www.montessoricentrewales.com
Influencing Global
Educational Reform
THE SCHOOL IN THE CLOUD
©Alan Evans 2012
www.montessoricentrewales.com
The Average Child’s Brain
www.montessoricentrewales.com
The Superior Teacher’s Brain
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Waldorf, Montessori & Reggio are the three progressive
approaches to early childhood education, which appear to be
growing in influence around the world, Edwards (2002).
All three approaches represent an explicit idealism and turn
away from war and violence towards peace and reconstruction.
They are built on coherent visions of how to improve human
society by helping children realise their full potential as
intelligent, creative whole persons.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
In each approach children are viewed as
•active authors of their own development
• strongly influenced by natural, dynamic, self righting forces
within themselves, opening the way towards growth and
learning.
•Teachers depend on carefully prepared aesthetically pleasing
environments that serve as a pedagogical tool and provide
strong messages about the curriculum and respect for children.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Montessori Teaching Style
•Unobtrusive director observing children in self directed
activity.
•Providing an atmosphere of productive calm for children to
concentrate and recover, allowing them to develop confidence
and inner discipline to the point of non intervention
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Dr. Maria Montessori
Maria Montessori was a brilliant figure who
was Italy's first woman physician.
Montessori reflected a late19th century vision
of mental development and theoretical kin-ship
with the great European progressive
educational philosophers, such as Rousseau,
Pestalozzi, Seguin and Itard.
She was convinced that children's natural
intelligence involved three aspects from the
very start:
• rational
• Empirical - observation
• spiritual
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Sensorial Education - Multi Sensory Materials
Montessori’s approach was far in
advance of the general
psychological understanding of her
time. Montessori developed
materials and a prepared
environment for the intellectual
training through sensory motor
modalities for children aged three
to six years of age.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Look At The Child
Dr. Montessori discovered the child’s
true nature by accident while observing
young children in their free, self
directed activity. Building on Seguin’s
work and materials, Dr. Montessori
found that young children came to
acquire surprising new outward
qualities of spontaneous self-discipline,
love of order, and a perfect harmony
with others.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
I Do And I Understand
According to Montessori the
understanding of the sensory
motor nature of the young
child’s intelligence stemmed
from acute observations of
children. Up until then the
idea of intelligence was
based on verbal development
and the manipulation of
visual images and ideas.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
LOOK AT THE CHILD
Both Montessori and
Piaget’s discoveries and
insights into the mind of the
child were achieved, not by
what Piaget described as
‘adultmorphic’ thinking
(seeing the child as a
miniature adult), but by
unbiased, astute, direct
observations of the child.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Piaget and Montessori
emphasized the necessity of
active interaction between
learner and the environment.
Piaget and Montessori also
emphasised the child’s
relationship with peers as the
principal means to overcoming
egocentrism in learning.
The Quality of the Environment Can Help or Hinder a Child’s Development
www.montessoricentrewales.com
The Montessori method encourages
accommodation to external reality rather
than assimilation to the personalized
motives and fantasies of the child
(spontaneous play).
Montessori and Piaget observed that
certain conditions were necessary for
optimal cognitive growth. Among these
conditions is the creation of learning
situations that involve particular kinds
and qualities of autonomy.
Autonomous Environments Work
www.montessoricentrewales.com
The child in the Montessori
classroom is allowed to learn
autonomously, which they receive
from the teacher. It is a very
special relationship based on the
teacher’s trust in the child to
reveal their true nature.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Piaget
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Jean Piaget is considered to have
been one of the worlds leading
child psychologists. Piaget also
spoke of sensory motor
intelligence as the first period of
intellectual development from age
two to six years.
Sensory motor intelligence rests
mainly on actions (doing) on
movements and perceptions
without language but coordinated
in a relatively stable way.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
According to Penn (2005) Piaget
turned the tables on an approach to
early childhood, which aimed at
filling up the child’s head with
knowledge.
Piaget argued that children had to
find things out for themselves
through experimentation and their
own free thinking.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
The Plowden Report
In 1967 the U.K. Government published
a major review of primary and nursery
education known as the Plowden Report.
