RE: [balita-anda] montessory (dan buku Glenn Doman.... dan situs info kids)
Halo Rekan Netters, Karena banyak yang tanya ke saya langsung, maka balesan emailnya saya lewatkan milis saja ya. Sebenarnya info buku ini sudah pernah disampaikan oleh rekan netter yg lain. Mengenai buku ttg metode montessori, yang saya punya a.l.: 1. Meningkatkan Kecerdasan Anak, oleh Joan Beck 2. Metode Pengajaran Montessori untuk Anak Pra-Sekolah, oleh Elizabeth G. Hainstock ( utk buku ini, ada juga yg utk anak SD) 3. Membantu Putra Anda Membaca Membaca, oleh Betty Root 4. Membantu Putra Anda Mempelajari Bilangan, oleh Susan Meredith dan Frances Mosley dan masih banyak lagi, tapi saya tidak ingat. Yang jelas, buku2 itu dulu saya beli di Gramedia. Beberapa kali memang habis, jadi tanya saja ke org Gramedianya. Buku yang no. 1 sangat bagus loh. Biasanya dulu kalau teman saya ada yang punya baby selalu saya kasih hadiah buku itu. Itung2 membantu sedikit sekali dalam mendukung pencerdasan generasi mendatang :-) Untuk buku no. 2 sebenarnya info buku ini sudah pernah disampaikan oleh rekan netter yg lain. Kalau bukunya Glenn Doman, saya bacanya tidak di Indonesia, tapi yg bahasa Jepang, jadi saya tidak tahu pasti judul Bahasa Indonesianya. Ibu Irene pasti mau membantu informasinya. Kemudian, banyak juga yang nanyain situs saya yang 'Info Kids'. Homepage 'Info Kids' sudah beberapa bulan ini memang tidak bisa di-update karena back-up filenya rusak sewaktu saya meng-update O/S komputer saya dari windows ditambah dengan Red Hat Linux. Kalau yg di homepagenya sih masih bisa diakses di : http://infoanakindonesia.tripod.com/ Kalau sudah bisa di-update lagi nanti saya kasih kabar melalui milis ini. Tunggu saja dengan sabar ya. Sekian dulu, semoga bermanfaat. Taufan --- PS.: Jika anda ingin melakukan home_based_internet_business, dapatkan tips rahasia melakukan internet marketing yang sukses dengan mengirimkan email kosong ke : [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tipsnya akan langsung anda dapatkan segera. ** Original Subject: RE: [balita-anda] montessory ** Original Sender: "Dini Rahma Shanti" [EMAIL PROTECTED] ** Original Date: Fri, 2 Feb 2001 12:25:01 +0900 ** Original Message follows... Hi, nyambung pembicaraan sebelumnya ada yg punya buku metode montessory ngga ya? saya perlu info dimana belinya, apa di gramedia/ gunung agung ada? thanks Dini Internet Consultant kirim cake bunga ke 20 kota di Indonesia? klik, http://www.indokado.com Info balita, http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com Etika berinternet, email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Stop berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[balita-anda] montessory
Hi, nyambung pembicaraan sebelumnya ada yg punya buku metode montessory ngga ya? saya perlu info dimana belinya, apa di gramedia/ gunung agung ada? thanks Dini Internet Consultant http://www.digitaldevelopment.com kirim cake bunga ke 20 kota di Indonesia? klik, http://www.indokado.com Info balita, http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com Etika berinternet, email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Stop berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[balita-anda] Montessory Menthode8
AGE-BY-AGE "CAN DO" LIST AS YOU READ through the room-by-room suggestions, you may be thinking to yourself, when will my child be capable of pulling on his pants or making his bed? Well, as with walking and talking, every child's developmental time line is different, but this age-by-age "can do" list provides a rough guideline of when you might start introducing activities. "Use your creativity and intuition," says Bev Farrell, director of the Teacher Education Program at the College of Notre Dame in Belmont, California. "Try things with your child, and if he's not quite ready for it, modify it a bit--make it easier next time." --Put away toys: 15 to 18 months (or as soon as they're able to walk on their own hands-free, although parents will have to participate in cleanup for a long time before the child does it on his own) --Put on Velcro-closure shoes: two years --Pour from a small pitcher into a sturdy cup: 2 1/2 to three years --Make the bed (with a duvet or sleeping bag): 2 1/2 to three years --Wipe a child-size table with a rag or small sponge: 2 1/2 to three years --Get dressed (sweatpants and over-the-head sweatshirt): 2 1/2 to three years --Fold hand towels, match socks: 2 1/2 to three years --Set small table: 2 1/2 to three years --Dust with feather duster: 2 1/2 to three years --Put on a jacket: three years --Slice something soft, such as a banana, with a blunt knife: three years --Sweep the floor using a small hand broom and dustpan: three to 3 1/2 years --Slice slightly cooked carrots with a small, sharp knives with adult supervision: four to five years --Tie shoes: four to six years Kunjungi: http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com "Untuk mereka yang mendambakan anak balitanya tumbuh sehat cerdas" Berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Berhenti berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] EMERGENCY ONLY! Jika kesulitan unsubscribe, kirim email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://pencarian-informasi.or.id/ - Solusi Pencarian Informasi di Internet
