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Marie M. Dugan 2009 Living Legacy
AMS
2009 Annual Conference
Thursday, February 26, 6 – 7:15 PM Address;
7:15 – 8:30 PM Reception
New Orleans, LA
To read Marie’s Living Legacy remarks (delivered
February 26, 2009), click
here.
With grace and distinction, as both a parent and an educator, Marie
M. Dugan has helped nurture the growth of the American Montessori
Society— and, indeed, the American Montessori movement—since the earliest days, when AMS founder Dr. Nancy McCormick Rambusch became her mentor and friend. Today, Marie most values the personal and professional connections that bind far-flung AMS members into a community that is committed to educating for peace and social justice. She enjoys documenting the unfolding history of the Society’s extended family through its living archives collection. And she appreciates the opportunity to speak for the rights of children as an AMS representative to the United Nations.
As AMS Living Legacy for 2009, Marie is particularly pleased to call
attention to the importance of financial support for teacher education. “Teachers are truly the heart of our schools,” she says. “If the Montessori movement is to continue to grow, our community must commit to developing more teachers. Contributions to the Living Legacy Scholarship Fund are urgently needed to help new teachers prepare at accredited Montessori teacher education centers.”
Marie currently provides consultation on Montessori practices for
both public and private schools and is cocoordinator for the Course
for Montessori School Management at the Center for Montessori Teacher
Education/NY. She began her professional career as an AMS-educated
teacher in 1971 at Wilmington Montessori School in Wilmington, DE,
where she served as head of school from 1980 to 2000. She now serves
on the school’s advisory board.
Throughout her career, Marie has been devoted to the American Montessori
Society. A member of the board of directors for 13 years, she often
found herself in the role of peacemaker as the group sought consensus.
She was AMS president for 5 years and the first chair of the Heads
Section. She continued her service to AMS through the School Accreditation
Commission and as chair of the Founders Fund. In 2004, Marie agreed
to take the position of interim executive director, leaving her home
and moving to New York City to help guide AMS through a complicated
transition. She currently chairs both the Archives Committee and
the Centennial Campaign Committee—which has raised a half million dollars for AMS and is a member of the Development Committee.
Our 2009 AMS Living Legacy has also made significant contributions
to education outside the Montessori community. In 1992, she became
a board member of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.
The same year, the governor appointed her to Delaware’s Day Care Regulations Task Force. She served on the board of directors of Delaware Futures from 2000 to 2005 and on the board for Connecting Generations from 2000 to 2006. In 2003, Marie became a charter member of the Early Age Education Advisory Committee for the Middle States Commission on Elementary Schools. She has served on the boards of the Delaware Association for the Education of Young Children and the Delaware Association of Independent Schools.
In 2001, Marie received the Community Service Award for Lifetime
Achievement from Creative Grandparenting, Inc. In 2005, she was awarded
the Alumnae Association Medallion Award from Misericordia University
and the Board of Directors Award from Wilmington Montessori School.
On a personal note, Marie and George Dugan recently celebrated their
50th wedding anniversary. They have three children, George, Joanne,
and Annette, and two grandsons, Hugo and Max.
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