Richards (1984) suggests that the
principles underlying Plowden’s reports
were attacked by critics for being too
‘child centred’ and for neglecting the
importance of teaching as a way of
initiating the young into public forms of
knowledge.
Bridget Horatia Plowden
Source: www.npg.org.uk
www.montessoricentrewales.com
The members of the review board for the Plowden report
were impressed with Piaget’s theories and suggested that
schooling should be radically changed from a teacher in
front of the class to many different areas from where a
child could draw on concrete experiences with play and
learning materials.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
‘Underlying all educational questions is the nature of the child himself
…’ (p.1) “At the heart of the educational process is the child. No
(educational) advances … have their desired effect unless they are in
harmony with the nature of the child, unless they are fundamentally
acceptable to him …’ (p7).
Plowden (1967)
www.montessoricentrewales.com
We may assert that all effective learning involves personal
change and the most effective kinds of learning seem to be those
in which the learner is the initiator of the change and involves
himself in active commerce with the learning materials e.g.
autonomous experiential learning through play.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
A requirement for cognitive growth is the
psychological climate in which the child is free to
spend at least some of his time exploring his
world with complete autonomy.
When we interfere with a child’s play, when we
influence his modes of behaviour, when we
impose our beliefs upon him, we may be
performing a service but we may be unaware of
the harm we are doing.
Children in school and at home are frequently
forced to assume a purely passive position in
which he is required to register and later
reproduce material that has been imposed upon
him.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
We tend to treat children according to the group they are
placed in by age, ability, socio economic background and
many other factors.
‘It is as if the most important thing about them is their date
of manufacture’, Sir Ken Robinson, (2012).
www.montessoricentrewales.com
‘a return to a simple academic model of basic subjects taught in disciplined
environments where children are regarded a vessels to be filled with knowledge,’
Gerver (2013).
According to an Adobe Creativity study (2012) Companies are looking for more than
graduates who can do specific tasks so they want employees who can also think
differently and innovate. To be successful, students need an education that
emphasizes creative thinking, communication, and teamwork.
Richard Gerver
Leading academic thinkers Richard Gerver and Sir Ken Robinson
are calling for reform in the education system.
Gerver (2012) believes that we are still basing our education
system on the old model of time and motion developed by Taylor
(1911). Robinson believes we should encourage creativity and
divergent thinking. Both are involved in reforming education
around the world through human potential and creativity but here
in the U.K. the call is for
www.montessoricentrewales.com
HOT MANAGEMENT IN EARLY YEARS AND SCHOOLS
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ck-KrObORfI
Children using a model of the
lung. The children were given
the tools to experiment and
diagrams to make models
including electrical circuitry.
They also made and broadcast
their own radio shows.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
KEN ROBINSON, (2012)
What we have in schools today is
• DIVERSITY V UNIFORMITY
• CREATIVITY V COMPLIANCE
• LINEARITY V ORGANIC
• EMPATHY V UNIMAGINABLE HARM
• THE ART OF PEDAGOGY V DELIVERY
SOLUTIONS
• PERSONALISE EDUCATION
• OFFER A WIDE RANGING CURRICULUM
• TEACHING IS AN ART FORM NOT A DISCIPLINE
• ASSESSMENT BASED ON MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES
• CULTURE ALLOWED TO FLOURISH
Sir Ken Robinson
Source: www.gvsu.edu/business/home-1.htm
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Dr. Steven Hughes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LcNvTPX4Q08
HIGHLY RECOMMEND VIEWING
http://www.goodatdoingthings.com/GoodAtDoingThings/Selected_Screencasts.html
Dr. Maria Montessori and Dr.Steven Hughes - ‘The hands are the chief teacher of the child.’
Source: www.tovatest.com/news/Fall2008_Newsletter
www.montessoricentrewales.com
“It appeared that he might be receiving training in the kind of veridical
sequential perception we have called sharpening-that is, the
experiencing of new stimuli in their own right, independent of what has
happened before.” This research led Gardner to conclude, “The
evidence has been so impressive that we hesitate to accept, without
qualification, any view of child development that does not include
recognition of this degree of individuality.”
