Montessori Move Case Study Montessori Pedagogical Instructional Principles Implications Community College Course Graduates Career Paths

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The document discusses a case study examining the impact of Montessori pedagogical principles in community college classrooms and careers.

The dissertation focuses on the Montessori instructional pedagogical principles and their implications for community college students' success and career paths.

The study focuses on the Montessori instructional pedagogical principles.

Montessori on the Move:

A case study of the Montessori pedagogical instructional principles and


Implications for community college course graduates and their career paths
By
Norman Lorenz
B.A. (California State University, Sacramento) 1985
M.A. (California State University, Sacramento) 1994
DISSERTATION
Submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the doctoral degree of
DOCTOR OF EDUCATION
In Education Leadership
In the
OFFICE OF GRADUATES STUDIES
Of the
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
DAVIS
Approved:

Committee in Charge
2015

DEDICATION
This dissertation is dedicated to my family, my life partner and husband Edward F.
Condon and to our children, Margaret Maddy Condon-Lorenz and Timothy A. Condon-Lorenz,
for their understanding and patience in my pursuit of this degree. I also extend a most gracious
dedication to the thousands of students and families I have worked with over some 30 years of
educational experience. I express my gratitude to the children and families in Montessori
education, both in the private and public sectors. Finally, I dedicate this research to the adult
students and graduates of the college classrooms, each and every Montessori colleague including
Karen Lecy, M.Ed., who inspired me to become a Montessori educator, and finally to the broader
community for their invaluable input and training. With this guidance and experiential learning,
the legacy of Dr. Maria Montessoris philosophy lives on in education.

ii

ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The author wishes to express sincere acknowledgment to Dr. Paula Lane, Chair, and
committee members, Dr. Paul Porter, from Sonoma State University, and Dr. Gloria Rodriguez,
Co-Director of CANDEL, from the University of California, Davis, for their familiarity with my
needs, guidance, and support of my leadership ideals. I also recognize my colleagues at
Sacramento City College, especially Dr. Rhonda Rios-Kravitz, Dean of Learning Resources, for
her unwitting and ever-strong support of my research, and to Jonathan Solorio, from the
University of California Berkeley, for support in the preparation of this manuscript. Also I wish
to thank Dr. J. Frank Malaret, Dean of Behavior and Social Science, Dr. Mary Beth Buechner,
Dean of Research and Development, and Dr. Janice Kaston, retired and former Dean of Business
and Family Science at Cosumnes River College, for their assistance, support, and contributions
to my work. As a final acknowledgment, I wish to recognize my mother Betty Lorenz and
grandmother Ada Hiatt (both deceased). Long ago, they helped me recognize the importance of
keeping my dream of this degree alive. In this way, their wise financial investment has now paid
off, and I am eternally grateful for their support.

iii

Norman Lorenz
March 2015
Education Leadership

Montessori on the Move:


A case study of the Montessori pedagogical instructional principles and
Implications for community college course graduates and their career paths

A Case Study
ABSTRACT
This case study focuses on the Montessori instructional pedagogical principles with
implications about community college students success when the researcher in the higher
education classroom uses these principles. Two classes are studied while the interviews are based
on former students' invitations. The interviews involve graduates and ask about the practices
used, and whether they have any relationship of greater use across future educational course
work, graduation, and into career paths. Findings suggest the use of the Montessori instructional
pedagogical principles in community college classrooms can have lasting impact into the further
education and careers of students who experience this type of pedagogy and practice.

iv

TABLE OF CONTENTS
DEDICATION................................................................................................................... ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT ............................................................................................... iii
ABSTRACT ...................................................................................................................... iv
PROLOGUE ................................................................................................................... viii
Chapter 1 ............................................................................................................................1
The Statement of Problem ...............................................................................................3
The Purpose and Significance of the Study.....................................................................4
The Importance of the Course Context ...........................................................................5
The Importance of the Student Context ..........................................................................6
Research Questions ........................................................................................................7
Limitations of the Study ..................................................................................................8
Definition of Terms .........................................................................................................9
Chapter 2 ..........................................................................................................................10
Review of the Literature ...............................................................................................10
The Scholarly Approach of Teaching and Learning .....................................................12
Contextualized Learning in Community College .........................................................12
Dr. Maria Montessoris Methodological Historical Overview .....................................14
Defining the Montessori Methodology Implementation...............................................14
The Montessori Pedagogical Principles of Instruction and
Developmental Milestones.......................................................................................18
The Use of Montessori to Construct an Environment that Promotes
Deductive Reasoning and Thinking in the Community College Classroom ...........19
Seven Pedagogical Principles of the Montessori Philosophy
Used as Instructional Principles in the Community College Classroom .................23
Dr. Paulo Freires Socio-Cultural Political Influence for Student
Educational Participation in Learning .....................................................................28
The Overarching Value of Montessori, Gardner, Bloom, and Freires
Work to Students in the Community College ..........................................................30
Chapter 3 ..........................................................................................................................34
Methodology .................................................................................................................34
Research Questions .......................................................................................................34
The Subjects ..................................................................................................................35
The Interview Process ...................................................................................................36
The Data Analysis .........................................................................................................40

Chapter 4 ..........................................................................................................................42
The Findings ................................................................................................................42
v

Results of the Data .......................................................................................................42


Interview Results .........................................................................................................46
Summary of the Data ...................................................................................................61
Chapter 5 ..........................................................................................................................62
Discussion ...................................................................................................................62
The Classroom Environment and Pedagogy ................................................................63
Common Thread to Research Questions......................................................................66
Best Practices in Higher Education..............................................................................67
Instructional Quality .....................................................................................................70
Montessori Pedagogical Practices: Outcomes in the Community
College Classroom and Careers ....................................................................................72
The Hope in the Higher Education Environment ..........................................................74
Conclusion .....................................................................................................................76
Recommendations .........................................................................................................78
Contributions this Study Provides in Higher Education ...............................................79
Consideration for Further Research ..............................................................................81
List of Charts .................................................................................................................... vi
Chart 1 Research Questions ...........................................................................................7, 34
Chart 2 Montessori Pedagogical Principles .......................................................................24
Chart 3 Developmental Characteristics .............................................................................26
Chart 4 Subjects Across their Career Paths .......................................................................38
Chart 5 Data Collection Procedures and Individual Interview Process .............................39
Chart 6 Graduates into Career Paths ..................................................................................45
Chart 7 Analysis and Outcomes .........................................................................................65
Chart 8 Montessori Pedagogical Principles & Graduate Reflections ................................69
List of Figures ................................................................................................................... vi
Figure 1, Subject Valentine................................................................................................46
Figure 2, Subject Raquel ....................................................................................................48
Figure 3, Subject Roberta ..................................................................................................49
Figure 4, Subject Carlton ...................................................................................................51
Figure 5, Subject Shirley....................................................................................................53
Figure 6, Subject Christa....................................................................................................55
Figure 7, Subject Anna ......................................................................................................56
Figure 8, Subject Becca .....................................................................................................58
Figure 9, Cumulative Subject Themes ...............................................................................60
Figure 10, Montessori Pedagogy .......................................................................................73
Appendices ........................................................................................................................82
Appendix A Instrumentation.........................................................................................82
Appendix B Individual and Group Participation Rubric Agreement............................89
Bibliography .....................................................................................................................91

vi

PROLOGUE
Background and Role of the Researcher
As a tenured Professor of education in the community college system, the researchers
shares his interests, contributions, accomplishments, and projected goals as a professional in
teacher education. Included across more than 30 years of educational experiences in Montessori
pedagogical principles, the researcher has also developed leadership skills in business
supervision, and management. These abilities include classroom teaching in Montessori
environments for young children and directing a teacher education training certification program
for these types of teachers. As an administrator, he formed, owned, and operated a for-profit and
non-profit organization, which followed six Montessori infants through middle school programs.
These schools were affiliated and accredited. In 2000, The researcher became a co-founder of a
Montessori charter public school and, and is currently a board member of a Montessori charter
pubic school regionally in the area. In all, these sites for learning serve over 2,500 students,
Transitional Kindergarten-8th grade in the public school arena. They offer a multi-disciplinary
approach using Montessori educational programs covering multiple subjects in early childhood,
and Kindergarten through 8th grade. The researchers exposure to the public school system
eventually led him to an Educational Consultant position, monitoring early education preschool
state contracts. In his current role as a professor of Early Childhood and Elementary Pre-service
teacher education as well as administrative duties as the college's Staff Resource Coordinator, the
Montessori methodology directly and fully informs his contributions to the field of higher
education.

vii

Teaching, Learning, and Research Interests at the Community College


Humanistic development and Montessori pedagogical instructional principles are at the
root of my instruction, teaching, and learning as a college professor. The researchers training
and credentialing across these educational disciplines have included Montessori teacher
certification at the infant, early childhood, and elementary 6-12 year old credential levels. The
national growth and development of Montessori education has inspired him to bring these values
into the higher education levels being taught. They have also enriched his practice by
incorporating current research within the disciplines of his educational pedagogy. The
researchers practices are not merely based on one specific protocol comprised of either the
American Montessori Society (AMS) or the Association Montessori Internationale (AMI) alone,
nor should it be perceived as some Montessori sort of approach.
Moreover, Howard Gardners multiple intelligence theoretical learning style concepts are
blended into my instructional practice. These well-intentioned concepts have compelled him to
incorporate his learning styles which themselves are based on being models that offer relatively
simple and accessible methods to understand and explain the ways different people learn. These
concepts and tools are aids in understanding the overall personality and styles of learning which
fit with what people are learning and how its taught (Gardner, 1993). Together, Gardners
Multiple Intelligences connect across the Montessori philosophy because of how the researcher
links the learning styles with the Montessori principles of instruction. Furthermore, the cognitive
domains of Benjamin Blooms taxonomy of thinking become the metrics for how to think about
whats being learned across the learning styles. Finally, with respect to Montessoris pedagogy
of instruction, precisely Gardners approach to how students learn the material, Benjamin
Blooms taxonomy of cognitive objectives are embedded to incorporate the essentials of

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executive function in the basics of knowledge, application, and assessment/evaluation.


Interestingly, at the outset, Bloom believed that education should focus on mastery of subjects
and the promotion of higher forms of thinking rather than utilitarian ways of transferring facts
(Bloom, 1956). Hence, the authors research study is centered in these practices that involve
contextualizing experiences in community college students course dynamics across early
education, elementary school, and pre-service teacher education program content, and health and
social science majors. This teaching and learning integrates these developmental practices within
the courses being studied and the teaching pedagogies being used. Of the variety of approaches,
the Montessori system has helped the author to teach the content to students in higher education
by connecting the theory of coursework with contextualizing its connection with career practice
after graduation. Ultimately, this enhancement promoted the authors interest to study
engagement and course completion across students in these community college classes as they
affect the graduates' career paths.
The authors past experience in early childhood education fostered an interest to broaden
the understanding of Child Development in order to prepare college students for life skills into
adulthood. The instructional practices and methodology of Dr. Maria Montessoris work, in both
the private and public sector and across the physical, emotional, social, and cognitive disciplines,
have allowed the author to be successful in his career and strengthen students access and
success in teaching and learning at the community college level. This research study addresses
Dr. Maria Montessoris pedagogical principles of instruction as adapted to adult learning (Sykes
2006). Paulo Freires socio-cultural teachings (Freire, 2005) are also at the root of this research
study. Specifically, his work highlights how the author facilitates student engagement as a
method of Montessoris philosophy in teaching the coursework. Together these pedagogies help

ix

the course's guidance of the students to increase their participation (Freire 2005). His work
inspires a social and cultural lens addressing the development between the interests of
Montessori, the instructional styles in the community college classroom, and the students ability
to increase their participation in the learning environment, which builds on student participation
and completion. Building a collaborative model between Montessoris instructional pedagogies
in the community college classroom and Freires perspectives of social political and cultural
foundations supports student participation (McLaren, 2005). Student participation may create an
opportunity for the students to experience reflexively how they learn and integrate these
pedagogical principles of participation and student completion into their career path and work
force.

CHAPTER 1

The focus of this case study addresses the use of Montessori pedagogical instructional
principles implemented in the community college classroom. Shankland (2009) claims, The
classroom is the central location where students gather to pursue their college education.
Furthermore, a differentiation is made here between the pedagogy of teaching children --the
didactic, traditional, and teacher-directed approaches of instruction-- and that of andragogy
which has advanced over the past 30 years to encompass the delivery of building upon values of
ideas and concepts in education through a more independent way of thinking in adult learning
(Knowles, 1984). The andragogical model as conceived by Knowles is predicated on four basic
assumptions about learners all of which have some relationship to our notions about a learner's
ability, need, and desire to take responsibility for learning:
1.

Their self-concept moves from dependency to independency or self-directedness.

2.

They accumulate a reservoir of experiences that can be used as a basis on which to build
learning.

3.

Their readiness to learn becomes increasingly associated with the developmental tasks of
social roles as they move beyond graduation and into their career paths.

4.

Their time and curricular perspectives change from postponed to immediacy of


application and from subject-centeredness to performance-centeredness within an
organization (1980, pp. 44-45).

Faculty in community college that makes good use of student participation empower student
learners to demonstrate and interact with the theoretical material content of a course. Using these

approaches enable students to process and draw applied conclusions, which develop meaningful
understanding about their learning. Veltri (2006) wrote, It has been said that the visual
environment affects an individual's ability to perceive visual stimuli and affects both mental
attitude and performance. The face-to-face classroom environment is where the students
predominantly learn to apply the theoretical content being taught into the practice of their lives
including their career paths and work places (Gruenewald, 2000).
The classroom also becomes more than an intellectual place; it becomes a space for
human development including the social, emotional, and physical growth that occurs throughout
the life span. Therefore, it is important to note that instructional quality and physical
environment together are crucial partners in obtaining strong student learning where studentlearning styles such as the Montessori developmental characteristics are identified and practiced.
In order for the content of a course to have meaning, the student must feel and experience an
invitation to participate (Kester, 2009). This participation is based on how the material is
organized and sequenced within the environment (Keller, 2002). It also requires the ability to
balance delicately the environment and instructional quality to the needs of the student, which
can result in higher student participation. Therefore, when the physical, social, and emotional
needs in the environment are respected, faculty and students participate together successfully
(Gruenewald, 2000).
These researchers are highlighted based on their concern that standardization of
instruction focused on direct instructional practice compliments only the linguistic and auditory
style of learning. This style can limit the students participation and reinforce passive learning. In
turn, this can lead to poor performance and low student success. If these direct instructional types
exist across the implementation of coursework in the college classroom, then outcomes across

the vast range of courses offered can produce inconsistent results in student performance and
completion (Baker, 2002). Because of a growing awareness of the negative impact of multiple
levels of remedial courses on certificate and degree completion with similar instruction, there is
considerable interest in community college programs looking at approaches that create student
participation and completion (Navarro, 2009).