[balita-anda] Montessory Methode1
Rekans, Sambil menunggu dari bapak yang pertama melemparkan metode ini (tapi belum ada jawaban mungkin sibuk ya), saya temukan artikel ini di salah satu web. Saya akan kirim beberapa kali agar tidak terlalu panjang (in English). BRINGING MONTESSORI HOME B Y C H R I S T I N E O L S O N G E D Y E WHILE Montessori preschools have come in and out of fashion since Maria Montessori established the first Children's House in 1907, many of Montessori's ideas about how children develop and learn have become standards not only in teaching, but in parenting as well. Among her theories: Enable a child's natural yearning for independence; never do for a child what he can do for himself; organize the child's environment to enable his success. In fact, some Montessori methods are almost more natural in a home setting than at school. The first of her five "subjects" is Practical Life Activities--everything from sweeping the floor and buttoning one's jacket to saying "please" and "excuse me." You can easily adopt some of these principles and practices in your child's daily life, letting almost every room in the house function as a laboratory where your child can learn life skills and independence. Some of the changes needed are as simple as installing a set of pegs at your child's shoulder level so she can hang up her coat. In almost all cases, Montessori's methods require patience, and lots of it. The rewards, though, can be swift and astonishing. In the course of researching this article, I decided to give my 21-month-old a new responsibility or two. For a couple of meals in a row I asked her to clear her bowl from her child-size table to the counter. Within a day it became an almost religious post-meal routine, along with wiping her table and the floor around it. The way I figure, we all win: It's a few less things for me to do, it keeps her busy, and perhaps best of all, the job well done makes her beam with pride. We're hooked. Christine Olson Gedye is a Seattle-based freelance writer and editor specializing in family matters. Riefna Azwita Fahmi Test System Unit RisTI - Telkom Jl. Gegerkalong Hilir 47 Bandung-Indonesia E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- * Learn Telecommunication Technology at http://www.gematel.com * http://www.ristinet.com - See the difference think better Kunjungi: http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com "Untuk mereka yang mendambakan anak balitanya tumbuh sehat cerdas" Berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Berhenti berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] EMERGENCY ONLY! Jika kesulitan unsubscribe, kirim email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://pencarian-informasi.or.id/ - Solusi Pencarian Informasi di Internet
[balita-anda] Montessory Methode2
Bagian kedua Metode Montessory GUIDING PRINCIPLES THE FOLLOWING principles are central to Montessori teaching: --Give your child credit for being competent. Young children are capable of much more than most parents realize. Give your toddler a shot at helping you empty the dishwasher, clearing her dinner plate to the counter, or pouring herself some water (from a small pitcher). It will take more time than if you did it yourself--especially at first--but it's worth it. --Avoid saying "No, you can't do this." Instead, says Dottie Feldman, director of school consultation and accreditation for the American Montessori Society, be inventive about how to help your child achieve what he's trying to do. --Demonstrate, step-by-step, how to complete the task, then provide opportunity to practice it frequently. --If need be, take turns with your child, allowing him to do those steps he's capable of, and demonstrating the rest. --Involve your child in household tasks. Preschoolers thrive on helping and imitating the adults in their lives. "It also makes kids feel they belong," says Bev Farrell, director of the Teacher Education Program at the College of Notre Dame in Belmont, California. "And a sense of belonging to the family group is, as we know, what keeps them from straying in the later years." --Buy inexpensive dishes, but not plastic ones. A plastic dish or cup will not break, no matter how often it is dropped, and a child actually learns a great deal from a broken dish. --Provide tools that really work. Toy versions of adult tools often don't do the job, which results in frustration. Where possible, buy