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Maria Montessori Imagination and Creativity By: Becky Harris, Moira Hyde, and Jane Desmond

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Maria Montessori. Imagination and Creativity By: Becky Harris, Moira Hyde, and Jane Desmond. Maria Montessori: A Brief Biography. Born in Ancona Region of Italy in 1870 First female to graduate from the University of Rome Medical School (1896) Studied psychiatry, education, and anthropology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Maria Montessori

Maria Montessori

Imagination and Creativity

By:Becky Harris, Moira Hyde, and

Jane Desmond

Page 2: Maria Montessori

Maria Montessori:A Brief Biography

• Born in Ancona Region of Italy in 1870

• First female to graduate from the University of Rome Medical School (1896)

• Studied psychiatry, education, and anthropology

• Opened Casa dei Bambini in 1907• Exiled by Mussolini during World

War II; worked in India, Spain, and The Netherlands

• Nominated twice for the Nobel Peace Prize

• Invited to the USA by Alexander Graham Bell in 1917, spoke at Carnegie Hall and set up sample classroom in San Francisco.

• Died in 1952

Page 3: Maria Montessori

The Montessori Method

• Montessori viewed children as competent beings, who think and learn differently than adults.

• Each child is a unique individual • Environments in which children can fulfill to their greatest

potential in all aspects. • Children learn with other children by interacting with

peers through mixed age groups• According to Montessori, children learn best during

Sensitive Periods of Development

Page 4: Maria Montessori

Goal Of Education To assist children to independently master certain

experiences for which they are ready.

Give the child opportunities for independent mastery.

Teachers are passive observers, presenting material once realizing a child’s readiness in Sensitive Periods.

Page 5: Maria Montessori

Sensitive Periods:A Window in Development of the Child

• Children’s minds are naturally absorbent and quick to learn

• Children learn best during Sensitive Periods

• Children can learn more material and learn at a higher quality when the lessons match natural interest and ability.

• This is a genetic component, available to ALL humans, regardless of cultural background.

Genetically programmed blocks of time during which a child is eager and

able to master certain tasks.

Page 6: Maria Montessori

Sensitive Periods

• Order• Details• Use of Hands• Walking• Language

Page 7: Maria Montessori

Montessori Says…

Imagination is the result of sensory experience.

Therefore, older children with more sensory experience will have a better developed imagination than younger children.

The Problem This theory contradicts with the majority of society, who

believe that younger children are more imaginative than older children.

Page 8: Maria Montessori

Our Study

Included children from two different tutoring programs and baby-sitting.

The children were asked to imagine they had been given 1 million dollars to create their ideal bedroom, and to draw a picture of it

Page 9: Maria Montessori

Our Question

Are children with more sensory experience better able to use their imaginations?

How does the amount of sensory

experience a person has correlate with his ability to imagine?

Page 10: Maria Montessori

Hypothesis

• The mind cannot conceive that which it does not know.

• Older children will have more developed imaginations than younger children because they have more sensory experience.

Page 11: Maria Montessori

Understanding Montessori and Imagination

Key Terms: • Sensory

experience• Reality• Fantasy• Imagination• Creativity

Page 12: Maria Montessori

Sensory Experience

• Knowledge and development that is based on the five senses direct contact with environment, and experience.

Page 13: Maria Montessori

Reality• the quality or state of being actual or true. • According to Montessori, reality and truth are very much the

same. (e.g. that is why she does not want us to lie to children or engage them in fantasy.)

• It is what is real and actual, and the sum total of all things possessing existence or essence.

• Human beings interpret reality through sensory experience and this, according to Montessori, is indispensable to child development.

Page 14: Maria Montessori

Fantasy: An unreal or implausible assumption. A sequence of mental images that fulfill a psychological need. “The product of a mind that has lost its tie to reality.”

• A young child’s mind has a tendency toward fantasy and has difficultly distinguishing fantasy from reality.

• Adults confuse this tendency and consider it proof of the child’s superior imagination.

• Fantasy play should; therefore, be postponed until the child has a firm understanding of reality.

Page 15: Maria Montessori

Imagination• A child must be able to distinguish

fact and fantasy to engage in imagination.

• Imagination is rooted in sensorial experience.

• It is the ability to see fixed objects within one’s mind even when it is no longer physically there and to hear what is no longer there.

• “That spontaneous work of the infant mind by which children attribute desirable characteristics to objects that do not possess them.”