The Statement of the Problem


Colleges struggle to recognize the mediating role instructors play in the production of
building social contextual value in learning (Freire, 2005). In part, the educational, instructional
practices taught in the college environment could lead to stronger student outcomes
(Gruenewald, 2000). Evidence shows outcomes about completion and graduation are also in
question based merely on using more traditional styles of instruction (Navarro, 2009). The
purpose of this study explores the Montessori pedagogical principles in practice with community
college students. The focus is on the use of Montessoris pedagogical instructional principles as
practices with students on how they approach participation, utilize multiple modalities of
learning, and implications about how these approaches to teaching and learning assist in
contextualizing the curriculum to a higher value and relevance for overall student success.
Additionally, this research of teaching and learning, based on the use of the Montessori
pedagogical principles, addresses whether problem-based experiences across the content those
students are learning are reported to have an effect after graduation and into their career.
This case study explores whether evidence of these developmental practices exists in
every day and work place job roles of the students who experience them in their community
college courses. In order to examine and assess these practices, a focus group of graduates were

interviewed. This research offers implications about the Montessori pedagogical instructional
principles and developmental characteristics of student teaching and learning for participation
and successful college completion as well as into selected career paths.

The Purpose and Significance of the Study


The purpose and significance of this research examines the use of Montessori
pedagogical principles and contextual learning with implications for community college student
participation, completion, and principle application into their careers. The author inquires,
through the interview process, whether or not the use of the principles has lasting impact upon
the subjects chosen career paths after their community college experience. Furthermore, how do
graduates utilize these principles in their careers paths?
The goal of the study is to identify institutional classroom practices that go beyond
lecturing in a classroom. This study examines how project-based and student-centered
pedagogical practices taught using these principles could enhance student learning and affect
careers outside the community college experience. One of the primary responsibilities in
working with students in the community college classroom is to nurture and enhance the
development of the creative mind and to expand the learning environment beyond lecture- based
content to assist and expand critical thinking (OShaughnessy, 2008). What happens in the
classroom is integral to student completion and impacts their ability to recognize that learning
can differ across settings. The teachers pedagogical practice can have a long-term effect on the
design of quality-learning environments that impact the overall life of the graduate as their
careers are realized.

The studys broader goal is to find connections between community college teaching and
learning in pursuit of implementing these practices for the student into course academic progress
and to assist career achievement upon graduation. The study examines the educational
experiences that make a significant difference to student participation and successful completion
into the graduates careers. The practices and developmental characteristics of the Montessori
pedagogical methods , when embedded in a project-based and student-centered classroom, have
the opportunity to offer graduates a chance to demonstrate a stronger entrance into their careers
(Cottom, 1996). Therefore, the study examines whether graduates who were exposed to these
principles and milestones as community college students are guided to practice the seven
principles specifically in completing their education and into their careers. Hence, the
significance of the study can be profound if the subjects are using the principles in their other
college experiences and current career paths. This study has the opportunity to foster a learning
environment much more like the Montessori practices than the most prevalent mode of lecturebased instruction. Thus, using multiple modalities can strengthen student teaching and learning
in the community college environment (Lockhorst, 2010).

The Importance of the Course Context


The early education and family studies courses offered at the local community college are
human development based classes preparing pre-service educators, behavioral and social science,
and health services individuals in higher educational learning. These courses are primarily
required to obtain a degree in any of the following majors: Early Childhood, Education or
Behavior and Social Science. These majors are for students who are transferring to a four-year
institution to earn a bachelors degree in Child Development, Liberal Studies, Sociology,

Psychology, or health services such as Nursing or Pre-Medicine. These courses prepare students
by reviewing the sociological and life span principles regarding culture, race, and ethnicity of
students in the learning classroom. They are fundamental requirements that examine such issues
as environmental influences in school and how teachers and peers may influence his/her learning
as one moves into adulthood. These courses also explore family attitudes, beliefs, and
engagement regarding growth and development. Within the college community, these courses
specifically address gender, media, sexual orientation, social class, race, ethnicity, and the
special needs spectrum. The relationship schools play in support of these social roles,
experiences of individuals, and how family involvement and engagement becomes important for
growth and development can be called upon by students and their training in a given career path.
These critical resources regarding pedagogical, instructional practices and environmental
preparation are necessary skills for pre-service teaching individuals and other industry candidates
entering into the work force. The relationships between these two skills are supported when these
developmental characteristics are a part of the college classroom.

The Importance of Student Context


Students in community college are the focal point of this study. They are single,
partnered, married, working, or full-time students. The majority of the students have
accomplished their education through the public school system in traditional learning
environments. The context for this study addresses whether the exchange between the teachers
pedagogical instructional styles increases learning and how the students who respond with these
developmental characteristics transition into their career paths.

Research Questions
A study of the use and later effects of the Montessori pedagogical instructional principles
could add value to the research on quality instructional teaching in the community college. These
practices may stimulate and empower student participation, engagement, and stronger
completion and practice into their career paths. In light of circumstances surrounding student
remediation and completion rates, the exploration and discovery of instructional practices
include project-based and student-centered experiences in learning addressing the following
questions:

Chart 1
Research Questions
As a graduate of the community
college course:

As graduates of the community


college course moving on in careers:

When subjects completed a


course at the community college wherein
the Montessori pedagogical instructional
practices were employed, what evidence
was offered through interviews with the
subjects that these Montessori principles
had lasting impact as they completed
their education?

Do community college subjects


find a useful connection between
experiencing the implementation of
Montessori pedagogical instructional
practices in a higher education classroom
and their chosen career paths? If so, what
is that connection?

Limitations of the Study


The purpose of this study is to examine and shed light upon the connections between
community college teachings, using a Montessori pedagogical approach, and its effect upon
student completion and career path integration. The major limitations of the study include the
following:
The findings are limited to the data of only those graduates taught by one professor at the
community college. Further studies should be conducted with other instructors who utilize the
Montessori pedagogical instructional principles and/or other methodological practices to explore
the course completion, graduation, and connections to careers in other community colleges
within other student populations.
The study is based on the assumption that the instructor came from an accredited
Montessori teacher education program and has teaching experience using the methodology.
Furthermore, it is assumed evidence exists that the subjects in the interviews experienced his
pedagogical instruction.

Definition of Terms
The following definitions are used in the study:
Classroom Development of the student learning- Planes of Growth into Adulthood- It is the hope
and objective of the learning environment that as the students transform their learning through
the use of these guiding principles that a change in the thinking and reasoning promotes positive
change in the relationship of how we look to education as a way to expand our mind set
(OShaughnessy, 2008).
Curriculum is the formal approved college curriculum and what is taught.
Individual and Group Participation Rubric- The intention of sharing this information is to
heighten awareness about individual and group classroom participation and discussion. The level
name introduces the area of interest as we experience a social, face-to-face interaction with one
another concerning content and course materials. The A,B,C graded equivalent columns
provide students with areas of performance with respect to reaching, teaching, and learning in
such a way as to implement them fully across all developmental categories of the course and into
career paths with fellow students in subsequent courses and with colleagues in career paths.
Instruction refers to the pedagogical principles of Dr. Maria Montessori as a basis for teaching
curriculum.
Learning styles are defined in relationship to how students learn the material. The material is
offered in multiple ways for purposes of reaching the students individual learning style.
Pedagogical Instructional Practices- The instruction of the professor implemented using the
seven principles of the Montessori methodology.
Academic Progress is defined as students who pass courses and advance through his/her
coursework from one semester to the completion of his/her degree.
Retention means completion of a course in which the student originally enrolled.
Student Achievement- The goals and objectives outlined for a given course offering.
Student Academic Progress and Course Completion refers to major completion with a passing
grade or better.
Teaching and Learning is the interaction in the learning environment between the curriculum,
students, and styles of delivery.

Chapter 2
Review of the Literature
The foundations of our education optimally combine traditional instruction and its
coverage of the history and philosophy of the subject matter. It is the sociology of education that
contends with the time and space for multicultural education to become integrated into the whole
life education (Gonzales, 2005). This is where the students prior knowledge can become
influential to the wide diversity in the classroom and how it affects learning. In addition to
blending these important perspectives, the inter-relationship between the history and structure of
the American education system, the changing nature of the teaching profession, and the sociocultural factors influencing the adult learner become important.
The author considers foundational themes from a critical theory perspective, such as Dr.
Maria Montessori and Dr. Paulo Freire, as cornerstones provide a strong base to the suppositions.
Often, student learners lack the basic understanding of why inequities exist in today's schools.
They are unaware of the historical events that put a system in place and are not empowered with
strategies to address these issues once they experience them in the work force (Ruenzel, 1997).
Therefore, by providing students with this important background information, the goal of the
instructor is to enable participants to fulfill his or her potential with this skill set.
Examples of these characteristics may include how students participate in the course
objectives. This includes how large and small group discussions expand learning. By introducing
case studies that promote problem-solving potentials versus merely text reading, these
instructional practices and student developmental characteristics can begin to work together to
produce stronger achievement across the course as well as provide implications to the value they

10

hold for teachers in increasing student participation and completion into their careers based on
how a course is taught and learned.
The process of using technology builds a contextual alignment with the students
personal reality and could have positive effects on the learning when it is integrated with the role
of the teacher (TAMIM 2011). Multimedia and guest presentations, field trips, and
demonstrations are also a part of the in-class activities. Matriculating from the teacher
preparation programs to the classroom, the college students are ready to expand, enrich, and
deepen their teaching knowledge and skill through collegial reflection as well as continued
instruction and study (Lovo, Cavazos, & Simmons, 2006). Students are encouraged to apply
theory and research presented in the text to scenarios and into their personal lives as they see
themselves as educators in their field of interest.
Students use their critical thinking skills to determine which theories are applicable in
these different sociological situations and how to apply them with their school populations.
Therefore, based on the potential to use these multi-pedagogical approaches, students are
compared and analyzed against other students receiving minimally only lecture style formats.
With regard to graduates of the child, family and community and the life span development
courses, they varied due to methodological linguistic styles of lecture-based instruction versus a
project-based and student-centered approach using varied and multi-sensory instructional
qualities. Currently, student achievements vary and are inconsistent for classes that do not use
project-based or student-centered pedagogies.

11

The Scholarly Approach of Teaching and Learning


The scholarly approach of teaching and learning practices can help identify teachers who
are doing well or who are struggling (Duncan, 2009). Consequently, teachers can better meet the
needs of students as these learners become citizens in their career paths. This partnership in
revolutionizing schools must occur everywhere. Dr. Paulo Freire's work on the Liberation
Education is the dynamic that involves social engineering as the conception of human society.
A minority of educational theorists should not determine it. The human community must decide
(Martin 2009, 10-03). The perfect time is now; a sense of ownership about exemplifying the
importance of teacher preparation is what students need, so as they grow, they experience the
opportunity to participate effectively and contribute to our citizenry.

Contextualized Learning in Community College


These multidisciplinary pedagogical practices enable and empower college students to
become competent in the goals and objectives established for these courses. Thus, the influence
that the environment has in student learning can have positive and long-term effects on both the
outcomes of students and the human resources of the personnel modeling when these attitudes
and beliefs exist in the educational setting. Based on todays critical need to revolutionize
education along with addressing the achievement gap, it is apparent a part of the calculation of
improvement in community college learning environments could occur with the design of the
school environment; how students learn in them; and most importantly, how the teachers are
trained to teach about student learning.
The identity and training of the educator is embedded in the environment (Cossentino,
2006). Teachers across a spectrum, spanning early education through high school, specifically

12

receive extensive training tied to the curriculum models chosen as well as instruction in
implementing developmentally appropriate and performance-based assessments of learning
(Mead, 2009). However, in the college setting and because higher education professionals
become experts in content areas, issues related to student learning across these course areas have
posed questions of accountability to student success and completion in college.
Government and higher education have become more conscious of the educational
environment, which may extend our notions of pedagogy and accountability connecting to
andragogy in higher education student learning. Thus, instructional pedagogy in the community
college classroom becomes more relevant in connecting the ideas to the lived experience of
students, and accountability is re-conceptualized. The whole person learns from the training the
teacher has experienced. Additionally then, the entire environment, both physically and mentally,
matter to educators, students, and citizens in tangible ways (Gruenewald, 2000). The college
instructional practices must follow the students. Progress is observed from preschool through
college instructional outcomes and into careers.
"People with strong body/kinesthetic intelligence process information and express
themselves through their bodies, muscles, movements, or senses. Their bodies are avenues to
learning and understanding any content or subject. These people are sensitive and attentive to
environmental comfort such as temperature, lighting, and body comfort; these elements greatly
impact their ability to focus and learn.
If this is one of your strong intelligences, then you teach from your strong intelligence
using body/kinesthetic strategies. For example, you are mindful when setting up the learning
environment to consider body comfort, making sure there is adequate space for each person at
tables, and frequently provide body breaks by having people stretch, get up, and do standing

13

group activities, such as discussions and recording on flip charts on the wall, rather than staying
seated. You provide materials for participants to use independently during your sessions, with
the purpose of providing something for them to do with their hands, helping them focus and stay
engaged." (Hine, 2014)

Dr. Maria Montessoris Methodological Historical Overview


The theoretical framework of Dr. Maria Montessoris humanistic work informs a theory
in teaching and learning. There are other instructional practices with a more teacher directed
approach. One such approach, demonstrated through a longitudinal study Unveiling
Professional Development: A Critical Review of Stage Models, (Dall'Alba 2006), suggests
when student participation is employed as a part of instruction (versus only teacher directed or
lecture-based instruction) key assets to student outcomes and integration to their education and
career path potential imply increased student participation. In light of these student outcomes and
student participation, the work of Dr. Paulo Freire exemplifies the other base that demonstrates
the social construct of how culture and society affect the cognition of the individual for political
purposes and societal gain. More importantly in this case, using these approaches, the college
instructor or professor can seek out the power surge of the learning over the student.
Assimilation between the two theories informs this research case study.

Defining the Montessori Methodology Implementation


In the early 20th century, the Italian physician-educator Maria Montessori (1870-1952)
created the Montessori Method of self-paced learning for children. The Montessori Method has
influenced the modern-day development of alternative-education programs (Gettman, 1987). In

14

reaction to systems of teaching that require physical compulsion to gain a child's attention, Maria
Montessori's development of this philosophy, in Italy in 1907, is an educational system that uses
a set of didactic materials to arouse and/or entice the child's spontaneous interest, producing a
natural concentration on Montessori tasks that do not tire or annoy the child (Standing, 1957).
Children in Montessori schools are free to move about the classroom from one set of materials to
another in an environment prepared with auto-educative, multi-sensory, and manipulative
learning devices for language, math, science, and practical living. These concepts are known
through the relativity of the Cosmic Education approach.
Montessori education evolves initially at the early childhood ages, from 3-6, although
there are many training programs that offer the teachings for the infant and toddler child. It
emphasizes the early learning of reading and writing with children schooled by the method often
learning to read and write before the age of five. Pupils of different ages typically are grouped
together in a three-year age mix--such as 3 to 6, 6 to 9, and 9 to 12 years. For example, they learn
by manipulating objects such as vertical, horizontal, and oblique lines made of textured materials
and by fitting cylinders of various thicknesses into holes in a block. . The teacher serves as an
observer and catalyst. . Self-motivated and individualized learning are at the core of the method
and strive to develop self-discipline and self-confidence.
Specifically during the elementary years, Montessori's approach encompasses the "whole
to the part to the whole" theory. This "Cosmic Education" approach is the basis of Montessori's
pedagogy. It concentrates with the core subjects of language, mathematics, and geometry while
interacting with these core subjects throughout the teachings of botany, the study of the plant;
zoology, the study of animals; geography, the study of the earth, land, and water; and history, the
study of the era, ages, and our universe.

