The learning materials
The
first learning materials that the child is likely to encounter in the
Montessori classroom are those that make up the practical life curriculum.
These are activities that involve pouring different materials, using utensils
such as scissors, tongs and tweezers, cleaning and polishing, preparing snacks,
laying the table and washing dishes, arranging flowers, gardening, doing up and
undoing clothes fastenings, and so on. Their aims, in addition to developing
the child’s skills for independent living, are to build up the child’s gross
and fine motor control and eye-hand co-ordination, to introduce them to the
cycle of selecting, initiating, completing and tidying up an activity (of which
more in the next section), and to introduce the rules for functioning in the
social setting of the classroom.
As
the child settles into the cycle of work and shows the ability to focus on
self-selected activities, the teacher will introduce the sensorial materials.
The key feature of the sensorial materials is that each isolate just one
concept for the child to focus on. The pink tower, for example, consists of ten
cubes which differ only in their dimensions, the smallest being 1 cm3, the largest 10 cm3. In building the
tower the child’s attention is being focused solely on the regular decrease in
volume of successive cubes. There are no additional cues—different colors for
example, or numbers written onto the faces of the cube—which might help the
child to sequence the cubes accurately. Another piece of sensorial material,
the sound boxes, contains six pairs of closed cylinders that vary in sound from
soft to loud when shaken, and the task for the child is to find the matching
pairs. Again, there is only one cue that the child can use to do this task:
sound. The aim of the sensorial materials is not to bombard the child’s senses
with stimuli; on the contrary, they are tools designed for enabling the child
to classify and put names to the stimuli that he will encounter on an everyday
basis.
The
sensorial materials, are, furthermore, designed as preparation for academic
subjects. The long rods, which comprise ten red rods varying solely in length
in 10 cm increments from 10 cm to 1 m, have an equivalent in the mathematics
materials: the number rods, where the rods are divided into alternating 10 cm
sections of red and blue so that they take on the numerical values 1–10. The touch
boards, which consist of alternate strips of sandpaper and smooth paper for the
child to feel, are preparation for the sandpaper globe in geography—a globe
where the land masses are made of rough sandpaper but the oceans and seas are
smooth. The touch boards are also preparation for the sandpaper letters in
literacy and sandpaper numerals in mathematics, which the child learns to trace
with his index and middle fingers.
Key
elements of the literacy curriculum include the introduction of writing before
reading, the breaking down of the constituent skills of writing (pencil
control, letter formation, spelling) before the child actually writes words on
paper, and the use of phonics for teaching sound-letter correspondences.
Grammar—parts of speech, morphology, sentence structure—are taught
systematically through teacher and child-made materials.
In
the mathematics curriculum, quantities 0–10 and their symbols are introduced
separately before being combined, and large quantities and symbols (tens,
hundreds and thousands) and fractions are introduced soon after, all through
concrete materials. Operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication,
division, the calculation of square roots) are again introduced using concrete
materials, which the child can choose to stop using when he is able to succeed
without that concrete support.
Principles
running throughout the design of these learning materials are that the child
learns through movement and gains a concrete foundation with the aim of
preparing him for learning more abstract concepts. A further design principle
is that each piece of learning material has a 'control of error' which alerts
the child to any mistakes, thereby allowing self-correction with minimal
teacher support.
Self-directed engagement with the materials
Important
though the learning materials are,8 they do not, in
isolation, constitute the Montessori method because they need to be engaged
with in a particular way. Montessori observed that the young child is capable
of concentrating for long periods of time on activities that capture his
spontaneous interest.2,3,4 There are two
features of the way that children engage with the learning materials that
Montessori claimed promoted this concentration. The first is that there is a
cycle of activity surrounding the use of each piece of material (termed the
'internal work cycle'9). If a child wishes
to use the pink tower, for example, he will have to find a space on the floor
large enough to unroll the mat that will delineate his work area, carry the ten
cubes of the pink tower individually to the mat from where they are stored,
then build the tower. Once he has built the tower he is free to repeat this
activity as many times as he likes. Other children may come and watch, and if
he wishes they can join in with him, but he will be able to continue on his own
if he prefers and for as long as he likes. When he has had enough, he will
dismantle the pink tower and reassemble it in its original location, ready for
another child to use. This repeated and self-chosen engagement with the
material, the lack of interruption, and the requirement to set up the material
and put it away afterwards, are key elements aimed at developing the child’s
concentration.10
The
second feature which aims to promote concentration is that these cycles of
activity take place during a 3-h period of time (termed the 'external work
cycle'9). During those 3 h
children are mostly free to select activities on their own and with others, and
to find their own rhythm of activity, moving freely around the classroom as
they do so. One might wonder what the role of the teacher is during this
period. Although the children have a great deal of freedom in what they do,
their freedom is not unlimited. The teacher’s role is to guide children
who are finding it hard to select materials or who are disturbing
others, to introduce new materials to children who are ready for a new
challenge, and to conduct small-group lessons. Her decisions about what to
teach are made on the basis of careful observations of the children. Although
she might start the day with plans of what she will do during the work cycle,
she will be led by her students and their needs, and there is no formal
timetable. Hence the Montessori classroom is very different to the teacher-led
conventional classroom with its highly structured day where short timeslots are
devoted to each activity, the whole class is engaged in the same activities at
the same time, and the teacher instructs at the front of the class.
In summary, there are
two aspects of Montessori classrooms that are very different to conventional
classrooms: the learning materials themselves, and the individual,
self-directed nature of the learning under the teacher’s expert guidance. All
the elements described here—the features of the learning materials themselves (e.g.,
each piece of material isolates just one concept, each contains a control of
error that allows for self-correction, learning proceeds from concrete to
abstract concepts) and the child-led manner of engagement with those materials
(e.g., self-selection, repeated and active engagement, tidying up afterwards,
freedom from interruption, lack of grades and extrinsic rewards) might
potentially benefit development and learning over the teaching of the
conventional classroom. We will return to many of the elements discussed here
in the following two sections. (This has necessarily been only a brief survey
of some of the most important elements of the Montessori method. Readers
wanting to find out more are again directed to refs. 2,3,4).
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