Gardener’s (1966) research into
individual differences in memory reveal
that the individual differences in
children can be constrained according
to their early experiences especially in
relation to memory and cognitive skills.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Howard Gardener
Multiple Intelligence Theory
Intrapersonal
Interpersonal
Musical
Spatial
Kinesthetic
Verbal/Linguistic
Logical Mathematical
Credit: Peter Gregoire
www.montessoricentrewales.com
The curriculum was thematic, and the centres provided seven different ways for the
students to learn the subject matter. Each day began with a brief lecture and discussion
explaining one aspect of the current theme. For example, during a unit on outer space,
the morning’s lecture might focus on spiral galaxies.
After the morning lecture, a timer was set and students in groups of three or four
started work at their centres, eventually rotating through all seven.
Bruce Campbell
Bruce Campbell (1999) implemented Gardner’s theory in an
educational setting by organising his third grade classroom
in Marysville, Washington, into seven learning centres, each
dedicated to one of the seven intelligences. The students
spent approximately two-thirds of each school day moving
through the centres 15 to 20 minutes at each centre.
Source: www.corwin.com/authors/528294
www.montessoricentrewales.com
What kinds of learning activities take place at each centre?
All students learn each day’s lesson in seven ways. They build models, dance, make collaborative
decisions, create songs, solve deductive reasoning problems, read, write, and illustrate all in one school
day. Some more specific examples of activities at each centre follow:
In the Personal Work Centre (Intrapersonal Intelligence), students explore the present area of study
through research, reflection, or individual projects.
In the Working Together Centre (Interpersonal Intelligence), they develop cooperative learning skills
as they solve problems, answer questions, create learning games, brainstorm ideas and discuss that day’s
topic collaboratively.
In the Music Centre (Musical Intelligence), students compose and sing songs about the subject matter,
make their own instruments, and learn in rhythmical ways.
In the Art Centre (Spatial Intelligence), they explore a subject area using diverse art media,
manipulables, puzzles, charts, and pictures.
In the Building Centre (Kinesthetic Intelligence), they build models, dramatize events, and dance, all in
ways that relate to the content of that day’s subject matter.
In the Reading Centre (Verbal/Linguistic Intelligence), students read, write, and learn in many
traditional modes. They analyze and organize information in written form.
In the Math & Science Centre (Logical/ Mathematical Intelligence), they work with math games,
manipulatives, mathematical concepts, science experiments, deductive reasoning, and problem solving.
and reasoning.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Self Organised Learning Environments - S.O.L.E.
Sugata Mitra placed a computer in a hole in a wall in a slum and
replicated this experiment across India.
The hypothesis was whether education was effected by
•Remoteness of education
•Teachers
•Infrastructure
•Maintenance of infrastructure
The tests were carried out on children in communities across India.
Measured performance was based on distance from Delhi.
Results were not correlated to size of class, quality of infrastructure
and not related to poverty.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Teachers were asked would you like to move?
•69% yes
•I wish I were in another school impacts on results
Conclusion. Teacher motivation effects children’s learning
Observations
ET is piloted in the best schools
Impact is limited because they already have what they want
Conclusion ET is over hyped and underperforming
Take the same into a remote school and the impact is far greater
Conclusion. ET is better used at bottom of pyramid
www.montessoricentrewales.com
The first hole in the wall experiment took place in New Delhi in 1999.
Mitra’s office bordered a slum. He cut a hole in the wall and put in a
PC a touch pad and high speed Internet.
Questions asked were
Is this real?
Does the language matter?
Will the computer last?
Will they break it?
Will they steal it?
Source: www.perceptum.nl
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Mitra took the experiment to a number of poor areas where children
taught each other to browse, use the computer.
Three months after leaving the computer in a rural area where no
English was spoken children were using 200 English words. Mitra was
funded to replicate the experiment. Children found a website to teach
themselves the English alphabet. Younger children began teaching
older children.
Results of experiment
6 to 13 year olds can self construct - teach themselves in groups if you
lift adult intervention.
Results showed the same learning curve you would get in a school.
300 children were computer literate within 6 months with one
computer. 8 year olds live in a society, which says don’t do that don’t
touch.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Can A Teacher Be Replaced By A Machine?