15

Montessori's research is extensive in relationship to the absorbent mind. At the 6-12


stages, they leave that era entering what she calls the "Intellectual Period" (Lillard, 1996). The
children's appetite for knowledge is immense. They are not satisfied with bits and pieces of
isolated information, this part to write a report for that part to memorize and reproduce for a test.
They want to grasp the "whole of knowledge". Montessori wrote that in this period "All other
factors sink into insignificance beside the importance of feeding the hungry intelligence and
opening vast field of knowledge to eager exploration" (Standing, 1957). This is the cosmic
education theory. It involves the child taking in knowledge that increases the intellectual ability
of the thought process of critical thinking and deductive reasoning. The result of the cosmic
education for the children is a development of gratitude for the universe and their lives within it.
They form awareness that they have received many gifts from human beings whom they will
never see or know (Lillard, 1996).
The final component leading to the successful implementation of the Cosmic Education
theories for the children is freedom along with the capacity for accepting responsibility (Lillard,
1996). Such examples of these aptitudes include a wider vision toward building impressions
from previously experienced didactic materials. Furthermore, the psychological presentation, or
the "Great Lesson," becomes a medium by which the elementary teacher is able to build from the
whole to the part and back to the whole again. The children have observed touched, and explored
the simple and concrete and are now ready for the building tools toward the creative aspect of
constructing new information from the whole. Structure within limits along with time
management provides the motivation toward product evaluation especially for the 6-9year-old
student. These responsibilities lending toward freedom can be stated in a Bill of Rights for the
elementary classroom:

16

- To act by oneself and for oneself


- To act without unnecessary help or interruption
- To work and to concentrate
- To act within limits which are determined by the environment and the group
- To construct one's own potential by one's own efforts
The elementary teacher takes special care avoiding the violation of these freedoms and thus
assists the children in meeting the responsibilities, which they engender (Lillard, 1996).
Although Montessori based her method on the early work of the French physician and
teacher Jean Itard and psychiatrist Edouard Seguin for the purpose of teaching and learning with
children, the value of these methodologies are questioned as to their purpose into adulthood.
Expounded in the Montessori Method (1909; English translation, 1912,) it has been used in
thousands of schools around the world and in recent decades has been in use in some U.S. public
schools. The first U.S. public Montessori school was opened in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1975, and
public schools offering Montessori programs now range in the hundreds including the author's
co-founding of a charter Montessori in the Sacramento region. Teacher training in the
Montessori Method is offered through oversight of standards set forth by Maria Montessori in
1929 and range across international and national U.S. organizations. The Montessori
Accreditation Council for Teacher Education (MACTE) now governs these organizations along
with many others, which accredit Montessori teaching institutions to practice the teaching
methods of Dr. Montessori through agreed upon standards and criteria for instruction and
curriculum, including the Cosmic Education method. The question once again is, how might
these attributes of the Montessori methodology be examined in adulthood whether an adult is a

17

Montessori student or not? This study will look at students in the community college classroom
and across a varied set of career paths.
Therefore, as these educational qualities allow for the mind of the child to grow
exponentially, the methodology has the potential to offer the adult mind these same attributes.
The incorporation of these principles into adult learning may have a direct relationship on
student teaching and learning in ways that may increase participation and completion. Hence, the
value of Montessori pedagogical instructional principles can be linked as an alternative
methodology in adult community college courses.

The Montessori Pedagogical Principles of Instruction and Developmental Milestones


College classroom lectures primarily focus on course objectives and tend to minimize
inquiry-based learning (Dall'Alba 2006). As inquiry based learning theory proposes, studentcentered learning and project-based approaches can expand learning beyond the community
college classroom (Martin 2009). Therefore, the use of the Montessori pedagogical principles of
instruction as tenets to student learning will act as the theoretical framework of this study. The
rationale in using this theory is to demonstrate how social influences affect academic learning.
Can the training of Montessori socialization processes and influences be instructed to insure a
students learning objectives could be met? Could a set of developmental characteristics in
students improve their educational learning? These practices, such as student-centered learning
and project-based assignments under the influence of these teaching practices and student
characteristics, become factors offering students an opportunity to experience the value of
instruction in the community college classroom. These practices may affect students' successful
completion and use of the practices across their career paths.

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The Use of Montessori to construct an Environment that Promotes Deductive


Reasoning and Thinking in the Community College Classroom
Comprehending the matrix of the mind and how it works is a phenomenal undertaking.
As the system of education transforms students from young children, imagination and creative
intuition play a very mystical role in childrens daily school experience. Dr. Montessori evolved
this methodological system over one hundred years ago, and it still causes great confusion with
regard to the concepts of how children think in order to distinguish between truth and reality.
According to the four planes of development within the pedagogy of Montessoris methods,
scientific factors play a fantastic role in the development of the child and imagination (AMI,
1971). It is in these elements that this research study asks the question of the college student:
What are the deductive reasoning skills needed to succeed and strengthen student success and
course completion based on instructional styles across the college?
It is within the first plane of Montessoris absorbent mind that specific sensitive periods
of development begin characterizing the personality and temperaments of the individual. As the
student moves from the stages of total dependency on the teacher to that of independence across
the curriculum content, the basic ideals of the social, emotional, and physical developmental
qualities are what spark the very core of this development. It is believed through the
methodology of Montessoris perspective that all things must first be true and concrete in
childhood (Standing, 1957). If this is true, then how might these developmental characteristics
offer the college student with a path of academic progress as they participate in their education?
In order for the reality of the experience to be beneficial, the student must be offered the content
through the use of the senses; in other words, the availability of the didactic material offers

19

students the opportunity to explore the truth about reality convergent, factual, and through the
senses (Montessori, M., (Clarement translation) 1967).
Using the Montessori methodology, the prepared environment is organized through the
researchers role model and the ideal awareness of the developmental patterns particular to
meeting the needs of the student; therefore, the adults in the environment service them. Once the
foundation of the classroom is prepared for the student, observation is warranted upon his/her
activities within the perimeter of the class structure. The student works through the initial
reading while the author links the class with the content for purposes of studying its personal and
professional connections. Scientifically, it is predicted that in order for the student to grasp basic
concepts of reality that the environment must meet these basic requirements. It must be founded
with support, bonds, and attachment for rituals within the schedules, repetition, and
predictability. Once the normalization process evolves, through regularity, many new and
sensitive periods of interest unfold in the classroom. The teachers role is to continue
empowering the children toward autonomy and self-gratification through their own sense of
accomplishment (Montessori, M., (Clarement translation) 1967). This accomplishment occurs
through increased initiative and the will to succeed. Furthermore, the efforts observed in this
simple and concrete environment promote more advanced systems to develop.
At this point, the culmination of the social/emotional, physical, and cognitive
developmental traits begin merging together to form new patterns of recognition and interests
toward more advanced systems noted as the Intellectual Period (Montessori, M., (Clarement
translation) 1967). It is then the ideal time to begin promoting more diverse systems of thought
and the process of critical thinking skills, including deductive reasoning, problem solving, and
decision making. According to Montessoris theories, plane one has advanced to the highest

20

potential in the child and can be demonstrated equitably for the adult learner as well.
Cumulatively, the foundation of knowledge has been formed, and the student is well on the way
toward the divergence, which Montessori speaks of with regard to imagination.
While, it is critically identified amongst common educators that Montessori has a weak
link with regard to the knowledge of the developmental process of todays student; on the
contrary; the foundation of knowledge has been structured with absolute conviction. The student
has had many opportunities to develop capable strategies with concern to the core subjects being
taught. These subjects are experienced through the seamless curriculum of the Cosmic
Education theories of Maria Montessori similar to her teaching while in India (Standing, 1957).
Finally, as the methodologies of Montessori are defined, what qualities of character,
conscientiousness, attitude, and behavior do we want for community college students in an effort
to model access, a student-centered approach, participation in their own education, and
strengthened student completion, graduation, and career path implementation? Among the most
important, respect and love demonstrate a strength in service to fellow classmates and ultimately
and ideally to the community and career. The challenge of this effort is to stimulate the concepts
of honesty and open communication. It is often said, the fool remembers the experiences but
forgets the lesson while the wise person focuses on the experiences yet remembers the lesson.
Developmentally, the student is gaining a sense about self-identity that enables the learner to
begin reaching out socially to the community toward civic duties and volunteering for the very
purpose of gaining experience in deductive reasoning and decision making effort affecting an
organization or small group of individuals across the career path and work force (Standing,
1957).

21

Conclusively, Montessoris multi-sensory developmental approach allows the isolation of


each developmental quality to be presented both visually and auditorially based on the individual
students interest and abilities. The procedures introduced through the structure of Montessori
are seen as a way of enhancing attention and increasing self-discipline and self-direction. The
Montessori principles also enhance order, organization, and work cycle. Using these concepts of
Montessori as a medium for the entrance into the period of development known as the
Intellectual Period offers students with the diversification of knowledge of the whole life
preparation and perspective (Seldin, 1997).
The intention of integrating the use of the Montessori pedagogical principles is to
develop support for dedicated educators while providing guidance in the establishing of values
and fundamental principles upon which Maria Montessori based her philosophy throughout the
elementary years for adult use and success. The same principles that pertain to childrens
education need to be applied whenever possible to adults.
Montessori's concern for freedom of choice throughout the four planes of development is
emphasized through care and nurturance at all levels. It is guided by a deep respect for the
individual development of the whole student as a human being and contributor to society. While
using the Montessori teaching methodology, opportunities for open-ended discussion may
encourage thinking skills on the part of the educator, as well as on the community college
student. Individually selected projects will provide examples of methods used to implement the
freedom of choice within the structured and imaginative program content.
Because Montessori emphasized the active participation of the learner, is there
reciprocity to the student to experience this phase of the Cosmic Theory to become well
applied into adulthood? Montessori felt the process of development was much more important

22

than the end product. Therefore, this literary work attempts to provide an atmosphere of
understanding and comprehension with regard to how the implementation of this program works
with community college students as they participate in their education to achieve a career and
enter the workforce. Methods used to measure these beliefs include closely- supervised surveys
and small-group, cohort learning communities of current students and graduates across
education, health, and social services.
The objective for the researcher is the ability to demonstrate knowledge of Montessori
philosophy, theory, and methodology. Included in this process is the ability to inquire and
demonstrate theoretical knowledge of pertinent research findings in the field of human
development and how it relates with college students as they succeed in courses, graduate, and
enter their careers. The insights and skills needed to facilitate the individual needs of the students
are the expectation of this literary work as it attempts to secure a greater understanding of the
philosophy of Dr. Maria Montessori and her pedagogical principles of instruction across the
fields of education, health, and social services as this researcher uses these teachings as way to
determine if they are applicable in the college environment.

Seven Pedagogical Principles of the Montessori Philosophy used as


Instructional Principles in the Community College Classroom
The value of the preceding information sets the stage for the community college student
to gain access and participate in an environment that is enriched with the promise to share prior
knowledge. In this way, learning becomes linked with the current trends and issues facing our
careers and work lives; hence, the value of social/cultural learning becomes the lens (Freire,
2005). In order to create success in learning, the following seven principles are guides to the

23

researchers professional conduct that seeks to promote eventual changes in how the students
participate in their own education (Montessori, 1967).

Chart 2
The Seven Pedagogical Montessori Philosophical Instructional Practices
Respect for the student- The ability to balance the learning between content and
trusting in the students prior funds of knowledge
The absorbent mind- The ability to absorb, apply, and analyze basic knowledge
The Prepared Environment- The physical space is vital in offering student-centered
engagement
The process of Normalization- Creating trust in building the relationship
The Sensitive periods- Based on trust in the relationship, an awareness that
development of knowledge increases as the student applies critical thinking such as
problem-solving and decision-making
Role of the Teacher- The role is to come prepared with content and demonstrate
flexibility regarding the needs of the students as they will build the contextual value;
meaning erupts
Role of the student in adult learning- defined by the ability to fulfill the role of teacher
in carrying out leadership of skills learned and teaching or practicing them such as in
the learning and/or work environment.

(Montessori, 1967)
These seven pedagogical principles taught by the research imply that when the content is
organized and carried out in these ways across the adult classroom (using different learning
styles that relate to individual) students have the opportunity to promote multiple outcomes.
In this case study, the questions allow for an examination as to whether project-based and
student-centered Montessori pedagogical classroom strategies employed at the community
college level allow subjects to relate the principals to their new environments and career paths
when they are later questioned. The center of this study is whether or not the combination of
instructional pedagogies in early childhood pre-service training for the childs classroom

24

prepares college students to become effective when implementing these developmental


characteristics in their educational environment and careers.
As a part of this study, the researcher measured the outcomes of instructional
effectiveness in a Sociology course and a Psychology life span course. Student interviews
provided the feedback regarding the success of the project-based and student-centered
assignments. The student activities that the students engaged in were offered in a prepared
physical space where connections between the critical observations of hands-on learning in the
classroom as well as contextual connections to the personal life of the student and the content
being learned could take place. In this way, the classroom is the central location where students
gather to pursue their college education. Unless students choose online or distance learning, the
face-to-face environment in the classroom is where the students predominantly learn to apply
theory to practice effectively. Thus, the classroom specifically is reliant upon what teachers
learned as students and how effectively they teach (Dall'Alba 2006). Future teachers solidify the
significance of the theory presented in the classroom and hopefully will bring to life the practices
they learned when they launch into their career. The classroom becomes more than an
intellectual place; it becomes a place for human growth including the social, emotional, and
physical growth throughout the life span (Keller, 2002). It is evident that in order for the content
to have meaning, the student must feel an invitation to participate when the material is organized
and sequenced within the environment where the teacher and the student participate together in a
physical, social, and emotional places which breeds cognitive energy.
It is the hope and objective of the learning environment, as the students transform their
learning through the use of these guiding principles, that a change in the thinking and reasoning
promotes positive change in the relationship of how we look to education as a way to expand our

25

mind-set across our higher education experience and career paths (OShaughnessy, 2008). Here
are nine considerations of student success that graduates can experience concerning the use of
the principles when applied to complete their education, and implement into their careers.

Chart 3
The Nine Developmental Characteristics for Student Learners
Large and extensive work
Allows concept and size to be identified by peers and instructors as an important
accomplishment
Heightened Sense of Justice
Defining and relating interpretations of justice (fairness) along with what is equitable (what a
person needs as opposed to making sure that all people receive all things which not everyone
needs).
The hope and vision of the school is to create students that are self-reliant, just, fair, and
cooperative citizens through a collaborative process.
Hero Worship
Admiration is ultimately organized through a level of balance across the life span. It is the
classrooms responsibility to prepare opportunities for students to become aware of heroes
outside of our societal stereotypes such as sports stars or Hollywoods entertainers who are
more superficial. Such things as classical literary works allow students to look at characteristics
that are far greater in quality like humanistic qualities of true heroism. Examples may be Robin
Hood, Christopher Columbus, and the like.
Ultimately, it is the hope that children and students develop the perspective that the quality of
life is what one puts into it as well as see the authenticity of heroism through the efforts of what
the ordinary, everyday has to offer.
Herding instinct
The feeling to follow someone for his or her traits. Becoming the follower versus taking a
leadership role. How does one take on the role of being a leader? These values will be examined
across the small group-learning cohorts.

