Maria Montessori
Maria
Montessori: A Brief Biography
—biography
written by D. Renee Pendleton
Maria Montessori was, in many ways,
ahead of her time. Born in the town of
Chiaravalle, in the province of Ancona, Italy, in 1870, she became the first
female physician in Italy upon her graduation from medical school in 1896.
Shortly afterwards, she was chosen to represent Italy at two different women's
conferences, in Berlin in 1896 and in London in 1900.
In her medical practice, her
clinical observations led her to analyze how children learn, and she concluded
that they build themselves from what they find in their environment. Shifting her focus from the body to the mind, she returned
to the university in 1901, this time to study psychology and philosophy. In
1904, she was made a professor of anthropology at the University of Rome.
Her desire to help children was so
strong, however, that in 1906 she gave up both her university chair and her
medical practice to work with a group of sixty young children of working
parents in the San Lorenzo district of Rome. It was there that she founded the
first Casa dei Bambini, or "Children's House." What
ultimately became the Montessori method of education developed there, based
upon Montessori's scientific observations of these children's almost effortless
ability to absorb knowledge from their surroundings, as well as their tireless
interest in manipulating materials.
Every piece of equipment, every exercise, every method Montessori developed was
based on what she observed children to do "naturally," by themselves,
unassisted by adults.
Children teach themselves. This simple but profound truth inspired Montessori's
lifelong pursuit of educational reform, methodology, psychology, teaching,
and teacher training—all based on her dedication to furthering the self-creating
process of the child.
Maria Montessori made her first
visit to the United States in 1913, the same year that Alexander Graham Bell
and his wife Mabel founded the Montessori Educational Association at their
Washington, DC, home. Among her other strong American supporters were Thomas
Edison and Helen Keller.
In 1915, she attracted world
attention with her "glass house" schoolroom exhibit at the
Panama-Pacific International Exhibition in San Francisco. On this second U.S.
visit, she also conducted a teacher training course and addressed the annual
conventions of both the National Education Association and the International
Kindergarten Union. The committee that brought her to San Francisco included
Margaret Wilson, daughter of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson.
The Spanish government invited her
to open a research institute in 1917. In 1919, she began a series of teacher
training courses in London. In 1922, she was appointed a government inspector
of schools in her native Italy, but because of her opposition to Mussolini's
fascism, she was forced to leave Italy in 1934. She traveled to Barcelona,
Spain, and was rescued there by a British cruiser in 1936, during the Spanish
Civil War. She opened the Montessori Training Centre in Laren, Netherlands, in 1938,
and founded a series of teacher training courses in India in 1939.
In 1940, when India entered World
War II, she and her son, Mario Montessori, were interned as enemy aliens, but
she was still permitted to conduct training courses. Later, she founded the
Montessori Center in London (1947). She was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize
three times—in 1949, 1950, and 1951.
Maria Montessori died in Noordwijk,
Holland, in 1952, but her work lives on through the Association Montessori Internationale (AMI), the organization she founded in Amsterdam,
Netherlands, in 1929 to carry on her work.
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