Maria Montessori began offering training courses in Rome in 1910. By 1915 her ideas and methods were being applied in children's homes and special schools in Australia.
Maria Montessori had worked with intellectually and physically disabled children and, by observing them closely and recognising their capacities, changed the way they were taught and produced remarkable results. She then worked with 'normal' children and became confirmed in her belief that the teacher's role was to foster a child's independence. Montessori's method was to allow children to move more freely in the room and choose their own activity, and provide furniture and shelving at child-size. Tasks such as sweeping, flower arranging, cooking and the care of the self and pets were added to the curriculum, as was self-care, such as hand washing and gymnastics. Music, dance and joyfulness were also considered very important.
Dr Charles Mackellar, the president of the State Children's Relief Board from 1902-1916, was an 'expert' on feeble-mindedness and mental deficiency, and believed people with those conditions should be separated from the mainstream community and offered special education. He was an advocate for Montessori's ideas and used Montessori-trained teachers to run the first school programmes offered to 'mentally deficient' and 'feeble-minded' children in State Children's Relief Department institutions. In his annual reports, Mackellar wrote about the results achieved by bringing music, dance, drumming and craft into institutions. This was a vast improvement on 19th century practices of placing disabled children in asylums.
Montessori's ideas were slowly incorporated into the broader education system, firstly in the kindergarten and day nursery movement, and then in primary schools.
Over her lifetime, Maria Montessori developed several training centres and institutes which still train teachers in her methods. She inspired Rudolf Steiner, who also pioneered programmes of general and special education. Maria Montessori's work remains important in kindergarten and preschool education, special education and broader education philosophies of child-centred learning.
We do not currently have any resources linked to this entry, but resources may exist. If you know of any related resources, please contact us.
The Find & Connect Support Service can help people who lived in orphanages and children's institutions look for their records.
We do not currently have any photographs linked to this entry. If you know of any additional photographs, please contact us.
The Find & Connect Support Service can help people who lived in orphanages and children's institutions look for their records.
Last updated:
06 May 2022
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/nsw/NE01316
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License