Source: http://lifestarstgeorge.com/blog/?p=489Source: http://www.montana.edu/ttt/school_admin.php
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Conclusion
•Primary education can happen independently
•Not imposed from top down
•Can be self organising
•Natural systems are all self organising
•Values are acquired doctrine and dogma are imposed
If They Can They Should Be
Source: lrnteach.com blog
www.montessoricentrewales.com
Sugata Mitra is working on providing an alternative to traditional
education through his ‘Granny Clouds’ where children teach
themselves and tackle the big questions.
The results of his work are startling and challenge any educated
mind into rethinking education.
Isn’t that why we became teachers?
Do we stop learning?
Do we dismiss the research in favour of maintaining the status
quo?
Do we continue with a system, which has been overtaken by the
rest of the world?
www.montessoricentrewales.com
A CHANGE IS GONNA COME
Cultural change is organic from the ground up but people are desperately clinging on to
the old or suggesting we reinstate and update the old.
The future is with the alternative
Revolution does not require permission
It does not start from the top
It is not politicians leading the way
There is a global shift feeding off child and parental unrest.
The effort of constraining talent is greater than the effort in releasing it.
‘All mankind is divided into three classes: those that are immovable, those that are movable, and
those that move.’ Benjamin Franklin
Don’t waste too much time, move around them.
Work with the movable and the movers
www.montessoricentrewales.com
In conclusion, Montessori education places the child firmly at the centre of the process and
relies on observation of the child to lead and inform the adult. The relationship between child
and adult is the key to the success or failure of the method.
The Plowden report was revolutionary and should have had a much stronger effect on nursery
and primary provision given that its statement of overall aims included what we now know as
the main premise of Montessori education, i.e.
“At the heart of the educational process is the child. No (educational) advances … have their
desired effect unless they are in harmony with the nature of the child, unless they are
fundamentally acceptable to him …’ .
Autonomy and individuality are also a key factors in the delivery of educational methods. How
that autonomy and individuality transpires differs from place to place and again is dependent on
the adults within the environment. Gardner goes so far as to hesitate to accept any view of child
development that does not recognise the possibility of a high degree of individuality brought
about through the skills that every individual uses to process, categorize and make sense out of
what we see, hear, taste, smell, and touch. The Montessori provision is all about just that if
delivered true to the original philosophy. Montessori has been providing self organised learning
environments for over a century catering for multiple intelligences.
www.montessoricentrewales.com
References
Adobe, 2012. http://www.adobe.com/aboutadobe/pressroom/pdfs/Adobe_Creativity_and_Education_Why_It_Matters_study.pdf
Campbell, B. 1999. The Learning Revolution, Education innovations for global citizens
Edwards, C. Gandini, L. & Forman, G. (Eds.). 1998. The hundred languages of children:
Edwards, C. P. 2002, Katz & Cesarone, (1994) New (2000). Three Approaches from Europe: Waldorf, Montessori and Reggio Emilia.
The Reggio Emillia approach-Advanced reflections (2nd ed.).
Gardener, H. 1993. http://www.multipleintelligencetheory.co.uk
Gardner, W. R. 1966, The Elementary School Journal, Vol. 67, No. 2 pp. 72-83.
Gerver, R. 2013 http://www.richardgerver.com/blog/
Hughes, S. 2010. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LcNvTPX4Q08
Mitra, S. 2013. http://www.ted.com/talks/sugata_mitra_build_a_school_in_the_cloud.html
Penn, H. 2005, Understanding Early Childhood, Issues and controversies, Open University Press.
Peters, R. S. (Ed.) 1969, A Critique of Plowden's ‘Recognisable Philosophy of Education.’
Richards, C. 1984, The Study Of Primary Education, The Falmer Press.