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Limitless capacity for learning


Making every opportunity a learning experience. Rather than limiting by way of no, dont,
shouldnt, cant, wont, syndrome, provide a connection for the student to see freedom
within limits. The syllabi are a guide.
We need to realize students do need time to absorb information.
New information- what is the process to transform basic knowledge into what can be applied,
analyzed, synthesized, and evaluated with regard to what has been learned?
Principle of rest
This is an important time when observation occurs. A time to absorb or gain a comfort level of
the particular concept.
Experimentation
This process becomes the point at which observation can detail or identify the appropriate need,
such as supplies, or decisions about a given problem.
Research-based work needs to be fulfilled regarding much of the needs in these areas.
Going out
Empowerment is important. Given the constraints upon some of our communities, we must, as
educators and professionals alike, create opportunities whereby the students are able to
participate in the society as independent thinkers and active life doers.
Work of the student/small group cohort learning community
Do not do for the student what he/she can do for him/herself
Provide initial prompts. As the facilitator or guide initiates the foundation, the more the students
become actively engaged in creating his/her own educational answers. Therefore, he/she
receives less as far as materials and presentations on subject matter, for the students themselves
are now generating the knowledge.

(Montessori, 1967)
Effective recruitment, selection, and hiring of faculty should result in the hiring of faculty
who demonstrate teaching practices that manifest interest, motivation, and participation of

27

students who may promote these characteristics. The implication of hiring faculty who will
utilize project-based and student-centered approaches can be powerful for student outcomes. Non
lectured-based exclusive teaching enables students to demonstrate an interaction with the
material and can support students in gaining the ability to draw conclusions from the theory and
develop meaningful understandings about their learning. It has been said that the visual
environment affects an individual's ability to perceive visual stimuli and affects both mental
attitude and performance (Veltri, 2006).
A reflection upon the organizational analysis of the human resource perspective in the
college classroom today brings together a blend of professionals with many styles and methods
that comprise the model environment. School district and campus leadership have a strong
obligation to define what effectiveness means and how effectiveness should be measured within
the school setting in keeping with the intents of a school district and campus mission statement
(Young, I.P., 2008).

Dr. Paulo Freires Socio-Cultural Political Influences for


Student Educational Participation in Teaching and Learning
Dr. Paulo Freires work in socio-cultural teaching examines the social context of the
oppressed in third world countries. It reminds us about the hierarchy within the college system.
This work illustrates a close resemblance to community college students based on these
contextual values; and thus, it will contribute to this case study. Dr. Freire believes the modern
education system damages students with its domestication of people through a banking system
of indoctrination involving received knowledge (Rait, 2009). Providing a rich environment is the
backdrop to what todays students need in building confidence. The framework of Dr. Freires

28

work allows this study to examine the foundations of the teacher as the cultural worker. This is
an intriguing look between traditional roles and what Freire remarks as good teaching.
Meanwhile, a look upon the values of Montessoris method is in step with the teacher. Therefore,
when the teacher uses the students as primary resources in and across the learning community,
Montessori methodology promotes these pedagogical principles, which can demonstrate
developmental characteristics of the students social influences and can assist in weaving
dynamic learning into a system of traditional mastery where Freire says, learning is not static
(Rait, 2009). The diplomacy between the social cultural values of Freire helps to blend the
relationship of the teacher as learner and the student as teacher across the curriculum content.
The value of skill development learned in the college classroom directly relates to how a
student participates in the learning experience. Dr. Paulo Freires work fosters the basis of
importance concerning the socio-cultural connections. Students have to connect to the material
being learned. To wash ones hand of the conflict between the powerful (the hierarchy and
teacher) and the powerless (the student role) truly mean[s] to side with the powerful, and not be
neutral (Freire, 2000). When high quality learning promotes development, a sense of readiness
across both teaching and learning approaches can help students to integrate new life skills of
executive function from the educational institution and into their careers. The beliefs and
practices of Freire and Montessori promote to the student what can become a practice in
completing a course and/or their education. Freires work clearly qualifies these relationships by
building connection between the learning environment and the value of how content is delivered.
This case study looks at a way to revolutionize the higher education classroom based on
techniques we learn in Kindergarten and use throughout our educational career.

29

The kindergarten approach to learning is characterized by a spiraling cycle of


imagination, creativity, play, sharing, and reflection. This approach is ideally suited to the needs
of the 21st century education, helping learners develop the creative mind set along the
developmental continuum. In turn, this builds thinking skills that are critical to success and
satisfaction in todays society (Resnick, 2007).
In promoting the styles Resnick mentions above, the college professor has the
opportunity to create a learning environment for the adult students across courses and
coursework which exemplify the importance of how students can effectively learn and how to
apply these skills into their career paths.

The Overarching Value of Montessori, Gardner, Bloom, and


Freires Work to Students in the Community College
The educational and administrative leadership needed for operating in todays higher
education teaching and learning programs, require multi-dimensional people at the helm. A
sincere effort has been incorporated into daily teaching and learning to assist students and preservice employees gain from seeing how the Montessori pedagogical instructional principles can
affect their community college classroom environment outcomes and success when entering a
career.
Incorporating the Montessori methodologies with current standards of teaching and
learning invites increased participation in the community college. It also provides the potential to
produce high quality outcomes that exceed the current accrediting standards and broadly address
the new Student Success Act recommendations for increasing student success completion rates.
This work can help educators accumulate a set of practices in organizational leadership that can

30

continue to strengthen the academic disciplines in community colleges. They equally spread the
practice of strengthening student participation and engagement as well. These skills become
further developed in this case by the use and implementation of Gardners Multiple Learning
Intelligences with learning style differences and addressing them in teaching content (Gardner,
1993). Additionally as stated in the prologue, the Montessori pedagogical instructional
principles, coupled with recognizing Gardners theories of multiple intelligences, prompt higher
levels of executive function with the use and integration of Blooms Taxonomy of Cognitive
Thought Processes. The value of the basic cognitive domains of thought, according to Bloom,
offers students a device to learn knowledge simply, apply it to a given circumstance, and
evaluate its purpose and significance (Bloom, 1956). Given the amalgamation of these four
systems, this case study promotes the implementation of strengthening student success in the
higher education classroom. If so, this results in reinforcing graduates to practice these skills of
observational and developmental techniques across careers as well (Shanker 1996).
The importance of strengthening student participation and increasing college graduates is
paramount to this research study. The use of these practices in the community college classroom
can promote success for students. In turn, these skills help prepare tomorrows graduates, and
they might have implications for all work practices. Implementing these pedagogical principles
of instruction through humanistic relational observation and collaborative interaction may breed
greater success in student participation at many levels (DeLott Baker, 2009). Furthermore,
students who experience these types of instructional styles have an opportunity to expand
leadership in their own lives and develop new styles and trends of thinking about ways to learn.
The utilization of multiple learning styles and critical thinking into practices can affect the work
force in general (Shankland, Genolini et al. 2010). Equally, the belief is that school

31

accountability to teaching and learning offer the potential to further the vision of student
participation in the classroom. Cumulatively, as teachers refine their teaching and learning
approaches, they more greatly accomplish involving the students as participants in the classroom
and reinforce a community of learners that can produce greater student success, thereby
increasing completion and graduation.
Based on current experiences, can the strategic effort of the researchers implementation
of the Montessori pedagogical principles reinforce student participation, successful completion,
and have implications into the work place? Community college professors who teach to the
senses can involve multiple modalities to improve instructional quality. Teachers across school
programs who prepare learners from as early as preschool and elementary school years well into
adulthood can be known to add to the quality of teaching and learning that becomes integrated in
adulthood (D'Orio 1999). This skill-set supports collegial articulation across disciplines. These
Montessori principles can offer and promote a readiness for learning, once again connecting to
daily life. Therefore, the principals can become an instructional guide of the professor to
understanding the implementation of the college students unique learning styles. Potentially, all
professors could help one another to understand many content areas in a way that contextualizes
the learning for the students (DeLott Baker, 2009). This research promotes the thought that
student achievement, as a collaborative partner to advancing these said practices, could enhance
the work place. The Montessori pedagogical principles may also align with student
communication and become a collaborative partner to this modeling in community college. The
skill-set available in today's community college classroom addresses ways that can support
community college student access and participation in the learning environment. (Rule and Kyle,
2009). When enhancing the college environment with pedagogical styles, which alternately

32

stimulate student participation and interaction, the college classroom environment can increase
access and promote higher participation due to perceived social supports and more in-depth
relationships (Shankland and Genolini, et al. 2010).
The continuity of these newfound Montessori pedagogical instructional practices for the
community college instructor has the opportunity to branch throughout the college system and
offer long-standing potential to develop a foundation in the new realms of philosophical content
and styles of instruction in teaching and learning. The Montessori pedagogical instructional
practices highlighted have the opportunity to systematically expand across the United States with
other innovative styles such as the flipped classroom (Mazur, 2011) and the open learning
initiative (Wieman, 2012). Ideally, the presence of these instructional principles, in the forefront
of the college classroom with these types of environments, could further develop trends across
all divisions of education concerning student, collegial, and higher education development. The
recognition of this research also promotes the current reform models in the United States
Department of Education where these experiments are currently being studied at Harvard and
Carnegie Mellon universities. Bringing these types of instructional practices forward as teaching
and learning tools can demonstrate to state legislative levels about awareness of the Preschool
through the two-year college (P-22) educational continuum. Hence, a revolutionary design for
teaching and learning along with student academic progress in the community college system
offers the potential to increase participation and completion rates.

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Chapter 3
Methodology
This qualitative case study explored the lasting implications of Dr. Maria Montessoris
seven pedagogical principles of instruction as tools used in teaching the content of two
community college courses in higher education taught by the researcher. In light of the
community colleges low student success and completion rates (Kalb, 2014), the exploration and
discovery of these Montessori pedagogical instructional practices focused on experiences that
particularly interested the graduate to examine these principles about their own engagement
across the class. Specifically, they concentrated around their perseverance to persist in the class,
how these principles impacted their college completion, and (after graduation,) their use of these
practices in their career path. The structure of open-ended interviews (Patton, 2002) was chosen
as a means to pursue the research. The purposes of the interviews were designed to enable the
graduates, as subjects in this study, to share their stories about these principles in their
subsequent education and into their career paths. The research questions are:

Chart 1
Research Questions
As a graduate of the community college
course:

As graduates of the community college


course moving on in careers:

When subjects completed a course at


the community college wherein the
Montessori pedagogical instructional
practices were employed, what
evidence was offered through

Do community college subjects find a


useful connection between experiencing
the implementation of Montessori
pedagogical instructional practices in a
higher education

34

interviews with the subjects that these


Montessori principles had lasting
impact as they completed their
education?

classroom and their chosen career


paths? If so, what is that connection?

In order to examine these practices, the interview protocol was created. The interviews
were conducted based on Pattons (2002) qualitative interviewing work, called The
Standardized Open-Ended Interview. The interview consisted of three sets of questions. They
addressed general information about the individual, their recall of the coursework, and, with a
chart of the Montessori pedagogical principles, did they impact their experiences into their career
path. The introductions identified the graduate and were chosen to help with personal
connections in the classroom. The questions related to their general coursework experience
identified the embedded instructional practices of the teaching subjects experienced. The third
set of questions specifically related to the pedagogy of Dr. Maria Montessori and how they
related as to the impact upon the graduate into their career paths (Appendix A).

The Subjects (Graduates)


In order to explore the impact and use of the Montessori pedagogical principles, the
subjects were drawn from two courses the author taught. The subjects were graduates from the
community college, and they completed one or the other of two courses. One course was a
Psychology course, and the other was a Sociology course. It is noted that the courses were crosslisted across four different departments, Early Childhood/Liberal Studies, Sociology,
Psychology, and Family Consumer Science (Family Studies). Hence, the graduates were from
varying majors or degrees. All subjects were individuals who matriculated between 2012 and

35

2013 in the following disciplines: Social Science, Psychology, Health Science, Early Childhood
Education, Elementary Liberal Studies, and Sociology. The subjects are now pursuing careers in
social work, counseling, dental science, early childhood and elementary education, and health
fields.
The author invited, via school e-mail, the eight graduates from the community college
who took part in the two courses a part in the study. The author knew the graduates. All subjects
volunteered freely to participate in an interview.
It is taken as a given for this research study the practices of the researcher was true to
Montessori principles. These principles were employed as both part of the curriculum of the
courses and the pedagogy used to teach the course. (Note: As stated previously, as the higher
education instructor, the author is a certified and credentialed Montessori Teacher from a
nationally recognized accrediting body.) The subjects were selected because of their career paths,
the researcher knew them, they were willing to participate in the interview, and they could
readily discuss the Montessori pedagogical instructional principles due to their passing grades in
the aforementioned courses.
Each interview meeting was held at an agreed upon time and was between the former
student and the researcher. The, approximate one-hour long, interviews were recorded and
transcribed. The interview protocol can be found under instrumentation in the appendix A.

The Interview Process


The interviews protocol was designed to explore the Montessori pedagogical instructional
principles employed across the courses and their potential effects later on in other educational
pursuits. The questions were directed at the teachings and asked if the subjects thought the

36

principles were useful as tools with other fellow students in subsequent coursework, and/or
within procedures across the graduates different courses and career paths. This study was based
on the subjects recall of the principles in the coursework, and as tools supporting success in
assignments and group work. Additionally, the study examined the staying power of these
strategies for the subjects in subsequent pursuit of careers in a variety of fields. Recall and
impact of the principles were measured by whether the graduates ability to map specific
strategies to specific outcomes were, more or less, successful. In general, the questions asked:
did the principles have some lasting effect on the individuals as applied in other coursework, and
how might these strategies interact within their career paths?
Interviews were face-to-face. Subjects were asked to recall the Montessori pedagogical
instructional principles. In addition, subjects were asked if these specific principles had a
positive effect in the completion of their education and training and into career paths.
Essentially, the interview explored subjects viewpoints about whether or not the
principles helped support success in the class in which they were introduced. Questions were
also asked about attendance and participation as well as completion of assignments as a function
of the principles. Finally, the author explored how the principles identified in the course might
have been applied into their career paths (education, training, experience). The overarching
questions related to how the subject integrated them in subsequent courses to complete college
goals, and if the principles, in fact, could be practiced in the career path with co-workers and
colleagues.
Specifically, the interviews addressed questions about the seven Montessori pedagogical
principles and whether or not the graduates have practiced the principles in seeking and carrying
out subsequent coursework and/or job roles and responsibilities within their respective career

37

paths. Patton, (2003), claims that inquiries similar to the ones the researcher used in questioning
the use of the Montessori principles could provide qualitative data in determining links between
the coursework participation, engagement, and assignments into the completion of their
education and into their careers. The interview questions were appropriate for the population and
purpose of the study. Given that Montessori pedagogical principles have been the foundation of
early and elementary education for student engagement, was it plausible that similar results could
occur in higher education if they were used in teaching at two and four year institutions?
Interviews were the main data of the study to understand better the thinking of the students who
had experienced the principles. The purpose of a research interview is first and foremost to
gather data, not change people Neither is a research interviewer a therapist. Staying focused on
the purpose of the interview is critical to gathering high-quality data (Patton, 2003). The
interviews concluded by asking if the Montessori pedagogical instructional principles, across the
course teachings, were productive with other fellow students in subsequent coursework, and/or
within procedures across the graduates different courses and career paths. The following chart
depicts the graduates and their major and career with pseudonyms:

Chart 4
Subjects Across Career Paths
Subject (Graduate)
Pseudonyms

Major

Career

Valentine

Behavior and Social Science

Youth Counselor

Raquel

Administration and Justice

Rehabilitation Counselor

Roberta

Allied Health and Science

Nursing

38

Carlton

Chemistry

Dental Science

Shirley

Liberal Studies

Education Consultant

Christa

Psychology

Adolescent Middle School


Counselor

Anna

Sociology

American Sign Language

Becca

Biology

Researcher

Data from interviewing graduates formed the basis of this qualitative case study. It was
hoped the graduates of these courses, wherein the Montessori principles were taught and
employed, could provide evidence of the staying power of these strategies looking beyond the
community college experience and into career paths. It is known after coursework at the
community college; there is value in the graduates success in the work place (Berger, 1977).
Based on the study design, the following chart represents how the study was carried out
including data collection, individual interview process, interview format and structure, interview
questions, and data collection on how the Montessori pedagogical principles were used.

