Montessori curriculum is based on giving children exposure to concrete materials first, then giving them incremental opportunities to build more abstract concepts. What do we mean by concrete? The children are able to hold a material in their hands. Montessori Math is unique in that math skills are developed through hands on materials first. They […]
https://foothillsmontessori.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/foothills-logo-300x87.png00Daniela Cuyunhttps://foothillsmontessori.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/foothills-logo-300x87.pngDaniela Cuyun2021-02-12 14:29:552021-02-12 14:31:07Montessori Math
“Thankfulness is the beginning of gratitude. Gratitude is the completion of thankfulness. Thankfulness may consist merely of words. Gratitude is shown in acts.” – Henri Frederic Amiel The holiday season has many themes. In this year of loss and uncertainty, perhaps the most important is gratitude. Students in our Upper Elementary program have been learning […]
Montessori curriculum is based on giving children exposure to concrete materials first, then giving them incremental opportunities to build more abstract concepts. What do we mean by concrete? The children are able to hold a material in their hands. Montessori Math is unique in that math skills are developed through hands on materials first. They […]
https://foothillsmontessori.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/foothills-logo-300x87.png00Daniela Cuyunhttps://foothillsmontessori.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/foothills-logo-300x87.pngDaniela Cuyun2021-02-12 14:29:552021-02-12 14:31:07Montessori Math
“Thankfulness is the beginning of gratitude. Gratitude is the completion of thankfulness. Thankfulness may consist merely of words. Gratitude is shown in acts.” – Henri Frederic Amiel The holiday season has many themes. In this year of loss and uncertainty, perhaps the most important is gratitude. Students in our Upper Elementary program have been learning […]
Montessori curriculum is based on giving children exposure to concrete materials first, then giving them incremental opportunities to build more abstract concepts.
What do we mean by concrete? The children are able to hold a material in their hands. Montessori Math is unique in that math skills are developed through hands on materials first. They physically hold, carry and manipulate materials to gain a complete understanding of the concept of quantity.
Children initially experience concrete 1-10 concepts in Sensorial by doing activities such as the Pink Tower, Brown Stairs, Red Rods, Knobbed and Colored Cylinder. All of these activities have ten physical components to them (10 cubes, 10 stairs, 10 cylinders, etc.). While we do not count these components, children work with them and unconsciously experience what 10 items feel like. The materials are carried individually to a workspace on the floor, built or organized, then returned, one piece at a time, to their proper location in the classroom.
Montessori math materials stem directly from the Sensorial materials by utilizing the physical feel of 1-10, then adding the more abstract idea of a symbol: the number that corresponds to the physical quantity.
Number recognition is taught after the concrete materials are introduced, then the two concepts are paired together. In this manner, children develop a thorough understanding of not only numbers, but what those numbers represent.
Examples of Early Montessori Math materials include:
The Red and Blue Rods
The Spindle Boxes
Cards and Counters
and the Short Bead Stair.
When concepts of 1-10 are mastered, children move onto concepts of Teens, Tens, Hundreds and Thousands using the same process of introducing the concrete material first, then learning the symbol or number that represents the quantity, then pairing the two concepts together.
The materials are symbolic or representative of something else (a number, perhaps), and that symbolism changes over time until children are ready to let go of the materials and find solutions on paper or even in their heads. This idea of mastering a skill without the assistance of materials is what we refer to as abstraction.
When a child is ready to learn about basic operations, there are plenty of materials to support them. Montessori math uses the golden bead material; first to build numbers into the thousands. For example a single golden bead represents 1, a group of 10 beads are strung together in a straight line for 10, and 100 beads are affixed into a flat square. The thousand cube is as large as 1,000 of the original single ‘1’ bead. Once a child is able to build a visual representation of a number, the beads are used to teach basic operations. Young children are able to add, subtract, multiply, and divide numbers into the thousands using this material. They first learn with static problems – that is, with no exchanges – and then move on to more complex, dynamic problems. They quickly learn that ten 1s is equal to one 10, and they do this by holding those numbers in their hands.
Long and Short Chains are a continuation of the short bead material. These materials incorporate sequential counting that can also be used for skip counting which, in turn, aids building addition and multiplication skills.
In this manner, math concepts are easily understood and students are able to practice a wide variety of functions.
“Thankfulness is the beginning of gratitude. Gratitude is the completion of thankfulness. Thankfulness may consist merely of words. Gratitude is shown in acts.” – Henri Frederic Amiel
The holiday season has many themes. In this year of loss and uncertainty, perhaps the most important is gratitude. Students in our Upper Elementary program have been learning that gratitude is not just saying “thank you” and having good manners, but it is an intentional act.
One of our teachers, Ms. Krista, taught students ways to show gratitude during one of her Growth Mindset lessons. The students were paired up to design skits to show the acts of gratitude. Each pair was given an act of gratitude and they prepared a skit to perform for the rest of the class. The rest of the class had the opportunity to guess what act of gratitude they were portraying in their skit.
The acts of gratitude were the following:
being an active listener, giving out compliments
making eye contact, giving detailed examples of appreciation
being thoughtful of others, how to give a virtual hug (COVID style)
being gracious when challenged, offering congratulations (even when you are not the winner)
volunteering to help others with difficult tasks
showing patience.
All of these acts show gratitude for the community in which we live.
How will you and your family show your gratitude this season?