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Maria Montessori
As
a medical resident, Dr. Montessori
came into contact with mentally disabled children. This helped her to
understand that mental disability is not only a medical problem
but also a pedagogical issue. From that moment on she was deeply
involved in education and pedagogy.
She discovered that
sensory experiences preceded intellectual accomplishments. She
designed materials to train the various senses and achieve good results
with the mentally disabled. The use of sensorial exercises is an
important aspect of Montessori's method as well.
While working with Mentally disabled children, she realized they were
capable of learning much more than she had expected. They were
even taught how to read. This proved to Montessori that much was
suppressed or held back in normal children during their education.
She began to search for the reasons that in her words, "could keep the
happy healthy children of the common schools on so low a plane that they
could be equaled in tests of intelligence by my unfortunate pupils!"
After much research Dr. Montessori carefully observed how these children
learned and she realized the key,
overlooked potential!
This query led Dr. Montessori
to a conviction; to devote her energies to the field of education rather
than medicine for the remainder of her life.
To
prepare for her new role as an educator, Dr. Montessori returned to the
University of Rome to study philosophy, psychology, and anthropology.
During this time she also made a special study of nervous diseases of
children, and published the result of her researches. In 1904 she
was appointed Professor of Anthropology at the University, and carried
on her other research as well until 1907 when her active life as an
educator really took off.
Dr. Montessori was asked to direct a day-care center in a housing
project in the slum section of San Lorenzo, Italy. She accepted
the position, seeing this as her opportunity to begin her work with a
normal population of children. She called the day-care Casa Dei
Bambina. She was to have 60 children between the ages of three and
seven whose illiterate parents were working and the children were left
unsupervised in an area known for its oppressive poverty and crime.
What happened next, Montessori says, brought her a series of surprises
which left her "amazed and incredulous." The children showed a
degree of concentration in working with the "apparatus" which was not
observable in the mentally deficient children at the Institute, and
which seemed astonishing in children so young. Even more
astonishing, the children seemed to be not only rested, but satisfied
and happy after their concentrated efforts.
When
Benito Mussolini and the Fascists came into power in Italy, Dr.
Montessori and
the dictator publicly clashed and Dr. Montessori was forced
into exile. She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1949,
1950, 1951. Mussolini felt that the education of so many masses of
people was detrimental to his governmental
Fascist goals so she became a self proclaimed "citizen of the world" and
her teaching spread to the four corners of the earth.
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