[Maria
Montessori pictured in 1919]
Dr. Maria Montessori (August 31, 1870 – May 6, 1952), the first
female physician in Italy was an Italian educator, scientist,
physician, philosopher, devout Catholic, feminist, and
humanitarian,
best known for developing the Montessori method of teaching
young children. She introduced the method in Rome in 1907, and
it has since spread throughout the world. The Montessori method
stresses the development of initiative and self-reliance by
permitting
children to
do by themselves the things that interest them, within strictly
disciplined limits.

[Maria Montessori and
child; Photos from the Early Children's Houses in Italy]
Montessori was born in
Chiaravalle in the Ancona
province of Italy. She was educated at the University of Rome,
and in 1894
she became the first woman in Italy to receive a medical
degree. She joined the medical staff at the university’s
psychiatric clinic and soon became interested in the education
of children with mental retardation. She gradually became
convinced that children with mental retardation were much more
capable of learning than experts of that time believed.
In
1901 Montessori was appointed director of the Orthophrenic
School of Rome, which had been used as an asylum to confine
children with mental retardation. Drawing largely on the ideas
of French educators Jean Itard and Edouard Séguin, Montessori
provided the children with mental stimulation, meaningful
activities, and opportunities to develop self-esteem. She
received widespread recognition for her work when many of the
adolescents at the school passed standard tests for sixth-grade
students in the Italian public schools.
[Photo taken on the day of the
opening of the Casa dei Bambini, 6 January 1907,
Via dei Marsi, 58, San Lorenzo, Rome, Italy]
Montessori
believed that her methods would prove even more effective with
children of normal intelligence. In 1907 she opened the first
Montessori school, or Children's House, in a slum district of
Rome. Within a year, observers came from around the world to
see the progress made by Montessori’s students. Before the age
of five the children learned to read and write, they preferred
work to play, and they displayed sustained mental concentration
without fatigue.
Montessori based her educational method on giving
children freedom in a specially prepared environment, under the
guidance of a trained director. She stressed that leaders of
the classroom be called directors rather than teachers because
their main work was to direct the interests of children and
advance their development. According to Montessori, when a child
is ready to learn new and more difficult tasks, the director
should guide the child from the outset so that the child does
not waste effort or learn wrong habits.
The
success of the Children’s House led to the founding of other
Montessori schools and teacher-training programs throughout
Europe and the United States. In 1934 Montessori fled fascist
rule in Italy and settled in Barcelona, Spain. She worked there
until the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 forced her
to move to The Netherlands. There she established an
influential teacher-training school at Laren, near Amsterdam.
From 1939 to 1947 Montessori lived in India and Ceylon (now Sri
Lanka), founding more schools and training programs before
returning to The Netherlands.
Montessori was convinced that universal adoption of her teaching method would be of immense value in bringing about world peace, and she stressed the importance of education as the 'armament of peace.' A Roman Catholic, she also worked extensively to apply her principles to the teaching of religion. Among her published works are Il metodo della pedagogia scientifica applicato all'educazione infantile nelle case dei bambini (1909; translated as The Montessori Method, 1912); Antropologia pedagogica (1911; Pedagogical Anthropology, 1913); Mente del bambino (1949; The Absorbent Mind, 1949); and Il bambino in famiglia (1956; The Child in the Family, 1970).
[Dr. Montessori visits children at a Montessori school in London, England sometime in early 1950s. Montessori developed her method for teaching young children in Italy during the early 20th century. Her successes led to the spread of Montessori schools throughout Europe and the United States.]
"As soon as children find something that interests them they lose their instability and learn to concentrate."
- Dr. Maria Montessori, The Secret of Childhood, Fides Publishers, 1966, p. 145