Robinson, K 2012. http://www.educationrevolution.org/blog/kenrobinson
Taylor, F. W. 1911, The Principles of scientific management. http://www.ibiblio.org/eldritch/fwt/ti.html
Wilson, P. 1974, Plowden’s ‘Facts’ About Children: A Child Centred-Critique.
http://www.npgprints.com/image/70750/mayotte-magnus-bridget-horatia-nee-richmond-lady-plowden
Resources
S.O.L.E. toolkit http://www.ted.com/pages/sole_toolkit
Richard Gerver and Sir Ken Robinson http://www.amazon.co.uk/Creating-Tomorrows-Schools-Today
Free Montesori learning resources www.montessoricentrewales.ning.com

A SCHOOL IN THE CLOUD

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Waldorf, Montessori &Reggio are the three progressive approaches to early childhood education, which appear to be growing in influence around the world, Edwards (2002). All three approaches represent an explicit idealism and turn away from war and violence towards peace and reconstruction. They are built on coherent visions of how to improve human society by helping children realise their full potential as intelligent, creative whole persons.
  • 5.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com In each approachchildren are viewed as •active authors of their own development • strongly influenced by natural, dynamic, self righting forces within themselves, opening the way towards growth and learning. •Teachers depend on carefully prepared aesthetically pleasing environments that serve as a pedagogical tool and provide strong messages about the curriculum and respect for children.
  • 6.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Montessori Teaching Style •Unobtrusivedirector observing children in self directed activity. •Providing an atmosphere of productive calm for children to concentrate and recover, allowing them to develop confidence and inner discipline to the point of non intervention
  • 7.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Dr. Maria Montessori MariaMontessori was a brilliant figure who was Italy's first woman physician. Montessori reflected a late19th century vision of mental development and theoretical kin-ship with the great European progressive educational philosophers, such as Rousseau, Pestalozzi, Seguin and Itard. She was convinced that children's natural intelligence involved three aspects from the very start: • rational • Empirical - observation • spiritual
  • 8.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Sensorial Education -Multi Sensory Materials Montessori’s approach was far in advance of the general psychological understanding of her time. Montessori developed materials and a prepared environment for the intellectual training through sensory motor modalities for children aged three to six years of age.
  • 9.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Look At TheChild Dr. Montessori discovered the child’s true nature by accident while observing young children in their free, self directed activity. Building on Seguin’s work and materials, Dr. Montessori found that young children came to acquire surprising new outward qualities of spontaneous self-discipline, love of order, and a perfect harmony with others.
  • 10.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com I Do AndI Understand According to Montessori the understanding of the sensory motor nature of the young child’s intelligence stemmed from acute observations of children. Up until then the idea of intelligence was based on verbal development and the manipulation of visual images and ideas.
  • 11.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com LOOK AT THECHILD Both Montessori and Piaget’s discoveries and insights into the mind of the child were achieved, not by what Piaget described as ‘adultmorphic’ thinking (seeing the child as a miniature adult), but by unbiased, astute, direct observations of the child.
  • 12.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Piaget and Montessori emphasizedthe necessity of active interaction between learner and the environment. Piaget and Montessori also emphasised the child’s relationship with peers as the principal means to overcoming egocentrism in learning. The Quality of the Environment Can Help or Hinder a Child’s Development
  • 13.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com The Montessori methodencourages accommodation to external reality rather than assimilation to the personalized motives and fantasies of the child (spontaneous play). Montessori and Piaget observed that certain conditions were necessary for optimal cognitive growth. Among these conditions is the creation of learning situations that involve particular kinds and qualities of autonomy. Autonomous Environments Work
  • 14.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com The child inthe Montessori classroom is allowed to learn autonomously, which they receive from the teacher. It is a very special relationship based on the teacher’s trust in the child to reveal their true nature.
  • 15.
  • 16.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Jean Piaget isconsidered to have been one of the worlds leading child psychologists. Piaget also spoke of sensory motor intelligence as the first period of intellectual development from age two to six years. Sensory motor intelligence rests mainly on actions (doing) on movements and perceptions without language but coordinated in a relatively stable way.
  • 17.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com According to Penn(2005) Piaget turned the tables on an approach to early childhood, which aimed at filling up the child’s head with knowledge. Piaget argued that children had to find things out for themselves through experimentation and their own free thinking.
