Mido, a smart Boy
Mido never feels bored. He always thinks about something he can do. He likes playing and working, he likes inventing something new. Does he do this alone?
0.054 kg - 100 kg
Mido never feels bored. He always thinks about something he can do. He likes playing and working, he likes inventing something new. Does he do this alone?
The psychic life in newborns has aroused great interest. Th conclusion of research is that the first two years of life are the most important. So here begins a new path, wherein it will not be the professor who teaches the child, but the child who teaches the professor.
The main character in the story is Mido.The story introduces his family and shows where he is living.
Maria Montessori tireless efforts to open new paths in education were as irresistible as a force of nature. Opening a Children's House, continuing following the psychological manifestations of the children, who evidently had been oppressed in their homes, opened new insights, which were breaking news for the world.
The Secret of Childhood
In this book Maria Montessori explains the method which she has developed by observing children. It is here that she discovered the secret of childhood. The child has a spontaneous urge to learn. An understanding of this simple secret....
Girls are more than just sugar and spice. We’ve all figured that out. What we haven’t figured out completely is how they’re wired, why they do the things they do, how the world around them affects their choices and opinions, and what that means for youth ministry—until now. The book is designed to help each .................................
Mido and his friend Husam are playing in the garden of Uncle Hamdan. It is fun to have such a space to run and jump and climb. Is it really fun? Mido and Hamdan find a little bird under a tree....what happened?
The daily events of the Circus are interesting for Mido. They keep him busy and he wants to know everything about what is happening.
Traveling to the countryside is an adventure for Mido. The difference between the town and countryside is so huge. Mido discovers many new things.
The late Carl Rogers, founder of the humanistic psychology movement, revolutionized psychotherapy with his concept of client-centered therapy. His influence has spanned decades, but that influence has become so much a part of mainstream psychology that the ingenious nature of his work has almost been forgotten. Houghton Mifflin is delighted to introduce this preeminent psychologist to the next generation with a new edition of this landmark book.
This book is intended to help teachers and parents to envisage the needs of the child after the age of six. Every average by and girl of twelve years who has been educated till then in a Montessori School knows at least as much as the students who finish High School. And the surprising thing is that the child reaches this level easily.....
One day Mido goes to the Circe with his cousin Kuku. Kuku is amazed and happy. It is a special day! What is happening? Is Mido really happy? Or............