Chart 5
Data Collection Procedures and Interview Process
Steps
1

Informed Consent Statement was provided and signed

Each subject was given an explanation of the research and the purpose of the
interview during an orientation meeting. Following the orientation, the
individual interview began. The information conducted from the interview
was recorded and transcribed. Anecdotal notes were also taken. The subjects
were given a copy of the list of the principles at a specific point in the
interview process. This was a design feature first allowing recall to take place,

39

and then helping the subjects to remember, in greater depth, exactly what the
principles are. Later, the interviews were analyzed looking for patterns and
themes (Patton, 2002, 417)
3

The subjects were thanked verbally, but no payment or remuneration was


provided.

Upon completion of the dissertation, an invitational follow-up to all subjects


with an executive summary report presentation will be provided.

The Data Analysis


Transcribed responses to the questions were analyzed, as were the notes taken during
interviews. These data were analyzed looking for patterns and themes. In following the work of
Gay, (2009), being organized and paying attention to the notes and to the transcriptions, patterns
and themes became apparent.
Upon completion of the graduates interviews, their responses became the raw data. The
information compiled was cumulatively analyzed into themes of similarities between the
graduates and responses unique to each graduate. In this step, the researcher used a somewhat
unorthodox approach called Wordle. It is a web-based tool that provides a visual
representation of word descriptions contained in a piece of text, in this case, the three categories
of each graduates responses. The researcher combined each graduates answers from each of
these categories, used the web-based tool, and the outcome provided a manipulation into an
arrangement of their words in a graphic form. The arrangements of the words (the graduates
answers to the questions) are larger words for responses by the graduates in relation to the
frequency of the words being used. The smaller words in the Wordle graphics were the results
of unique individual responses.

40

Although this analysis was unconventional, it provided a novel picture of how the
students responded to the Montessori pedagogical principles in the interview. A consensus has
gradually evolved the important challenge to capture appropriately questions and issues, and not
to hold to any single methodological approach to all problems of analysis (Patton, 2002). The
responses of the students depicted in these Wordles, ultimately, allowed the researcher to
analyze the data in such a way as to see emphasis in responses. By combining their more
personal information with the coursework responses and their answers to the Montessori
pedagogical instructional principles questions, data was analyzed. Consequently, the outcomes of
these illustrations could help to provide, in the findings, areas of credibility and trustworthiness
to the process of existing patterns that would lead to the results in the findings.

41

Chapter 4
Findings and Results of the Data
This qualitative case study originated because the author was curious about why student
participation and completion in the community college system was low. Furthermore, as a
Montessori-trained educator, the pedagogical instructional styles have been quoted in the review
of the literature to have worked well with younger children. Therefore, this curiosity evolved to
look at these Montessori principles being used in the higher education classroom with
community college students. In using these principles and interviewing graduates, themes to their
learning across the completion of the course and into career paths became apparent. A
summation of the eight interviews was compiled. The practices ranged from student engagement
to different ways of thinking. These elements were captured throughout the interviews as they
related to Montessoris pedagogy and how they participated and became engaged in the learning.
The transcriptions of the interviews revealed connections between the Montessori principles in
comparison with Howard Gardners multiple intelligences, Benjamin Blooms Cognitive
domains, and Paulo Freires work on the socially oppressed as they related to learning and
thinking style differences along with social involvement. Small group teaching and learning
appeared to impact how their experiences affected the graduates connection of the Montessori
practices with their career paths.
Given the Montessoris principles were the foundations to the classroom design, these
themes across the interviews certainly told the story. The Montessori pedagogical instructional
principles as the cornerstone to the guiding force of the teacher in relationship to the success of
the student were what made it work (Becca, 2014). In a very consistent pattern, respect for the

42

student was premier. The value of being individually respected fostered an interest to inquire and
explore the content. Gardners multiple intelligences and Blooms domains of thinking styles
assisted in formulating questions about the content which led the students to see application and
synthesis as a method of understanding content with linkage to personal experiences. As mutual
respect and relationship grew between the researchers use of the Montessori principles and
students in the small groups across the classroom, more and more discussion ensued about how
the content built connections with their personal lives and the common practices could then be
analyzed in relationship to their career paths. The themes were:
- Mutual respect between the instructor (researcher) and the students who felt valued as
learners.
- Personal ownership of the classroom environment made it a living environment.
- A courageous growth of personal sharing that other students valued and connected to
the course content.
- A willingness among the student learners in the small groups to take responsibility for
facilitating leadership skills of problem solving and decision making among the
student learners to get the work done that led to graduating from the course.
- Social participation with one another expanded with an eventual realization of the
importance of connecting the content with real life and its transformation to career
paths.
Ultimately, the researchers use of the Montessori principles as a base to how the
classroom was organized and structured led the student learners across a path to discover, as the
content was introduced and explored, how the unique differences in learning and thinking styles
of each other were leveraged. As the increase of purpose grew, the content built meaning for the

43

graduates and their respective career paths. In turn, Freires work evolved the perceptions to
understand social participation based on respect could have far-reaching and beneficial results in
both personal and professional influences. Consequently, what they began to further realize was
the expansion of our human roles with one another was becoming intertwined, researcher and
learner. Without a sense of identity, there can be no struggle (Freire, 2000).
With respect to the blending of these practices, the realization of engagement, academic
progress, and participation led to a students successful completion of his/her coursework. It is
known beyond the individual that examining the interaction between dimensions of the
classroom context and an individual's beliefs and achievement can connect to careers (Young,
A., 2003). As the classroom content was explored in the interview, it was valuable to incorporate
the styles of learning instrument, reminding subjects of the content and material of the course
allowing them to comment on how these attributes took hold in their careers or career training.
As examples, such learning styles included a lecture-based or a linguistic approach, a visual or
representative model illustrating what was being theorized, and finally, a tactile, or hands-on,
element.
From the interviews, the graduates reported the Montessori practices stimulated their
learning. These practices provided opportunities that related the theory being learned to the
practice associated with the learning experiences. This condition was reported to be evident in
the graduates life experience and hoped-for career path. Therefore, interviews provided data for
the case study. The graduates across the interviews reported when the Montessori pedagogical
practices were used that the students learned not only the content but also about themselves as
learners. As the courses went on, the learning of the content connected with real practice to its
contextual nature, and the students had more opportunities to engage in social practices which

44

could contribute to career success later. Cumulatively, the eight subjects interviewed mentioned
the importance of the principles related well within their majors and career paths. The
implication from the interviews is that the Montessori principles could create consistency among
the students and their work, allowing them to achieve similar success as graduates applied to
their careers. The following chart illustrates the subjects education and career paths.

Chart 6
Graduates in Career Paths
Major

Career

Behavior and Social Science

Youth Counselor

Administration and Justice

Rehabilitation Counselor

Allied Health and Science

Nursing

Chemistry

Dental Lab Technician

Liberal Studies

Education Consultant

Psychology

Adolescent Middle School Counselor

Sociology

American Sign Language

Biology

Researcher

Based on the subjects majors and career paths, the research questions were then used to verify
the subjects experience in the respective courses and their interpretation of how they are using
these practices in their careers.
In summarizing the subject interviews, the researcher used a software program called
Wordle. The software transposed the oral and written words from the interview into the

45

following figures, which captured the graduates interview results. Therefore, Wordle
qualitatively aggregated the graduates interview by configuring small or minimal feelings to
large and bold statements that demonstrated high impact influences although the direction of the
word played no part of the research. The larger the word the more often it was discussed and the
greater role it played in the graduates completion of the course and integration into his/her
career path. In the classroom, the assignments, subsequent classes, the completion of their
education, and the success in their career paths were enhanced.
The following figures (1-9) provide evidence through Wordle illustrating the outcomes
of the subject interviews. As the researcher captured these interviews, an illustration of the wide
spread access to learning multiple aspects of the content was realized. Each graduate was able to
experience content delivery across the entire class, but through the value in wording across the
entire illustration, the graduates experienced individualization in learning the material. These
practices prompted engagement in the material which led to further inquiry about how these
practices connected with personal experiences. Thus, the analytical ability grew in linking these
illustrations of concepts with the importance to their career paths.

Interview Results
Figure 1- Behavior and Social Science
Interview Results: (Valentine)
Ultimately, the role modeling was exemplary. There was an ongoing level of respect
between the educator and my peers and this allowed all the details to unfold as I learned the
content. I could inquire about them, discuss them with my peers and connect them to my career
role with children. These experiences ultimately empowered the development of my leadership.

46

In turn, my leadership skills have become built upon these roles and when practiced in person,
my professional growth evolves. Every good leader is a follower (Valentine, 2014).
The affirmation of Valentines engagement in the class experience not only reinforces the
importance of the researchers impact of the use of the Montessori principles, but it also certainly
implies the value of holding a high level of respect for the students involvement as critical to
career path integration. He goes on to add, this course made it real for me. I learned I could
promote these practices myself. I have built a better relationship with the kids Im working with.
They now have more respect for me when I dont push them, but respect them; they push
themselves to do better now (Valentine, 2014). This confirms that the capacity to build
relationship can transcend leadership.
Perhaps the most relevant area of Valentines interview was his interest as a youth
counselor and care provider, seeking to meet others needs. The interview confirmed, based on
the design of the class and instructional principles that recall of the course material had a major
affect on him, both in completing his coursework as well as with his employer. Keeping
everyone at the table informed starts early. Be cautious about how you affect others, get to
know their perspective, be neutral, and non-confrontational (Valentine, 2014).

47

Specifically in his career, as a care provider, he related features of working as a team with
children. Whether in counseling situations or when care providing in a one-on-one situation,
always inform the patient and/or client the circumstances and ask for input and clarity when
appropriate. Be careful and tender of their opinions and always explain the how and why
something is important (Valentine, 2014). This certainly validates the Montessori instructional
principles of role modeling and teacher as learner.

Figure 2- Administration and Justice


Interview Results: (Raquel)
I adore [the] professor! He helped me to gain self-esteem and confidence in my learning
capacity. I will finish school and when I do, I will invite him to the graduation! (Raquel, 2014).
What Raquel expressed happened for her through this course helped to build her ability to finish
her other courses with a similar sense of self-esteem and confidence.
Although the coursework essentially required more work up front to understand the
Montessori practices, as she understood them, the work both individually and in a small group
setting actually became easier for her to complete. The reason for this was because, as students,
we were working as a team. While we were always focused on our individual learning, your
reinforcement of our work in groups fostered our thinking in a way that would prompt us to
analyze how we were thinking. You werent always at the front of the room. Sometimes you
were in the back of the room. This fascinated me. As we shared our individual interpretations of
the content, when we needed guidance on a topic, either with reinforcing the information or
redirecting an area of content that needed more information, you provided it (Raquel, 2014).

48

Through discussion around this topic, Raquel and the researcher further discussed that
this concept of instruction was very different than in all other classes. This method excited her
and enticed her to want to know more. It strengthened my courage to ask a question and/or
communicate an answer across the class as a whole. (Raquel, 2014)
With regard to Raquels work in rehabilitative services, helping to support people in
building their self-esteem is very important. These practices helped her to express this with her
clients. In turn, I feel more success in my work because I am confident to use this skill as I
communicate with my client. (Raquel, 2014)

Figure 3- Allied Health & Science


Interview Results: (Roberta)
In Robertas circumstances, information that led to becoming a nurse was very important
to her. At every point of the course content, leadership in nursing was on her mind.
I truly appreciate Professor Lorenzs style of connecting with the students. This class helped to
transform my ambition of becoming a leader throughout my nursing program. The other students

49

and the hospital where I am doing my rotations strongly support me in my leadership. I am


thankful I had this class (Roberta, 2014).

For Roberta, her data specifically showed the influence of her role as a student within the
role of the program, i.e., the small group. This interactive, ongoing, and small group met weekly
to discuss the chapter topics with responsibility to provide views back to the entire class
regarding interpretations about the information. For me, this work allowed me to recognize the
value of working as a team concerning patient care. We all must work together for the sake of
the patient and be on the same page. This provided a basic understanding of using these
principles in my own management skills (Roberta, 2014).
The interview detailed that the course also had much to do with Robertas professional
goals. It helped her to pursue the nursing program. In my current floor rotation in cardiology,

50

we need to know the psychological maturation of the patient. In other words, to break through
the ethnocentrism of the process of other peoples developmental way of thinking, whether it is
for them created a right and wrong. In my goals it is about being professional and yet nurturing.
This truly brings forth the value of social participation. To be a teacher and befriend the patient
became all about my role as I came to understand the Montessori pedagogical principles of
instruction (Roberta, 2014).
Further in the interview, the exploration of the course pedagogy revealed a very specific
point of Robertas role with patients. Especially with teen patients, why they lash out or rebel in
my pediatric rotation, it was beneficial to know the theoretical values of growth across these
planes (Roberta, 2014). This specifically raised the value of the implied principles to mean that
knowing the content, given the styles of teaching, brought this patient relationship to fruition in
ways that reached successful completion. Consequently, as stated, the geriatric value and
accomplishment patients could embrace, Maslow and Ericksons theories, specifically having to
do with my nursing interventions for older patients, gave way to the importance of the practices
of the absorbent mind and the value of these sensitivities I learned about (Roberta, 2014).

Figure 4- Chemistry
Interview Results: (Carlton)
As a veteran, this class had particular interest to me. As I returned to school from the
military, I was particularly in awe about how students were so unmotivated in their learning.
Based on what I had experienced, I was very motivated to get the content, do the assignments,
and move on (Carlton, 2014). What Carlton expressed over his interview certainly addressed
these expectations.

51

The value this class taught me and actually assisted me to get into U.C. Davis for my
undergraduate course work based on how I placed in my interview to the Chemistry program.

With my interest in learning, becoming a dentist with a chemistry background has me very
captivated. With Professor Lorenz as a support, I knew I could accomplish my goals (Carlton,
2014). Through role-playing and working with the course materials (including class projects and
student discussions) my learning was reinforced. My main take away was how the content was
structured. I liked the order (Carlton, 2014).
As for Carltons other course work, highlighting the points using other styles of learning
he had become acquainted with (including role-playing and/or the multiple styles of learning
such as empathy and communication styles in discussions) became great examples to use in other
classes. These were practices I used with other students and when teachers werent aware of
these learning styles for me as a student; listen as opposed to hearing (Carlton, 2014).

