| I call BS. Kilpatrick was a disciple of Dewey; both were known haters of Maria Montessori and her work, and never gave any specific criticism of her system, just appeals to their own authority; they basically rejected her purpose in education (developing the faculty of reason, learning writing, reading, arithmetics, and geometry) because of their progressive-education, anti-reason dogma. There isn't much difference between the insights of Montessori and Piaget. Piaget worked with Montessori early in his career. The experimental nursery school in Geneva, La Maison des Petits, where Piaget carried out his first studies of children in the 1920s, was a modified Montessori institution, and Piaget was the head of the Swiss Montessori Society for many years. Jean Piaget was a great scientist who conducted systematic experiments with countless children. Your claim that he only observed his own 3 children is a lie. Scientists at the University of Geneva to this day carry on with his research and experiments. That last reference you provide is some obscure German PhD thesis which does not reference Montessori's work at all; it has a major focus on teaching mentally retarded children, as well as teaching mathematics out of books to children older than the ones that go to Montessori schools (commonly age 3-6). |
His work was still a giant leap.
The Author of this thesis is one of the most respected scientists in germany relating to pre-numeric Mathematics. Teachers for mentally retarded children had to think about pre-numeric mathematics long before it became fashionable for younger kids. She based her work on Piaget and Vygotsky. Its quite my point that she didn't base it on Montessori.