  • 18.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com The Plowden Report In1967 the U.K. Government published a major review of primary and nursery education known as the Plowden Report. Richards (1984) suggests that the principles underlying Plowden’s reports were attacked by critics for being too ‘child centred’ and for neglecting the importance of teaching as a way of initiating the young into public forms of knowledge. Bridget Horatia Plowden Source: www.npg.org.uk
  • 19.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com The members ofthe review board for the Plowden report were impressed with Piaget’s theories and suggested that schooling should be radically changed from a teacher in front of the class to many different areas from where a child could draw on concrete experiences with play and learning materials.
  • 20.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com ‘Underlying all educationalquestions is the nature of the child himself …’ (p.1) “At the heart of the educational process is the child. No (educational) advances … have their desired effect unless they are in harmony with the nature of the child, unless they are fundamentally acceptable to him …’ (p7). Plowden (1967)
  • 21.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com We may assertthat all effective learning involves personal change and the most effective kinds of learning seem to be those in which the learner is the initiator of the change and involves himself in active commerce with the learning materials e.g. autonomous experiential learning through play.
  • 22.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com A requirement forcognitive growth is the psychological climate in which the child is free to spend at least some of his time exploring his world with complete autonomy. When we interfere with a child’s play, when we influence his modes of behaviour, when we impose our beliefs upon him, we may be performing a service but we may be unaware of the harm we are doing. Children in school and at home are frequently forced to assume a purely passive position in which he is required to register and later reproduce material that has been imposed upon him.
  • 23.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com We tend totreat children according to the group they are placed in by age, ability, socio economic background and many other factors. ‘It is as if the most important thing about them is their date of manufacture’, Sir Ken Robinson, (2012).
  • 24.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com ‘a return toa simple academic model of basic subjects taught in disciplined environments where children are regarded a vessels to be filled with knowledge,’ Gerver (2013). According to an Adobe Creativity study (2012) Companies are looking for more than graduates who can do specific tasks so they want employees who can also think differently and innovate. To be successful, students need an education that emphasizes creative thinking, communication, and teamwork. Richard Gerver Leading academic thinkers Richard Gerver and Sir Ken Robinson are calling for reform in the education system. Gerver (2012) believes that we are still basing our education system on the old model of time and motion developed by Taylor (1911). Robinson believes we should encourage creativity and divergent thinking. Both are involved in reforming education around the world through human potential and creativity but here in the U.K. the call is for
  • 25.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com HOT MANAGEMENT INEARLY YEARS AND SCHOOLS http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ck-KrObORfI Children using a model of the lung. The children were given the tools to experiment and diagrams to make models including electrical circuitry. They also made and broadcast their own radio shows.
  • 26.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com KEN ROBINSON, (2012) Whatwe have in schools today is • DIVERSITY V UNIFORMITY • CREATIVITY V COMPLIANCE • LINEARITY V ORGANIC • EMPATHY V UNIMAGINABLE HARM • THE ART OF PEDAGOGY V DELIVERY SOLUTIONS • PERSONALISE EDUCATION • OFFER A WIDE RANGING CURRICULUM • TEACHING IS AN ART FORM NOT A DISCIPLINE • ASSESSMENT BASED ON MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCES • CULTURE ALLOWED TO FLOURISH Sir Ken Robinson Source: www.gvsu.edu/business/home-1.htm
  • 27.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Dr. Steven Hughes http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LcNvTPX4Q08 HIGHLYRECOMMEND VIEWING http://www.goodatdoingthings.com/GoodAtDoingThings/Selected_Screencasts.html Dr. Maria Montessori and Dr.Steven Hughes - ‘The hands are the chief teacher of the child.’ Source: www.tovatest.com/news/Fall2008_Newsletter
  • 28.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com “It appeared thathe might be receiving training in the kind of veridical sequential perception we have called sharpening-that is, the experiencing of new stimuli in their own right, independent of what has happened before.” This research led Gardner to conclude, “The evidence has been so impressive that we hesitate to accept, without qualification, any view of child development that does not include recognition of this degree of individuality.” Gardener’s (1966) research into individual differences in memory reveal that the individual differences in children can be constrained according to their early experiences especially in relation to memory and cognitive skills.