52

The description of Carltons career management was validated for him, and he became a
stronger person and professional for it; furthermore, the main subjects of the course, and how
they were taught and learned, impacted his experience in advancing to complete the degree.
This translated for me to be much more cognitively aware as a 31 year old with 'prior
knowledge' has impacted my life; in other words, I display 'holding it together' where other
colleagues may have 'lost it' (Carlton, 2014).

Figure 5- Early Education & Elementary Liberal Studies


Interview Results: (Shirley)
For Shirley, she had much to say about how the class design helped her. As a young
child, she had reading difficulties, so hands-on experiences were a relief for her. She could work
with examples and work as part of a group of learners. Individually how my personal
experience affected my outlook was to look at ways I eventually interpreted my role to be as I
now work with personnel, parents and most importantly, children in a school environment
(Shirley, 2014).

53

In particular, after Shirley took this class, she indirectly became a comparison within the
content delivered. After her graduation, she actually took Montessori training, became a teacher,
and is now a school director. As transcribed during the interview, when asked about this
particular coursework, it wasnt at all what she expected. She thought it would just be another
class. So many 'ah ha' moments about my natural love for children came to light. My experience
in this class taught me about seeing the whole child (Shirley, 2014). She then took my
Montessori training, I could recognize the childs past social experiences. Furthermore,
supporting and nurturing the practices myself with my role modeling to the adults, it could
provide and orderly style to move the children ahead physically, emotionally, and cognitively in
order to address their academic growth. This class exceeded what I expected (Shirley, 2014).
Without the prepared environment, over time, children lose interest in achieving. There
must be enticing experiences in store for them to flourish. The same is true for the adult learner. I
particularly chose Montessori training for myself because of my experience with Professor
Lorenz (Shirley, 2014). Once she took the Montessori training specifically, I realized where
his styles of instruction came from. I have now followed in those footsteps. My work is
motivated by helping children to become intrinsic learners (Shirley, 2014).
The interesting development this interview presented was the reciprocal value to career
paths, especially in the younger years. The research discussed only detailed adult learning
specific to Montessori training educators who work with children. This interview highlighted
that a college class in higher education, using these practices, could substantiate the industry of
education as well as the seven, other career paths. This became a fascinating result which can be
explored in discussions around all career path benefits.

54

Figure 6- Psychology
Interview Results: (Christa)
Once I took this class, it convinced me as a returning student with three children, I
wanted to use these skills to finish my associate of arts and transfer to the four year institution to
get a bachelor in Psychology. I want to help build connections with young children as a
counselor the same ways I experienced them in this class with Montessori instructional practices
as a part of my own experience. I appreciate how this class taught me to recognize my self
confidence (Christa, 2014).

In particular, the interview revealed that the impact of the normalization process affected
Christa the most. With regard to the course value, the concern was held for the student and
focused on career. This base was primary in building trust; once this dynamic is built,
interactions can expand the learning; personal contact was fostered across assignments as well as
understanding the conditions of other fellow students when outside issues impacted their

55

learning. In other words, issues personally that affected our learning; this resolution came about
because of the trust, normalization could see other peers as people (Christa, 2014).
My career path as a counselor has definitely become easier because building the
relationships journey has become more influential in the way of executing projects as opposed
to merely an assignment or grade. Relationship is essential and trust is evident when
normalization develops. I can then see mentoring is what builds the practice to further normalize
across new endeavors (Christa, 2014).

Figure 7- Sociology- American Sign Language & Deaf Studies


Interview Results: (Anna)
Although I took Professor Lorenzs class a few semesters ago, and I didnt
remember the specific theories, I feel as if he supported me to become stronger in socializing. As
an American Sign Language interpreter, socialization is important. This class taught me to reach
out to others and in doing so, it helped me build confidence that I can reach my goals (Anna,
2014).

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Anna was quite endearing about the course. Although she clearly identified that she did
not remember every aspect of the class, once the interview process afforded her the Montessori
pedagogical principles, Anna quickly recalled what the course actually helped her to realize. As
a graduate and working with the Department of Food and Agriculture, this course improved my
communication skills (Anna, 2014). As the interview progressed, it would be confirmed that the
principles had come to be a contribution to her overall development.
Throughout the interview, two specific areas related to the pedagogical principles
continued to come forth as they related to the themes about personal responsibility and
socialization. With regard to Annas application in her career, she stated, I apply this learning to
elementary and middle school church program that I volunteer for. However, my career path is
not where I work, therefore, it is minimal use in my current work (Anna, 2014). As the
researcher continued with the questions, a realizing sense came over Anna.
Initially, as personal goals were discussed, Anna spoke about the courses effect in
helping her to realize that she is a visual learner. As a goal for the future, I want to work with
deaf children, and in doing so, sign is visual. This type of communication is very influential to
my success and those I will work with. In the meantime, I really do need to be mindful about
how people learn, thank you for helping me to realize this. I may not have ever realized this had
we not spoke about these outcomes (Anna, 2014).
Secondly, a realization occurred by Anna that everyone is truly different and shared her
perspective in relation to the themes noted earlier. In her current role, as described, the use of
technology and telecommunications requires a more professional communication style.
Grasping this has helped me to be careful as to what to say and what not to say. The pedagogies

57

during our course were a great way to encourage the student to build confidence especially when
public speaking (Anna, 2014).

Figure 8- Biology
Interview Results: (Becca)
An initial thought as I sat in the front row, is this will be just another psychology class
and it will merely confirm what I already know (Becca, 2014). To Beccas surprise, she shared
in the true value of these principles based on her prior life experience as a Waldorf educator.
With an interest to be a researcher myself and with a love of science, I have input to a given
project (Becca, 2014)!
According to Becca, the interview equated to a better understanding of her personal life
in connection with her career path. As a teen mom, early choices in my career were about
raising my child. However, after taking this class, my natural scientist came out and helped me to

58

crystallize my thinking about educating a career in science (Becca, 2014). Throughout the
interview, Becca shared that at every turn into a new chapter, I continued to find confidence in
myself based on the instructional principles of the course (Becca, 2014).
The interviewee continued to validate Beccas value as well as the case study. She was
able to share that the class had helped her to extend these featured principles into her own
community of scientists. In this way, physical activities are influential to on-going learning as
we experiment and hypothesize to a result (Becca, 2014).
In particular, the pedagogical principles embedded in the instruction of the course
offered me connection to my prior Waldorf teaching practices. This provided me with the space
to give and received feedback (Becca, 2014). Becca shared that she was able to relax and ask
questions. Here, it was acceptable to dialogue and better understand how the content could or
should connect with our careers. This was good work, I progressed; this concept has provided
me with the ability to learn from my own questions by simply asking them out loud and getting
my answers confirmed when right and simply redirected when wrong (Becca, 2014).
The prepared classroom environment was another area Becca felt was quite remarkable.
The large group and, most important, the small group could offer feedback through building trust
that could be shared participation across the group (Appendix B). This feedback to the larger
group provided information which could, once again, be detected socially throughout all levels
by preparing the information and presenting it in a larger way for meaningful connection to our
careers. I didnt feel comfortable asking questions; Im not broken and now, I can ask the
questions knowing the answers are there and not necessarily mine, but based on the trust and
respect of each other, how we can cumulatively allow the institution to change; basic instruction

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with a more hands-on experience. Its lacking in my career, if I were the director, I would build
off respect; versus being competitive and hierarchical (Becca, 2014).
As a returning student and single mother, this class absolutely turned my life around.
Although I was a Waldorf teacher and enjoyed my work, I had always wanted to be a scientist
and conduct research. Once I finished this class, I shifted my major and am now completing my
four-year degree in Biology. It was Professor Lorenz that invited me to believe in myself. I really
appreciate his genuine style and interest to care for every student to want to achieve her or his
best, thank you (Becca, 2014).
Im very grateful for this course. It was a catalyst to realizing a better set of outcomes
for my daughter and me. Its the institution in place and to move through this class has been
beneficial to realizing this development in myself (Becca, 2014).

Cumulative Results Of Subjects


Figure 9- Cumulative Subject themes

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This Wordle provides a cumulative illustration of the graduates combined experiences


when the Montessori pedagogical, instructional principles were practiced during the students
coursework. The teaching and learning enabled heightened the students academic progress
regarding retention and completion showing an increased learning of the material in a group and
connecting it to career and work. Furthermore, this case study validated that the methodology of
Montessori pedagogical practices can offer students, who achieve their education, increases in
their confidence also to connect their prior and current knowledge with their career interest.
Consequently, these practices can increase success into the industries in which the graduates
work.

Summary of the Data


Cumulatively, the data demonstrated common themes across the Montessori instructional
principles and the course content. They held meaning personally and professionally. As the
graduates expressed the value of respect between instruction and peer group experiences, a
greater educational focus persisted in learning the material and a further in-depth importance to
career implementation.
Although different major and degree aspirations to career paths existed among the
subjects, in a summative way, the graduates found collective benefits when they were given the
opportunity to contextualize their learning. They reported positive experiences from the courses
taught and found the pedagogy used helpful, supportive, and meaningful. Interviews yielded
strong correlations between the courses taught, the Montessori instructional principles used, and
application of these principles further on in their lives.

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Chapter 5
Discussion
According to the four planes of development within the pedagogy of Montessoris
methods, scientific factors play a vital role in the development of learning (AMI, 1971). As
known, Dr. Montessori evolved this methodological system over one hundred years ago, and it
still causes great confusion with regard to the concepts when compared to traditional systems of
education. However, these results, as shown through the interviews, have illustrated,
qualitatively through Montessoris pedagogical instructional practices, the matrix of the mind
and how it works was a phenomenal undertaking. As the system of education transforms students
across the learning planes of growth, these graduates reported that they experienced both
increased imagination and creative intuition. Ideally, they were very purposeful in recognizing
their role in developing critical thinking, problem solving, and decision-making skills. In turn,
these features became the catalyst to the demonstration of their leadership skills across the
completion of their course, the remaining courses it took to graduate, and worked well into their
career paths.
It is within the planes of Montessoris absorbent mind that specific sensitive periods of
development assisted the characterization of the graduates' personality and temperaments to the
active and engaged learner. As the graduates moved from the stages of total dependency in the
teacher to an interdependent learner, the basic ideals of the social, emotional, and physical
developmental qualities were what sparked the very core of their overall development. These
pedagogical principles built trust to learn, and use the tools of learning, for career development
preparation. It is believed, through the methodology of Montessoris perspective, all things must

62

first be true and concrete and develop to the abstract and random (Standing, 1957). Therefore, in
order for the student to demonstrate a conscientious mentality toward the concepts being learned,
the student had to first experience a connection with his/her own reality. The concepts stemmed
from the belief that in order for the intuition to become a reality, the graduates first experienced
the world through the use of the senses; in other words, the availability of the didactic material
offered learners the opportunity to explore the truth about reality. Consequently, factually and
through the senses, prior knowledge and hands-on experience were what built the long standing
memory and meaning for the content (Montessori, M. (Claude A. Clarement) 1967).

The Classroom Environment and Pedagogy


As stated earlier in Chapter 3, according to Kalb (2014), in light of the community
colleges low student success, the exploration and discovery of my training as a Montessorian
led to the development of this dissertation. Could these pedagogical principles have implication
on community college student success? Therefore, the data was analyzed, and the results
determined that the physical classroom environments essential task was to create a
multidimensional intellectual space for students to be offered the opportunity to explore. As
claimed by Page, The school is primarily an intellectual place. The foundation of education has
to be that you try to teach people to improve their ability to think about such things as social
education, and functional education, and they're all incidental (Page, 1987). In building the
foundations of human resources within the employee, the knowledge imparted around the
content and material, demonstrated through instruction, now plays a vital role in the elements of
the prepared classroom environment. Student perceptions of these types of environments were
affirmed through ways that promote and contribute to further student engagement across classes,

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which led to college completion. Equally, these attributes build skills in the practices across the
industries examined in this case study. It is proposed that if the consistency of these practices is
exemplified across a greater number of courses, then similar student outcomes could result.
Maintaining sensitivity in finding a balance between these skills is important among instructors.
Therefore, the environment plays a valuable role in connecting the theory and student
participation with the advancement of higher education and how these values translate into
career paths. These instructional policies have long-lasting effects on societal participation as
these subjects progress through their discovery-based environment and into career paths.
It was through these learning styles that the graduate was able to translate meaning from
the theory presented to make meaning as it fit with his/her personal life. Thus, the use of these
skills in strengthening the higher education classroom, implementing with such methodologies
like Montessori, have determined a positive effect on discovery-based learning. According to
Weaver, Students who actively participate in the learning process learn more than those who do
not (Weaver, 2005). Based on these interviews, further use of these different styles of teaching
and instruction by professors across the coursework in the community college can assist the
student in graduating with a major and/or transfer to a four-year institution. The expansion of this
type of instructional methodology claims that the relationship of connecting the theory with
personal experience more easily connects them with a career path. Therefore, these principles, by
way of policies and procedures monitored by human resources, strengthen career paths when
implemented. Consequently, as the interview deepened into the questions about Montessori
pedagogy, the graduates were able to link these effects with the implementation of the personnel
review in a career and/or evaluation process and procedures of a certain role within a career path.
As instructional quality in the interviews were validated through strong student outcomes, it

64

became clear that innovative instruction in higher education, using varied and proven learning
styles, promoted a higher caliber of content delivery, engagement, participation, and completion
for the graduates. These graduates reported that their levels of achievement were greater and
more successful. This, in turn, encouraged the students to complete the course. Ideally, this
information has fostered growth into the graduates career path as well.
The ultimate community college value given to this research asks about student
engagement, retention, and student success. The relationship this research has demonstrated
concerning participation and completion has proven, based on the interviews, how steadily
embedded the Montessori pedagogical instructional principles were in creating a consistent
environment with clear expectations. In turn, engagement and participation of the students
ability to connect demonstrates intrinsic discipline and emotional intelligence to succeed
(Goleman, 2007). As seen in the final figure illustrating the components of the Montessori
pedagogy, the significant results showed that the interviews confirmed the outcomes which
completion and career path success can take place when an instructor practices these types of
instructional pedagogies. The research reinforced student completion and career path influences.
The answers were a resounding yes. The use of the Seven Pedagogical Principles of the
Montessori Philosophy Instructional qualities breed respect, and with this common agreement,
the limitless potential of learning for all involved is possible (Montessori, 1967).

Chart 7
Analysis and Outcomes
As a graduate of the community college
course:

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As graduates of the community college


course moving on in careers:

When subjects completed a course at


the community college wherein the
Montessori pedagogical instructional
practices were employed, what
evidence was offered through
interviews with the subjects that these
Montessori principles had lasting
impact as they completed their
education?

Do community college subjects find a


useful connection between experiencing
the implementation of Montessori
pedagogical instructional practices in a
higher education classroom and their
chosen career paths? If so, what is that
connection?