Page 16: Maria Montessori

Think of the presents you've broughtAny merry little thought

Think of Christmas, think of snowThink of sleigh bells Here we go!

Like a reindeer in the sky

You can fly! You can fly!You can fly! You can fly!

Peter Pan uses sensory experience in order to Imagine!!!

Page 17: Maria Montessori

Santa Claus

The Tooth Fairy

Easter Bunny

Adults tell these tales to children in the hope of encouraging a child’s imagination. Does it?

NO!This doesn’t help the child form their OWN imagination.

The child is receiving impressions, rather than developing their own individual ability to imagine constructively.

22

Page 18: Maria Montessori

Fantasy vs. Imagination

• Fantasy is devoid of reality.

• It does not require memory of sensorial experience.

• It is the product of an undeveloped mind.

• Imagination is rooted in reality

• It relies on memory.• It necessitates

sensorial experience.• He or she has to be

able to differentiate between Reality and Fantasy in order to imagine.

Page 19: Maria Montessori

Creativity

o The ability to fashion an original idea or thing using his or her imagination.

o Creativity is an inventive process by which one uses imagination in order to produce a distinctive

result.o When people are creative they are building something new based on imagination, which is

rooted in sensory experience.o A person cannot create without imagination, but

he or she can imagine without creativity.

Page 20: Maria Montessori

Criteria:• We looked at the ability of the child to hold

within their memory past sensory experience.• This was determined based on the number of

objects within their drawing. • When looking at the drawings, we determined

creativity based on the definition: the ability to use one’s imagination to create an original product. This largely helped us analyze the pictures in order to determine if children with more sensory experience are more imaginative.

Page 21: Maria Montessori

Sample Drawings

Collected From

Mentoring and Babysitting

Page 22: Maria Montessori

Meg Age 5

• The is an example of a child on the verge of imagination.

Page 23: Maria Montessori

Emily age 5

Emily shows fantasy in her drawing. Her drawing has no basis in reality; therefore, it is unimaginative.

Page 24: Maria Montessori

Anar Age 11

• Anar’s picture shows imagination. He recalls his sensorial experience in the drawing. He takes his room and fills it with desired objects from his memory.

Page 25: Maria Montessori

TJ age 11

• TJ’s picture shows imagination!

Page 26: Maria Montessori

Mary Sweeney Age 22

• Mary’s picture is both imaginative and creative!!

Page 27: Maria Montessori

• “The mind basis itself on the imagination, which brings things to a higher level, that of abstraction. But the imagination has need of support. It needs to be built, organized. Only then may man attain a new level. He is penetrating the infinite.”

-Maria Montessori

To Educate the Human Potential

Page 28: Maria Montessori

The kids liked the project!!

Page 29: Maria Montessori

Results

Name Age

# Items

Reality

Creative

• Mary 22 13 8 5

• Magdalene 8 12 8 4

• Cristina 10 10 6 4

• Sanchir 11 9 8 1

• Naomi 13 11 7 4

• Lizzy 5 9 5 4

• Anar 11 9 3 6

• Valeria 9 7 1 6

• TJ 7 6 2 4

• Jackie 11 5 1 4

• Emily 5 3 0 3

• Meg 5 3 3

Page 30: Maria Montessori

Age corresponds with Ability to Imagine:

• This chart shows the studies combined and is a good visual depiction of our findings

Imagination

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

# Items

Age

Name

Page 31: Maria Montessori

0

5

10

15

20

25

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

Name

Age

# Items

The data shows the correlation between age and imagination

Page 32: Maria Montessori

•Limits to our observation

•Was our hypothesis correct?

•Conclusion

Evaluation of Study

Page 33: Maria Montessori

Limits in observation

-Time -Resources: we could have had more

participants.-Many of the children have limited

English skills, so part of the task could have been lost in translation

-Unable to clearly interpret all drawings.

Page 34: Maria Montessori

YES!!!!!!!

Was our hypothesis Correct?

Page 35: Maria Montessori

Conclusion:• Our hypothesis was

correct! Older children with more sensory experience have better imaginations.

• Imagination depends on the ability of a child to differentiate between reality and fantasy.

• One must be able to remember sensory experience in order to Imagine

• Creativity depends on the ability to imagine. One uses their imagination as a basis for all creativity.

Page 36: Maria Montessori

Nature v. Nurture

Rousseau

MontessoriKohlberg

Locke

Nature Nurture

Vygotsky

Piaget

Erikson

Gilligan