  • 29.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Howard Gardener Multiple IntelligenceTheory Intrapersonal Interpersonal Musical Spatial Kinesthetic Verbal/Linguistic Logical Mathematical Credit: Peter Gregoire
  • 30.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com The curriculum wasthematic, and the centres provided seven different ways for the students to learn the subject matter. Each day began with a brief lecture and discussion explaining one aspect of the current theme. For example, during a unit on outer space, the morning’s lecture might focus on spiral galaxies. After the morning lecture, a timer was set and students in groups of three or four started work at their centres, eventually rotating through all seven. Bruce Campbell Bruce Campbell (1999) implemented Gardner’s theory in an educational setting by organising his third grade classroom in Marysville, Washington, into seven learning centres, each dedicated to one of the seven intelligences. The students spent approximately two-thirds of each school day moving through the centres 15 to 20 minutes at each centre. Source: www.corwin.com/authors/528294
  • 31.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com What kinds oflearning activities take place at each centre? All students learn each day’s lesson in seven ways. They build models, dance, make collaborative decisions, create songs, solve deductive reasoning problems, read, write, and illustrate all in one school day. Some more specific examples of activities at each centre follow: In the Personal Work Centre (Intrapersonal Intelligence), students explore the present area of study through research, reflection, or individual projects. In the Working Together Centre (Interpersonal Intelligence), they develop cooperative learning skills as they solve problems, answer questions, create learning games, brainstorm ideas and discuss that day’s topic collaboratively. In the Music Centre (Musical Intelligence), students compose and sing songs about the subject matter, make their own instruments, and learn in rhythmical ways. In the Art Centre (Spatial Intelligence), they explore a subject area using diverse art media, manipulables, puzzles, charts, and pictures. In the Building Centre (Kinesthetic Intelligence), they build models, dramatize events, and dance, all in ways that relate to the content of that day’s subject matter. In the Reading Centre (Verbal/Linguistic Intelligence), students read, write, and learn in many traditional modes. They analyze and organize information in written form. In the Math & Science Centre (Logical/ Mathematical Intelligence), they work with math games, manipulatives, mathematical concepts, science experiments, deductive reasoning, and problem solving. and reasoning.
  • 32.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Self Organised LearningEnvironments - S.O.L.E. Sugata Mitra placed a computer in a hole in a wall in a slum and replicated this experiment across India. The hypothesis was whether education was effected by •Remoteness of education •Teachers •Infrastructure •Maintenance of infrastructure The tests were carried out on children in communities across India. Measured performance was based on distance from Delhi. Results were not correlated to size of class, quality of infrastructure and not related to poverty.
  • 33.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Teachers were askedwould you like to move? •69% yes •I wish I were in another school impacts on results Conclusion. Teacher motivation effects children’s learning Observations ET is piloted in the best schools Impact is limited because they already have what they want Conclusion ET is over hyped and underperforming Take the same into a remote school and the impact is far greater Conclusion. ET is better used at bottom of pyramid
  • 34.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com The first holein the wall experiment took place in New Delhi in 1999. Mitra’s office bordered a slum. He cut a hole in the wall and put in a PC a touch pad and high speed Internet. Questions asked were Is this real? Does the language matter? Will the computer last? Will they break it? Will they steal it? Source: www.perceptum.nl
  • 35.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Mitra took theexperiment to a number of poor areas where children taught each other to browse, use the computer. Three months after leaving the computer in a rural area where no English was spoken children were using 200 English words. Mitra was funded to replicate the experiment. Children found a website to teach themselves the English alphabet. Younger children began teaching older children. Results of experiment 6 to 13 year olds can self construct - teach themselves in groups if you lift adult intervention. Results showed the same learning curve you would get in a school. 300 children were computer literate within 6 months with one computer. 8 year olds live in a society, which says don’t do that don’t touch.
  • 36.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Can A TeacherBe Replaced By A Machine? Source: http://lifestarstgeorge.com/blog/?p=489Source: http://www.montana.edu/ttt/school_admin.php
  • 37.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Conclusion •Primary education canhappen independently •Not imposed from top down •Can be self organising •Natural systems are all self organising •Values are acquired doctrine and dogma are imposed If They Can They Should Be Source: lrnteach.com blog
  • 38.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com Sugata Mitra isworking on providing an alternative to traditional education through his ‘Granny Clouds’ where children teach themselves and tackle the big questions. The results of his work are startling and challenge any educated mind into rethinking education. Isn’t that why we became teachers? Do we stop learning? Do we dismiss the research in favour of maintaining the status quo? Do we continue with a system, which has been overtaken by the rest of the world?