Common Threads for Research Questions 9-15


In relationship to the research questions restated above, the analysis of the common
threads using the Montessori pedagogical principles reassured students in completing their
college degrees and certificate programs. As an example, work and career are integrated through
the course content and pedagogy employed throughout the courses. With regard to relationships
and stronger identity, the use of the small group cohort model resulted in enhanced
communications. Furthermore, the prepared physical environment enticed students to attend and
work together collaboratively. Increased communication, leadership, and mentorship evolved
from a balance of these practices used.
The use of the Montessori pedagogical principles also assisted the graduate in realizing
their value to careers. The Wordles helped to illustrate a value of building consensus in the
work place. A further increase of leadership skills and their benefit to potential career
advancement became apparent. They clearly related to communication in the workplace
surrounding problem solving and decision-making connected to the organizational needs of the
company.
Outlines by course are ways in which curriculum committees by department can assure
teaching and learning are addressed in college coursework and instruction. Simmons (1997),

66

confirms that small, group work as examples, illustrated through these interviews, helped to
affirm class-wide peer-tutoring peer-assisted learning strategies, in which student partners
assisted each other two to four times weekly, benefited individualized learning activities. This
approach has been shown to be effective in improving academic achievement in general and
linking contextual learning into the graduates careers (Berry, 2006). As the college instructor
seeks for clarity of the meaning of academic freedom and course learning objectives, one aspect
is well defined: there are values of effective practice that all post- secondary and higher
education models can implement and provide opportunities to meet the high-quality objectives in
reaching course outcomes such as was described earlier in the areas of this case studys
interviews. According to Chickerings work (1987), these best practices in higher education
include:

Best Practices in Higher Education


1.

Encourages student faculty contact


Frequent student- faculty contact in and out of class is a most important factor in student
motivation and involvement. Faculty concern helps students get through rough times and
keep on working. Knowing a few faculty members well enhances students intellectual
commitment and encourages them to think about their own values and plans.

2.

Encourages cooperation among students


Learning is enhanced when it is more like a team effort then a solo race. Good learning,
like good work, is collaborative and social, not competitive and isolated. Working with
others often increases involvement in leaning. Sharing ones ideas and responding to
others improves thinking and deepens understanding.

3.

Encourages active learning


Learning is not a spectator sport. Students do not learn much just sitting in classes
listening to teachers, memorizing prepackaged assignments, and spitting out answers.
They must talk about what they are learning, write reflectively about it, relate it to past
experiences, and apply it to their daily lives. They must make what they learn part of
themselves.

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4.

Gives prompt feedback


Knowing what you know, and dont know, focuses your learning. In getting started,
students need help in assessing their existing knowledge and competence. Then, in
classes, students need frequent opportunities to perform and receive feedback on their
performance. At various points during college, and at the end, students need chances to
reflect on what they have learned, what they still need to know, and how they might
assess themselves.

5.

Emphasizes time on task


Time plus energy equals learning. Learning to use ones time well is critical for students
and professionals alike. Allocating realistic amounts of time means effective learning for
students and effective teaching for faculty.

6.

Communicates high expectations


Expect more and you will get it. High expectations are important for everyone for the
poorly prepared, for those unwilling to exert themselves, and the bright and well
motivated. Expecting students to perform well becomes self-fulfilling.

7.

Respects diverse talents and ways of knowing


Many roads lead to learning. Different students bring different talents and styles to
college. Brilliant students in a seminar might be all thumbs in a lab or studio; students
rich in hands-on experience may not do so well with theory. Students need opportunities
to show their talents and learn in ways that work for them. Then they can be pushed to
learn in new ways that do not come so easily. (Chickering and Ehrmann, 1987)

We can do it ourselves-with a little bit of help (Chickering, 1987). These practices, in fact,
overlap with the Seven Principles of Montessoris Pedagogical principles of instruction. They are
shown here, by the quotes from interviews that highlighted their personal connections to their
achievement and outcomes in the course, how they assisted them in the completion of their
education, and are using the principles in a practical way in their careers. Clearly, the value of
supporting these qualities is a highly probable reason for incorporating these principles into
higher education. The following chart depicts a summary of the Montessori pedagogical
instructional practices as they equate to each student:

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Chart 8
Montessori Pedagogical Principles & Graduate Reflections
Seven Pedagogical Principles of the Montessori Philosophy Instructional qualities
Respect for the student- The ability to balance the learning between content and trusting in
the students prior funds of knowledge
I felt so respected by my classmates. The way you encouraged open-ended dialogue
allowed us to share our experiences with each other and then we connected our
information to the chapter work. It was an amazing experience (Raquel, 2014).
The absorbent mind- The ability to absorb, apply and analyze basic knowledge
As a returning student, I gained back my confidence because you respected my
experiences, and I could then apply them new information. This opportunity fostered my
interest to seek a major in Biology (Becca, 2014).
The Prepared Environment- The physical space is vital to student centered engagement
I distinctly remember rearranging the room every class period so we could be face to face
with our classmates. I met new people that I am still friends with today (Carlton, 2014).
The process of Normalization- Creating a trust in building the relationship
As an educator myself now, I never realized that you made us feel comfortable and not
uneasy. I have taken this practice and incorporated it into my own classroom by using icebreakers to help students become comfortable with one another. They find as they do this,
friendships begin and picking on others decreases (Shirley, 2014).
The Sensitive periods- Based on trust in the relationship, an awareness that development
of knowledge increases as the student applies critical thinking such as problem solving
and decision making
I didnt know what I wanted to be when I returned to college. Taking this class truly
helped me decide to become a nurse. Your support of us to take the lead each week has
encouraged me to become a leader in my nursing program. I truly enjoy my role with my
fellow peers (Roberta, 2014).
Role of the Teacher- The role is to come prepared with content and demonstrate flexibility
regarding the needs of the students as they will build the contextual value; meaning erupts
I had very low self esteem and didnt know what I wanted to do. Once I took your class
the first day, I learned by how comfortable I felt I wanted to become a psychologist to
help be a role model for students. This course helped me appreciate other peoples
perspective. I learned from my classmates (Christa, 2014).
Role of the student in adult learning- defined by the ability to fulfill the role of teacher in
carrying out leadership of skills learned and teaching or practicing them such as in the
learning and/or work environment.
I grew up here in this town, and this class taught me about the bio ecological model. My

69

interest to share my story influenced me to want to give back to my community. I want to


work with music in a youth center helping kids to be successful with my influence
(Valentine, 2014).

As the pieces of classroom and course learning objectives were constructed together, a
clearer picture of personal processes was facilitated in order to promote student learning from the
higher education coursework point of completion to the subjects career path integration.

Instructional Quality
As the examination of the graduates learning styles were connected, regarding the course
objectives and student achievement, this case study was able to demonstrate how the correlation
between instructional quality and student participation became interwoven. These performances
are known as Functional controls which pertain to those measures guide the human resource
function relative to the actions of employees (Young, I.P., 2008). Particularly in relationship to
the first research questions posed in this study, when subjects completed a course at the
community college wherein the Montessori pedagogical instructional practices were employed
by the researcher, was the evidence offered, through interviews with the subjects, that the
Montessori principles had lasting impact as they completed their education? Truly, although
most college teachers have been trained to be the experts in their area, and advanced degrees
have denoted their authority in the classroom, specific instructional practices are lacking. We
are the decision makers for our classrooms: we create the syllabi, assignments, assessments, and
we make sure the course runs on schedule (Young, A., 2003). However, what these interviews
have determined is that such examples of these aged functions is that the graduates found it hard
to relate to a high degree of self-identity and worth in student achievement in more traditional

70

classes after they experiences the Montessori pedagogical principle of instruction. Additionally,
Berrys research exemplified that the following strategies could be effective in increasing
students' involvement in whole-class math and literacy lessons: modeling the particular skills
being taught, posing questions encourage differing viewpoints, calling on students to answer
questions or when they volunteer, restating students' contributions to make them more accessible
to other students, and keeping the discussion on point (Berry 2006). These interwoven functions
and implementation of teacher strategies in the classroom truly helped students to achieve overall
success, become graduates from the course specifically, and complete their degrees. Ultimately,
once these interviews were transcribed, they helped the graduate recognize and unfold the
organization and implementation of these skills and their own roles into the educational setting.
In realizing these measures of instructional quality, they build upon the levels of functional
controls.
Further features of instructional quality also derived the values characterized by Levin
(2010), who states,
Unlike many examinations that focus only on the transfer mission, this study includes
other vital areas of the community college, including workforce preparation and developmental
education. Study findings reveal that the practices of these programs had four common
characteristics: cohesionthe ability of program personnel to operate as a unit in which
behaviors and actions mesh or are rationally consistent; cooperationthe degree to which
program personnel work together toward common goals and form good working relationships
with each other and with students; connectionthe ability of program personnel to sustain
interdependent relationships with internal and external entities, such as other departments within
the college and industry representatives; and consistencythe presence of a distinctive and
stable pattern of program behaviors that promote program goals (Levin, 2010).
With this example, graduates shared these aspects of the classroom involved in both formal and
informal styles of instruction. The lecture form had the least purpose and smallest outcome. The
interviews resulted in much agreement over how beneficial the large group exchange in
information was based on the small group cohort community used as a part of the classroom

71

environment configuration (Appendix B). Attributes such as peer-teaching or tutoring and gender
and social support blended through these instructional styles worked best. Additionally, Lillard
introduces yet a different way of thinking about meaningful guidance as a part of the
management of the classroom:
It is true that the student develops in his/her environment through activity itself, but
he/she needs material means, guidance, and an indispensable understanding. It is the adult who
provides these necessities. If the adult does less than is necessary, the student cannot act
meaningfully, and if the adult does more than is necessary, he/she imposes him/herself upon the
student, extinguishing the students creative impulse (Lillard, 2005).
Collectively, it is through these types of experiences in classroom management which enabled
the graduates to absorb the content and material that led it to coincide in ways that were
meaningful and purposeful in recalling, applying, and assessing merit to as they spoke about how
these principles offered success in their career path. They very much valued the student
participation. It equated to a higher level of achievement. Cohesively, as they reflected upon the
pedagogical principles in relation to their careers, they shared similarities about how the
personnel practices in their careers offered a comparison to my approach versus the more formal
stimulation, which offered less engagement. Instead, there were references to more active
learning as the graduates spoke about implementing the practices into the daily operation.
Ultimately, a trustworthy setting stimulates both learning and interest, which can contribute to
student retention and completion from the college courses and practice into career paths.

Montessori Pedagogical Practices:


Outcomes in the Community College Classroom and Careers
The interviews qualified values about how the researcher fostered growth with
connection to the student needs based on the use of the Montessori pedagogical instructional

72

principles practiced in the classroom-learning environment. Thus, advancement across both


educational coursework and career experiences showed a strong correlation to the experiences in
this research study. This Wordle illustrates the evaluation of the students implementation of
the Montessori pedagogy in everyday, ordinary life as they graduated and represented the
practices in their career paths.

Figure 10- Montessori Pedagogy


Overall Interview Data Results Discussed:
Clear results were authenticated from the eight interviews. The research revealed that
this case study aided in validating the researchers practice in the utilization of the Montessori
pedagogical principles of instruction. Based on the role participation plays on completion,
connecting with students has the opportunity to advance student engagement, retention, and
completion. Certainly further research considerations could approach these questions. However,
presently, when the current research being used and implemented in connecting with students,
stronger outcomes can exist across all planes of growth. This includes but is not limited to
physical, emotional, social, and cognitive development (Montessori, 1948).

73

Plainly, the environment must be a living one, directed by a higher intelligence,


arranged by an adult who is prepared for this mission developmentally across, including but
not limited to the physical, emotional, social and cognitive planes of growth.
(Dr. Maria Montessori, 1948)

The Hope in the Higher Education Environment


The results of the student achievement and instruction are connected to the classroom
environment and relationships across our life span of physical, emotional, social, and cognitive
growth planes. These areas set the tone and structure for how the higher education professor is
going to teach or instruct the content. Meaningful assignments involve providing students with
challenging, more complex tasks. When assignments and lessons are assigned that encourage
problem-solving objectives and higher-order thinking, the goals become dynamic (Young, A.,
2003). As compared with the learning objectives, through lecture, group discussion, written
assignments, and student-centered and project-based experiences, the results in outcomes are
demonstrated through proficient competences. Social roles, or the gender-stereotypic beliefs of
the dominant culture, hold that males are more argentic, meaning they tend to be more assertive
and controlling, and females are more communal, meaning they tend to be more concerned with
the welfare of others (Canada, 1995). These values demonstrate the instructor must also be
sensitive and clear about the intentions during group discussion or small/large group
participation to foster and promote active involvement with sex, gender, and development so as
to maximize the potential of the group in meeting the outcomes. These requirements for the
faculty have also contributed to the quality of training the students receive and have helped the
program curricula stay current, ensuring program faculty members have up-to-date knowledge

74

and experience with industry trends and technological advances (Levin, 2010). In doing so,
training becomes mutual and not merely instructor-authored. This involvement increases the
student competencies toward high quality outcomes. Our results suggest strong policies on the
equitable treatment of male and female students make a difference. Such policies, if carefully
enforced and periodically monitored by observations in classrooms, are translated into genderequitable behaviors of teachers and students in classrooms and can profoundly affect students'
experiences (Canada, 1995). The differences between male and female outcomes offer further
clarification that those solid personnel policies are in place to heighten awareness and
responsibility to create and build equity in the classroom ensuring an atmosphere of trust and
consistency. Grunewald further states,
The pressure of accountability and the publication of standardized test scores in the
news media reinforce the assumption that student, teacher, and school achievement can be
measured by classroom routines alone and that the only kind of achievement that really matters
is individualistic, quantifiable, and statistically comparable. Such an assumption is misleading
because it distracts attention from the larger cultural contexts of living, of which formal
education is just a part, and whether or not it is representative of sex, gender, and development
(Grunewald, 2003).
It is reasonable, then, to capture beyond the classroom walls; it is more than simply
accountability that fulfills the accomplishments of quality teaching and learning. Meaningful
beliefs engage the student to want to achieve. Consequently, this empowers the achievement of a
students environment strengthened by these practices as observed by their graduation and career
path integration.

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Consequently, as we look to incorporating a greater connection with students across the


life span planes of growth, it is valuable to note Dr. Paulo Freires work from earlier about the
cultural teacher. Additionally, given the importance of Chickerings work in higher education
teacher quality (and although Montessori can be highlighted with similar contributions,) it is
important to identify that Freires evaluation of community-focused education within a
democratic society (not just government) is a more viable solution for student success in
learning. Freires work makes a good source of ideas and methods of communication for
educators (Martin, 2009).

