THE HISTORY OF THE MONTESSORI MOVEMENT
Nearly
100 years ago, an Italian physician inspired the birth of a worldwide
educational movement. Dr. Maria Montessori, one of Italy’s
first female physicians, became interested in education while caring
for mentally challenged children in a psychiatric clinic in Rome.
There she combined sensory-rich environments and hands-on experiential
techniques in the hopes of reaching children previously labeled
“deficient and insane.” The experiment was a resounding
success. Within two years, the children were able to pass Italy’s
standardized public school tests. More importantly, Montessori’s
innovative practices had elicited positive learning behaviors from
children previously left behind by society.
In 1907, Montessori continued shaping her learning model by opening
“A Children’s House” for pre-school children living
in the slums of San Lorenzo. With her scientific background to guide
her, she observed how young people learned best when engaged in
purposeful activity rather than simply being fed information. She
drew upon her clinical understanding of children’s cognitive
growth and development in constructing an educational framework
that would respect individuality and fulfill the needs of the “whole
child.” Dr. Montessori’s pioneering work created a blueprint
for nurturing all children –learning disabled to gifted—to
become the self-motivated, independent and life-long learners that
are the ultimate goal of today’s educational reform movement.
Since that time, Montessori’s philosophy, materials and practices
have spread around the globe and have been implemented in a variety
of cultural settings. Following Dr. Montessori’s death in
1952, the practice enjoyed a renaissance in America as parents sought
new learning options for their children. In 1960, parent and teacher
Dr. Nancy McCormick Rambusch founded the American Montessori
Society (AMS) to meet an overwhelming
public demand for more information on Montessori education.
Today, Dr. Montessori’s visionary ideas flourish as the cornerstone
of a thriving educational practice. There are thousands of Montessori
schools in the U.S. including hundreds of programs in public and
charter schools, where the interest in enrollment often results
in long waiting lists. However, because any school can call itself
“Montessori” – there is no trademark on the name
– AMS can only vouch for the authenticity of the programs
as practiced in schools that are members of the Society.
As more and more schools incorporated core elements of her model—multi-age
classrooms, early childhood education— Montessori became widely
recognized as being ahead of her time. Remarkably, her visionary
ideas remain viable concepts that have profoundly influenced the
entire educational landscape.
American Montessori Society
281 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10010-6102
212-358-1250
ams@amshq.org
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