small, working versions of the real thing, and demonstrate how to use them safely. (Obviously, a child under eight should never use a knife unsupervised.) --Give the child responsibility for himself. Brushing one's own teeth, washing one's own face, sorting one's own socks, pouring a drink or getting a snack for oneself--these are a child's beginning steps towards independence. --As you encourage your child to help with household tasks, realize this: You and he have diametrically opposed purposes. "The parent wants to get the job done, to move on to the next thing," says Feldman. "The child's purpose is merely the process of doing it. He doesn't anticipate the completion of the task." Parents need to be truly willing to go at the child's pace. --Resist the urge to re-wipe the table, or otherwise correct your child as she goes. If you do, those feelings of pride and independence will wither. --Do not disturb. "The biggest favor a parent can do for his child is to let him be when he's truly engaged. It's better to wait until he looks up or asks you a question. By not interrupting him, you're helping him develop his powers of concentration. --Strive for Order. According to Montessori philosophy, "external order creates internal order." That doesn't merely mean having a place for everything and everything in it's place. It also means having daily and weekly routines for the child. If he can predict what's coming next, the transition won't throw him so much. --Organize your child's environment to enable independence. "Think about how you can arrange things in your home so that your child can be more in charge, so that he can work towards doing things himself," says John Chattin-McNichols, the Director of the Montessori Education Institute of the Pacific Northwest. A bed low to the floor with a sleeping bag on it, for example, is much easier to straighten than a bed on a frame with lots of sheets, blankets and
[balita-anda] Montessory Methode4
KITCHEN BETWEEN COOKING, eating and cleaning up, there are plenty of ways to keep your child busy and learning in the kitchen. Provide a sturdy step stool that the child can get out and put away on his own. It should allow him to access the sink comfortably--for getting a sponge to wipe the table, for washing dishes, and for just playing in the water. You may also want to hang a waterproof apron where your child can reach it easily. If you have the space, set up a child-size table and chairs near the family eating area. It can be used for snacks, meals with friends or meals that aren't being eaten at the family table, artwork, and other tabletop toys such as small blocks or puzzles. Make sure the child knows the table and chairs are his to care for. Provide a drawer--preferably near the child's table--for his art materials, table toys and perhaps his own set of measuring spoons and cups or other kitchen utensils. Enable your child to help himself to a snack and a drink by placing a small pitcher of water or juice and a prepared snack on a low shelf in the refrigerator. Make sure a small cup, plate and napkins are also within reach. Invite your child to help prepare meals. He might start with mixing dough for biscuits or washing lettuce, and later move to peeling cucumbers and carrots. Even though many parents are wary of letting their children use a knife, it's important to teach them how to do it correctly. Start by demonstrating how to slice a banana using a table knife (as early as age 2 1/2), then move on to cooked carrots. At age four, most kids can be taught how to safely slice raw carrots with a small paring knife (under close adult supervision). Expect your child to carry his food to the table, and to clear his dishes when he's finished eating (this will be easier if he's eating at his small table). Most young children--even toddlers--love to wipe up spills on the floor and table. Sweeping is another favorite task, made easier if you provide a small hand broom and dustpan--again stored where the child can retrieve it on his own. More tasks suited to little helpers: helping with putting away groceries and loading and unloading the dishwasher. Riefna Azwita Fahmi Test System Unit RisTI - Telkom Jl. Gegerkalong Hilir 47 Bandung-Indonesia E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- * Learn Telecommunication Technology at http://www.gematel.com * http://www.ristinet.com - See the difference think better Kunjungi: http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com "Untuk mereka yang mendambakan anak balitanya tumbuh sehat cerdas" Berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Berhenti berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] EMERGENCY ONLY! Jika kesulitan unsubscribe, kirim email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://pencarian-informasi.or.id/ - Solusi Pencarian Informasi di Internet