Conclusion
Acceptance of personal responsibility allows fulfillment of needs by the willingness to
participate in the learning process. Through learning and development, these facets may become
consequential and key to the power of our choices. The value of Montessori pedagogical
principles, as they relate to broad teaching and learning practices with students and faculty, were
fostered through this case study about these pedagogies and their benefits to overall higher
education and success into career paths.
Not only does this provide potential validation of increased achievement, but it also sets
in motion a new vision of teaching that is reflective of these more ambitious demands for the
profession. This vision is one that recognizes teaching as a multi-dimensional activity, requiring
a wide range of knowledge, skills, and abilities. The many dimensions of teaching are related to
one another in complex ways and are responsive to the needs of diverse learners (Bartell, 1995).
These increases demonstrate instructional styles in varied ways and with varied projects that help
students become effective in using these tools in advancing the instructional quality for teacher

76

preparation as it is for the education for younger students (Hagedorn, 2003). Equally, as these
styles of instruction demonstrate efficiency, we find the opportunity to create and develop
partnerships among courses such as these being taught with school communities broadly.
Therefore, the effect of the current school completion rate could see support offered directly in
the classroom with teaching and learning opportunities. These instructional pedagogies could
move through the college as they work to increase completion. In doing so, the potential to build
a stronger teacher credentialing program can advance the training of these practices for higher
education and higher completion.
Nature, and the policy in community college, abhors a vacuum. The absence of a strong
sense of purpose in the recruitment, preparation, induction, and ongoing-development of the
teaching workforce could be the undoing of years of productive, transformative work of student
success and completion into careers (Sandy, 2006). This study clearly defies these apathetic
perspectives. Through innovation and energy, producing high-quality results in higher education
and the community college can increase graduates. The dedication must persevere (Jacobson,
2009). In fact, the goal is to become recognized as an outstanding community college as well as
to offer bachelors degrees in related instructional fields along with some fashion of a teaching
credential. With our education partners that may be local, regional, or nationwide, such as school
districts and county offices, the college and university systems, and the broader higher education
and vocational industries, a higher quality can evolve based on a richer personal connection to
the academic rigor.
This qualitative, descriptive research design included introductions of these values to the
educators teaching in the classroom based on Dr. Maria Montessori and Dr. Paulo Freire. The
implications and evidence provided value to the seven principles of the Montessori pedagogy for

77

teacher instruction. Using observation, insight, and mentoring along with interviewing subjects,
each of the seven principles were explicitly detailed based on the tools used and the skill set
necessary in transforming the higher education classroom environment for producing higher
quality learning experiences into career paths. The results of this qualitative data have been able
(through interviews, the physical layout and design, the scope and sequence of the material in the
environment taught, and the use of the pedagogical practices,) to determine effective student
learning, graduation, and career path implementation. When carried out, the pedagogical tenets
emit a stronger, higher education instruction and quality outcomes for students, graduates, and
employees across these industries. As these values unfold with the college classroom, with very
specific guidelines in the training programs of higher education instructors, the practicum
occurring in these courses can further strengthen both the teachers growth and the colleges
student graduation rates.

Recommendations
Ideally, as physical space and the environmental design are refined in the higher
education classrooms so too are the methodologies and practices in human resources of how they
are taught in the college classroom. As strategies of new visions are implemented along with the
use of technological advances, the value of building upon space, materials, instruction, and
activities will lend themselves to promote learners of all ages to continue developing as creative
and critical thinkers and problem solvers (Resnick 2007). Items associated with the function and
role of the educator are linked to recruitment, selection, orientation, hiring, and evaluation of
these positions. Further study may reveal even more in- depth inquires concerning the linkage

78

between these positions over compensation, review, continuity, staff, and professional
development when directly employed as educators in the community college system.

Contributions this Study Provides to Higher Education


Building and investing in faculty and staff through means of a strategic plan is a way to
advance student competencies and achievement. It is evident and essential in the content-driven
classroom. In order to deliver enrichment through materials, connecting and pertaining to the
topic areas explored are vital along with realizing learning style differences. Grunewald states,
The political dimension of place-conscious education, therefore, demands a radical
multiculturalism that continually challenges the regimes of accountability designed to move
everyone toward the political center, multiculturalism embraces the spaces those differences
make (Grunewald, 2003). These values strengthen the relationship between how the theoretical
content is delivered and the how learning styles of the students are practiced. As part of an
everyday experience in a college class, the reality of the classroom is where we base the
experiences of college students and their learning. These experiences are performed in a physical
space conducive for these learning patterns to take place. The foundations of these very
procedures further exemplify the role of the instructor in a college classroom. These features
play roles in building and strengthening the lives of students regarding achievement in
addressing instruction.. Thus, meeting the course's learning objectives and student performance
standards can be joined under the umbrella of professional development resources. This is where
the responsibility lies in carrying out these objectives for students in a high-quality, organized
classroom. The culmination of these findings for improved higher education settings, based on

79

college teaching and instruction, will be the antithesis to the recommendations of formulating a
minimum of a masters degree and a teaching credential for Californias community colleges.
Many researchers study issues that are close to their heart. In this case study of the
Montessori pedagogical practices put into use at the community college, I looked to the DNA, if
you will, of former students from several courses wherein these students experienced and learned
about the seven Montessori principles. In the contribution of research these graduates provided to
the community college system, based on the inquiry of instructional practices, I found traces of
these ideas in their current pursuits, professions, and careers. As a knowing insider on both the
topic and the instructor, what would these graduates tell me about their experiences learning in
his classes and in their present career pathways regarding the ideas of Dr. Maria Montessori? As
deemed, the researcher worked in teacher education for many yearsidentifying whats needed
is a constant challenge, both to parents and the media. Dr. Montessori had her own way of
articulating best practices. Ultimately, from the interviews, students eagerly shared ideas that
support both recall and deep understanding of the essence of Montessori -- such as the role of the
student themselves in the learning and the importance of respect for the individual while
blending the ability to work with others for a common good. The role of trust in teaching came
forward as did an ability to apply what one has learned and bring it forward into new settings.
This research is important for several reasonsone, the community college students
major, for example, administration of justice ends up as a rehabilitation counselor. The behavior
and social science student works with youth. The allied health person works with a major
hospital as a health technician. The graduates interviews shared about their practices.
Employers want their people to carry forward the same set of ideas about problem solving and
analytical thinking (Carlton, 2014). This appears to be what I learned about Montessori as the

80

researcher shared. For this, this research provides powerful motives for improving student
participation and success concerning completion across the college environment (Becca, 2014).

Considerations for Further Research


Although the references of this research address and propose statistically higher
achievement based on a project-based and student-centered approaches, it has not entirely
answered important questions about the effects on achievement and other desirable outcomes of
schooling. Other questions do exist such as student engagement, motivation, and persistence
when these teachers go out into higher education environments (Nye, 2001). Consideration for
further study may address these approaches by observing and assessing the role of the educator
in their teaching classroom with higher-education students.
With such items as the project-based and student-centered approaches being applied,
perhaps a student might be more likely to graduate from high school with college preparation,
and if these attributes were incorporated across the high school and college environments, would
more people end up attending college? These and other questions combined with the results
prompt the author to further consider these details.

81

Appendix A
Instrumentation
Interview Format and Structure
1.

The researcher interviewed eight individual graduates and requested the completion of
the subject information sheet. The subjects were graduates from two undergraduate
classes, the Sociology class and the Psychology class. These graduates were chosen
based on interest to participate in the research after their graduation. It is believed in the
interest of increasing student participation in higher education coursework and higher
career success; the graduates participated because of their interest to contribute to
improving higher education learning and not necessarily participate only to please me.
Given the Internal Review Board (IRB) was accepted, the Human Subjects (graduates)
were invited and Pseudonyms for the eight subjects have been used during the interview
and used to analyze the information about their participation during their class and about
their career paths:

2.

The interview lasted approximately 60-90 minutes.

3.

During the orientation process, the researcher described the recording device and the
purpose of recording including the confidentiality of the information received. All data
from the interviews would be transcribed and lead to information will be summarized
into the conclusion of the research. The signed human subjects page stated these facts as
well. The subjects were informed about consent on the form.

4.

Proceeded with the individual interview with the established questions that were
recorded. The researcher-defined terminology the participant needed clarified.

82

5.

Made the information sheet available and collected this information for purposes of
gathering basic career/education information about the subject prior to the interview.

6.

Began the interview starting with the basic warm up questions.

7.

After the fifth question was answered and recorded, the seven pedagogical principles
sheet was made available and was able to proceed with the remaining questions about
Montessori pedagogy.

8.

Upon completion of the interview, the researcher answered any questions from the
subject.

9.

Collected and secured the material including the information sheet and the recording for
transcription.

Script for Interview Protocol


The first four interview questions provided a warm up for the individual subjects from the
courses being studied. The following general questions 5-16 required approximately 6090 minutes for each of the eight interviews:
1.

Please provide a brief introduction of yourself including where you are currently
employed and/or continuing in your education.

2.

Do you remember the overall course content? If so, what do you remember about the
assignments and/or the instruction that may have differed from other courses and styles
of instruction?

3.

Based on what you recall, what did you learn? How have you applied these practices in
other course work or in your career?

83

4.

Is there any other information you wish to add to your general introduction based on
where you are located now in your education or career path?

General Questions
5.

Looking back at the course you took, Sociology or the Psychology course, was the course
what you expected it to be? If yes, please describe. If no, what did not meet your
expectations?

6.

Did the course affect your personal goals? If yes, what did you learn that could be applied
professionally across your career?

7.

What learning came from the group work that was required in the class? Did you benefit
from the peer influences?

8.

Do you recall the pedagogical instructional principles that I used? What do you
remember?

(At this time, the student interview handout of the seven Pedagogical Instructional Principles
was offered to the subjects- found below.)
9.

Based on the Montessori pedagogical instructional principles used, share one example of
how respect for the student affected your participation throughout the course? How do
you practice this in your career path?

10.

With a foundational understanding of respect, has the value of the absorbent mind
changed your mindset about learning to think about thinking in higher education and the
importance of this skill in your career?

84

11.

Describe your perception about the Montessori principle of the prepared environment
and how do you perceive its importance now that you have been exposed to some of its
value in the class? How about in your career path?

12.

Based on Montessoris concept of normalization, how did this process affect your
learning in your small group? Has it had an effect in your practice across your career
path?

13.

As a result of your attendance in this class, do you believe your understanding of the
Montessori pedagogical instructional principles was creating a sensitive period in
learning, fostering a change in your role and participation in subsequent classes, and has
it affected your role as an employee in your career?

14.

With regard to the role of the teacher, do you think that you used this principle in your
role as a student in other classes, and do you see your role as vital in helping others learn
your career responsibilities?

15.

As a result of your participation in this class, have you applied the pedagogical
instructional principle of the role of student in adult learner as an educational tool with
other fellow students and with co-workers and colleagues in your career path practice?

16.

Is there anything else you would like to add about your experience in the class?

85

Student Interview Handout

Seven Pedagogical Principles of the Montessori Philosophy used as Instructional Principles in


the Community College Classroom

Seven Pedagogical Principles of the Montessori Philosophy Instructional qualities


Respect for the student- The ability to balance the learning between content and trusting
in the students prior funds of knowledge

The absorbent mind- The ability to absorb, apply and analyze basic knowledge

The Prepared Environment- The physical space is vital to offering student centered
engagement

The process of Normalization- Creating a trust in building the relationship

The Sensitive periods- Based on trust in the relationship, an awareness that development
of knowledge increases as the student applies critical thinking such as problem solving
and decision making

Role of the Teacher- The role is to come prepared with content and demonstrate
flexibility regarding the needs of the students as they will build the contextual value;
meaning erupts

Role of the student in adult learning- defined by the ability to fulfill the role of teacher in
carrying out leadership of skills learned and teaching or practicing them such as in the
learning and/or work environment.

(Montessori, 1967)

86

The Nine Developmental Characteristic Milestones for Student Learners


Large and extensive work
Allows concept and size to be identified by peers and instructors as an important
accomplishment
Heightened Sense of Justice
Defining and relating interpretations of justice (fairness) along with what is
equitable (what a person needs as opposed to making sure that all people receive
all things which not everyone needs).
The hope and vision of the school is to create students that are self reliant, just,
fair and cooperative citizens through a collaborative process.
Hero Worship
Admiration is ultimately organized through a level of balance across the life span.
It is the classrooms responsibility to prepare opportunities for students to become
aware of heros outside of our societal stereotypes such as sports stars or
Hollywoods entertainers that are more superficial. Such things as classical
literary works allow students to look at characteristics that are far greater in
quality like humanistic qualities of true heroism. Examples may be Robin Hood,
Christopher Columbus and the like.
Ultimately, it is the hope that children and students develop the perspective that
the quality of life is what one puts into it as well as see the authenticity of heroism
through the efforts of what ordinary every day
Herding instinct
The feeling to follow someone for his or her traits. Becoming the follower versus
taking a leadership role. How does one take on the role of being a leader? These
values will be examined across the small group learning cohorts
Limitless capacity for learning
Making every opportunity a learning experience. Rather than limiting by way of
no, dont, shouldnt, cant, wont, syndrome, provide a connection for the student
to see freedom within limits. The syllabi are a guide.
We need to realize that students do need to time to absorb information
New information- what is the process to transform basic knowledge into what can
be applied, analyzed, synthesized and evaluated with regard to what has been

87

learned
Principle of rest
This is an important time when observation occurs. A time to literally absorb or
gain a comfort level of the particular concept.
Experimentation
This process becomes the point at which observation can detail or Identify the
appropriate needed, such as supplies, or decisions.
Research based work needs also fulfill much of the needs in these areas.
Going out
Empowerment is important. Given the constraints upon some of our
communities, we must as educators and professionals alike, create opportunities
whereby the students are able to participate in the society as independent thinkers
and active life doers.
Work of the student/small group cohort learning community
Do not do for the student what he/she can do for him/herself
Provide initial prompts. As the facilitator or guide initiates the foundation, the
more the students become actively engaged in creating his/her own educational
answers. Therefore, he/she receives less as far as materials and presentations on
subject matter; for the students themselves are now generating the knowledge.

(Montessori, 1967)

88

Appendix B
Individual and Group Participation Rubric Agreement
The intention of sharing this information is to heighten awareness about individual and group
classroom discussion in the classroom teaching and learning communities each students become
a part of. The level name introduces the area of interest as we experience a social, face-to-face
interaction with one another concerning content and course materials. The A, B, C graded
equivalent columns provide students with areas of performance with respect to reaching teaching
and learning in such a way as to fully implement them across all developmental categories.
Level Name

Advanced in Goals

Proficient in Goals

Basic/Not meeting
Goals
79-70%- C

100-90%- A

89-80%- B

Prepared for Class


- Questions, ideas
and
interpretations
- Assignments are
completed prior
to class

Thorough
understanding
- Well formed
questions
- Fits with discussion
- Illustrates ideas
with examples
- Assignments
completed prior to
class

Information from
assignment
summarized and not
used
- Assignments
disconnected with
discussion
- Assignments
partially complete
prior to class

Unclear whether and


how well preparation
is completed.
- Assignments
incomplete prior to
class.

Promoting Discussion
- Respects class
dynamics
- Presents clear
ideas
- Listens to others
- Asks relevant
questions
- Challenges ideas
- Maintains respect
for others

- Thoughtfully
presents ideas
- Listens intently
- Works to involve
others
- Listens to others
points of view
- Relevant questions

- Intent of making
points heard
- Focuses on
examples
- Some peripheral
discussion
- Asks clarifying
questions

- Emphasizes
individual ideas
- Monopolizes
conversation at times
- Interrupts or
restates ideas of
others
- Some questions are
trivial or off topic

89

Progression of
Growing Ideas
- Synthesizes ideas
- Connects content
and context within
discussion
- Rephrases for
comprehension
- Fosters support in
group
understanding

- Questions, opinions
in depth with topic
areas
- Clarifies & draws
illustrated
connections
- Draws upon
experience to
highlight
understanding

- Follows discussion
- Summarizes ideas
- Occasionally takes
initiative to advance
own & others ideas
& thinking

- Ideas are static


- Often off topic
- Individualizes
statements
- Disconnect
between share and
topics.

Attending to Work
- Present
- Engaged

- On time
- Prepared and ready
to begin
- Actively engaged
Uses technology
appropriately during
class that relates to
the topics discussed

- Most often present


and engaged
- May arrive/leave
late/early &
distracted

- Significantly late or
disengaged
Uses technology
such as texting that
can district the
learning environment
and disrupt the flow
of learning

90

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