be guided by practical experience on the basis of a theoretical training.

Empirical methods, observation and research are the main themes that run through this issue of Communications. The various articles provide insightful arguments concerning their importance, tell of research past and present, and make a connection to Montessori practice historical and topical.

Our first theme article “Montessori and Empirical Research—an Introduction” details how Maria Montessori set up an early research project at three Roman schools which was mainly anthropologically driven— it includes vivid descriptions of how Montessori implemented the methodology learnt from her anthropological studies, and demonstrates how she applied her training in the science of observation, measuring and noting facts and how this basic attitude continued to impact and direct her further thinking. The article also shows the change in Montessori’s way of thinking after her experiences in the Children’s House in San Lorenzo. She more and more recognized that pedagogy cannot be built on empirical research alone, but also needs other ways of obtaining knowledge as it is done in the wide field of humanities especially by hermeneutic methods.

In “Some Suggestions and Remarks upon Observing Children” Montessori provides the “proof” of her guiding principle. The article is the synthesis of two lectures that she gave on observation during her 1921 London course. It combines profound philosophical reflections on the value of observation, the fundamental points underlying it, whilst also giving some very concrete and practical examples.

“Researching Montessori: What Matters and Why” perceptively outlines how Montessori and her co-workers passed on her findings mainly through an oral tradition: by giving courses and public lectures. Jacqueline Cossentino traces some key trends in the  history of research on Montessori and reviews two recent studies, advocating rigorous Montessori research across various disciplines.   Clara Tornar argues along the same lines in her “Report on Recent Empirical Research on Montessori Education in Italy.” The author observes that after many years of neglect by Italian universities, the academic research of Montessori pedagogy has in recent years made a healthy come-back. The article pays particular attention to some pilot projects that have been concluded, and makes a vigorous plea for broadening the horizons of exploration.

Similarly “Recent Empirical Research on Montessori Education in Germany” sketches quite comprehensively the current “state” of Montessori research, whilst making some useful links to history. The main research project discussed here is VERA 2004, a comparative research project that tested the levels of 9 to 10-year-olds in the fields of Mathematics and German. The article also includes a summary of a recent empirical study carried out on furthering creativity through Montessori education.

The second contribution by Clara Tornar is “The Scientific Topicality of the Montessori Model” a lecture she gave last year at a Centenary Conference in Stockholm. She offers a precise description on the how’s and why’s of the Montessori model, and provides four main charts that show how—at various levels—input generates output in a Montessori setting.

In our Question and Answer Section, Kay Baker joins the ranks of the authors in this issue who address the importance of observation, and discusses how to use this tool in the Elementary classroom. Taking a very broad outlook, outlining the purpose of observation, she asks many pertinent questions and provides clear answers. The article offers a helpful and detailed insight into the practice of observation, and shows the teacher how she can observe her own role and self-monitor her work.

In our series “Cosmic Education lectures from the archives,” we are bringing you the fourth lecture that Maria Montessori gave in the winter extension of the 21st training course. She continues her descriptions of the interconnectedness of all organisms on earth, however small, and revels in the wonder of coral reefs and their creation.

In “Montessori and Tools for Life” the reader will meet Dutch mathematical logician Henk Barendregt, who from 4-17 attended Montessori schools. In this interview he shares his deep appreciation of Montessori education, and links some of the crucial “conquests” in Montessori to his love of Mathematics and Buddhism.

In conclusion, in “The Absorbent Mind” Paul Pillai sketches some of the cosmic elements of Montessori’s achievements. Similarly to her argument that all is connected and everything works in the service of our world, Pillai writes that Montessori’s ideas, methods and philosophy were fed by the society in which she grew up, and by the scholars and scientists that went before her. His argument culminates in his description of the power of the human mind.

We hope you will enjoy this issue and would be very glad of your feedback. You can contact the editorial board via .

Harald Ludwig

* Il metodo della pedagogia scientifica applicato all’educazione infantile nelle Case dei Bambini (Città di Castello, 1909)
** Cf. Montessori, Maria, “The Two Natures of the Child” (1933) in Communications 4 (1995) pp. 4-9

Editorial Board

Kay Baker PhD., director of training at the elementary (6-12) level, the Washington Montessori Institute

Alexander Henny, member of the Communications Board Committee

Professor Dr Harald Ludwig, co-chair, professor emeritus of the Montessori Centre at the University of Münster, Germany and editor-in-chief of the German magazine Montessori

Renilde Montessori, director of training at the primary level (3-6) (retired), president emerita of AMI

Rita Schaefer Zener PhD., co-chair, trainer at the primary level (3-6), AMI examiner and consultant