Sunday, April 7, 2013

Maria Montessori. A Life Devoted to Children.


Maria Montessori’s ideas and concepts on education have travelled the entire globe. She passionately fought for the rights of children to develop without interference.   
Maria was born as an only child to Alessandro and Renilde Montessori on the August 31st, 1870 in Chivaravalle (in the Ancona province of Italy). She moved to Rome with her parents where she spent most of her childhood and years of study. Due to her obvious aptitude for the natural sciences, she attended a boy’s technology school. Her hard work was awarded with an opportunity to study medicine at university. In 1896 she became Italy’s first female physician.   When she worked as an assistant doctor at a mental institution in Rome, she realized that supervising and caring for the mentally disabled and children with learning difficulties was not only a medical matter. It occurred to her that it was also a pedagogical one. She researched possibilities to assist mentally disabled children through sensory aspects of learning. Specially designed learning materials would enable and motivate children to independently learn. The success was phenomenal. During this time Montessori was in a relationship with the physician Giuseppe Montesano. She gave birth to a son, Mario, in 1898. As a single mother she would have had to give up all of her professional commitments to raise her son. Thus, she decided to have him raised in a foster family. They were in regular contact and he moved back in with her at the age of fifteen. Mario became Montessori’s trusted companion and continued her work after her death.


  
Inspired by the successful work with mentally disabled children she took up further studies in Psychology, Pedagogy and Philosophy. Her goal was to use her findings and experience to aid in educating healthy children. The opportunity to observe the development of healthy children, presented itself to her when a building society renovated run-down buildings in a poor part of the city. Someone was needed to supervise the pre-school children of the area. In 1907, the first school for infants was opened in San Lorenzo, a suburb of Rome. About 50 children were looked after by a woman who had no prior training in education. Montessori instructed her on applying the sensory materials she had developed and didn’t interfere otherwise. At the time, Montessori worked as a pediatrician and taught anthropology at the University of Rome, but visited the children on a regular basis. In one of her books she describes the key moment during her observations which let her to fully devote time to pedagogy. She was observing a child that was completely immersed in an activity. After completing it seemed entirely transformed: happy, liberated, more independent.   She became aware that activities involved in everyday life and “sensory” exercises changed children’s attitude towards work and social behavior.




With further detailed research on child activities she developed pedagogical principles.   In 1909 she gave up her pediatric practice and became fully devoted to training teachers and educators for the Montessori children‘s homes and -schools, which soon after became established in various other countries. Due to totalitarian regimes in Germany, Italy and Spain during the Second World War her life’s work was partly destroyed. Nevertheless, she resumed her work in Europe in 1949. On May 6th, 1952 Maria Montessori died shortly before her 82nd birthday in Noordwijk aan Zee, Netherlands.

The most important principles of Montessori’s pedagogy can also be applied to music education:  
• Respecting the ‘learning windows’ in child development
• Learning should involve all senses
• Promoting independent activity
• Every child is an individual with a proper personality. 


  
It is still primarily up to the music instructor to attend to the needs of children. However, most pre-school musical education programs do not incorporate a reliable opportunity to monitor such attentiveness. Among the numerous concepts, there are only a few, that rely on Montessori’s principals and therefore focus on the most vital aspect of education: the child.

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