
Larry Page and
Sergey Brin, Founders of Google.com, Jeff Bezos of
amazon.com, and many others, credit Their Montessori
Education For Much Of Their Success.
It is quite an interesting collection
of people throughout history who have gone to Montessori
schools, sent their children to Montessori schools,
or supported this method of education in one way or
another. The short list includes: Alice Waters, Friedrich
Hundertwasser, Julia Child, Gabriel Garcia Marquez,
Helen Keller, Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Edison,
Henry Ford, Mahatma Gandhi, Sigmund Freud, Buckminster
Fuller, Leo Tolstoy, Burtrand Russell, Jean Piaget,
Erik Erikson, John Holt, Ann Frank, the Dalai Lama,
Jacqueline Kennedy, Prince William and Prince Harry
of the English royal family, Cher Bono, Yul Brynner,
Bill and Hillary Clinton, and Yo Yo Ma.
Tonight on the
Barbara Walters ABC-TV Special "The
10 Most Fascinating People Of 2004" Larry Page
and Sergey Brin, founders of the popular Internet search
engine Google.com, credited their years as Montessori
students as a major factor in behind their success.
Having been friends since childhood. When Barbara Walters
asked if the fact that their parents were college professors
was a factor behind their success, they said no, that
it was their going to Montessori school where they
learned to be self-directed and self-starters. They
said that Montessori allowed them to learn to think
for themselves and gave them freedom to pursue their
own interests.
This endorsement comes in the same
week as actress Susan St. James thanked the Montessori
school that her son attended for its generosity and
support to their family over the years.
The following notes about Larry Page and Sergey Brin
were downloaded from http://abcnews.go.com
"Larry Page and Sergey Brin are not your typical
billionaires. In fact, if you type billionaire into
Google, the picture that emerges — fancy cars,
private jets, mansions, jewels, supermodel girlfriends — isn't
anything you'd find in the lifestyle of the Google
guys. Page drives a Prius, which costs around $21,000.
Brin gets around for the most part on in-line skates,
and he still lives in a rented apartment. Since taking
Google public earlier this year, each is worth an estimated
$6 billion. Even the way they took their company public
was innovative. They let ordinary people bid on shares
in their initial public offering, not just the big
banks, because they thought it was fairer. In fact,
they see their work as more of a vocation than as a
means of getting rich. "We feel like we're making
a difference in the world — giving people information
that they want really quickly and effectively," Page
said.
Read the article on the Web at:
http://www.michaelolaf.net/google.html |