[balita-anda] Montessory Menthode5
BATHROOM THE BATHROOM is the ideal place to teach your child to be responsible for taking care of herself. As in the kitchen, provide a sturdy step stool that allows your child to use the sink comfortably. Make sure your child's toothbrush and toothpaste are small enough to handle, and easily accessible. Install a towel hook or rack where your child can reach her towel and facecloth easily. If your child is still in diapers, involve her as much as possible in decisions about diaper changing. For instance, you can ask her "Would you like to have your diaper changed while you are standing or laying down? Can you please hand me a diaper? The diaper cream?" and so on. If your child is beginning to use a potty, make sure she can get to it on her own, is wearing clothing that is easy to negotiate, and that she knows how to wipe herself properly. Riefna Azwita Fahmi Test System Unit RisTI - Telkom Jl. Gegerkalong Hilir 47 Bandung-Indonesia E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- * Learn Telecommunication Technology at http://www.gematel.com * http://www.ristinet.com - See the difference think better Kunjungi: http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com "Untuk mereka yang mendambakan anak balitanya tumbuh sehat cerdas" Berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Berhenti berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] EMERGENCY ONLY! Jika kesulitan unsubscribe, kirim email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://pencarian-informasi.or.id/ - Solusi Pencarian Informasi di Internet
[balita-anda] Montessory Mentode7
OUTDOORS A CHILD'S FIRST introduction to--and most frequent experience with--nature will probably be in your own backyard and on short walks in your neighborhood. Provide a small, sunny plot--or even just a large pot--for your child to plant his own vegetable garden. The lessons learned and pride earned in tending something from seed to table are immeasurable. If you aren't a gardener yourself, there are many children's nature activity books that can take you both step-by-step through the process. Include your child in the maintenance of the family garden by asking him to help you weed, rake and water it. Provide child-size rakes and trowels that really work--many fine toy stores and catalogs carry these in the spring and summer months. Go on frequent walks with your child, and let him set the pace as often as possible. Preschoolers are apt to spend much of their time squatting down and looking at an ant hill or collecting leaves or stones; this is what they are most interested in at this stage, and fostering such observation skills now will pay off later. If you can, set aside a place of prominence in the home or in the child's room for items gathered on these nature walks. Kunjungi: http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com "Untuk mereka yang mendambakan anak balitanya tumbuh sehat cerdas" Berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Berhenti berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] EMERGENCY ONLY! Jika kesulitan unsubscribe, kirim email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://pencarian-informasi.or.id/ - Solusi Pencarian Informasi di Internet
[balita-anda] Montessory Mentohe6
LIVING ROOM WHILE MANY families like to have one or two rooms in the home reserved for adults, there will probably be times when you want to use that room as a family; you'll all benefit if your child learns from the start how to handle himself there appropriately. Provide one drawer or cabinet for a small selection of toys or books; allow your child to choose what is kept there. "Do not touch" objects are difficult for young children. You can get past the temptation posed by delicate vases, candlesticks and other decorative objects by showing your child how to handle them gently; then explain that these items are better for looking at than playing with. Allow your child a section of your music storage space for her own growing collection of tapes and CDs. As early as age three, you can teach your child how to put a cassette or CD in a stereo, and show her the appropriate level for the volume. Teach your child how to dust small tables by first removing objects carefully, wiping with a clean rag, then putting the objects back in their places. Young children have a keen eye for dust, and get great satisfaction from wiping it away. Kunjungi: http://www.balita-anda.indoglobal.com "Untuk mereka yang mendambakan anak balitanya tumbuh sehat cerdas" Berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Berhenti berlangganan, e-mail ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] EMERGENCY ONLY! Jika kesulitan unsubscribe, kirim email ke: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://pencarian-informasi.or.id/ - Solusi Pencarian Informasi di Internet