  • 39.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com A CHANGE ISGONNA COME Cultural change is organic from the ground up but people are desperately clinging on to the old or suggesting we reinstate and update the old. The future is with the alternative Revolution does not require permission It does not start from the top It is not politicians leading the way There is a global shift feeding off child and parental unrest. The effort of constraining talent is greater than the effort in releasing it. ‘All mankind is divided into three classes: those that are immovable, those that are movable, and those that move.’ Benjamin Franklin Don’t waste too much time, move around them. Work with the movable and the movers
  • 40.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com In conclusion, Montessorieducation places the child firmly at the centre of the process and relies on observation of the child to lead and inform the adult. The relationship between child and adult is the key to the success or failure of the method. The Plowden report was revolutionary and should have had a much stronger effect on nursery and primary provision given that its statement of overall aims included what we now know as the main premise of Montessori education, i.e. “At the heart of the educational process is the child. No (educational) advances … have their desired effect unless they are in harmony with the nature of the child, unless they are fundamentally acceptable to him …’ . Autonomy and individuality are also a key factors in the delivery of educational methods. How that autonomy and individuality transpires differs from place to place and again is dependent on the adults within the environment. Gardner goes so far as to hesitate to accept any view of child development that does not recognise the possibility of a high degree of individuality brought about through the skills that every individual uses to process, categorize and make sense out of what we see, hear, taste, smell, and touch. The Montessori provision is all about just that if delivered true to the original philosophy. Montessori has been providing self organised learning environments for over a century catering for multiple intelligences.
  • 41.
    www.montessoricentrewales.com References Adobe, 2012. http://www.adobe.com/aboutadobe/pressroom/pdfs/Adobe_Creativity_and_Education_Why_It_Matters_study.pdf Campbell,B. 1999. The Learning Revolution, Education innovations for global citizens Edwards, C. Gandini, L. & Forman, G. (Eds.). 1998. The hundred languages of children: Edwards, C. P. 2002, Katz & Cesarone, (1994) New (2000). Three Approaches from Europe: Waldorf, Montessori and Reggio Emilia. The Reggio Emillia approach-Advanced reflections (2nd ed.). Gardener, H. 1993. http://www.multipleintelligencetheory.co.uk Gardner, W. R. 1966, The Elementary School Journal, Vol. 67, No. 2 pp. 72-83. Gerver, R. 2013 http://www.richardgerver.com/blog/ Hughes, S. 2010. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LcNvTPX4Q08 Mitra, S. 2013. http://www.ted.com/talks/sugata_mitra_build_a_school_in_the_cloud.html Penn, H. 2005, Understanding Early Childhood, Issues and controversies, Open University Press. Peters, R. S. (Ed.) 1969, A Critique of Plowden's ‘Recognisable Philosophy of Education.’ Richards, C. 1984, The Study Of Primary Education, The Falmer Press. Robinson, K 2012. http://www.educationrevolution.org/blog/kenrobinson Taylor, F. W. 1911, The Principles of scientific management. http://www.ibiblio.org/eldritch/fwt/ti.html Wilson, P. 1974, Plowden’s ‘Facts’ About Children: A Child Centred-Critique. http://www.npgprints.com/image/70750/mayotte-magnus-bridget-horatia-nee-richmond-lady-plowden Resources S.O.L.E. toolkit http://www.ted.com/pages/sole_toolkit Richard Gerver and Sir Ken Robinson http://www.amazon.co.uk/Creating-Tomorrows-Schools-Today Free Montesori learning resources www.montessoricentrewales.ning.com

Editor's Notes

  • #12 In 2012 I sent out invitations to the director of education in the regional areas of Wales. The only response I received was from Ceredigion where a secretary returned an email saying that Montessori would no be coming to Ceredigion.