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| The Montessori equipment is widely publicized and its role often misunderstood.
Because of their visibility, the Montessori materials tend to be overemphasized
in relation to the other elements in the Montessori method. In addition,
their purpose is often confused. They are not learning equipment in the
conventional sense, because their aim is not the external one of teaching
children skills or imparting knowledge through "correct usage."
Rather, the aim is an internal one of assisting the childs self-construction
and psychic development. They aid this growth by providing the child with
stimuli that capture his attention and initiate a process of concentration.
If the teacher has materials to offer that polarize the childs attention, he will find it possible to give the child the freedom he needs for this development. In order to serve their purpose of internal formation, the materials must correspond to the childs inner needs. This means that any individual material must be presented to the child at the right moment in his development. .., the sensitive moment for introduction to any individual child must be determined by observation and experimentation. The teacher watches for the quality of concentration in the child and for a spontaneous repetition of his actions with a material Because educational materials of the past has been designed for a passive child waiting to receive instructions, Montessori considered her materials a "scientific departure" from the past. Her materials instead are based on
This new approach to education, suggested to her by the work of Itard and Seguin, was regarded by Montessori as her "initial contribution to education" and "the key" to the continuation of her work. In addition to meaningfulness to the child, there are at least five principles involved in the determining of Montessori materials : First, the difficulty or the error that the child is to discover and understand must be isolated in a single piece of materials. This isolation simplifies the childs task for him and enables him to perceive the problem more readily. A tower of blocks will present to the child only a variation in size from block to block not a variation in size, color, designs, and noises, such as are often found in block towers in toy stores. Second, the materials progress from simple to more complex design and usage. A first set of numerical rods to teach seriation vary in length only. After discovering length sensorially through these rods, a second set, colored red and blue, in one meter dimension, can be used to associate numbers and length and to understand simple problems of addition and subtraction Third, the materials are designed to prepare the child indirectly for future learning. The development of writing is a good example of this indirect preparation. From the beginning, knobs on materials, by which the child lifts and manipulates them, have acted to coordinate his finger and thumb motor action. Through the making of designs that involves using metal insets to guide his movements, the child has developed the ability to use a pencil. By tracing sandpaper letters with his finger, he has developed a muscle memory of the patterns of forming letters. When the day arrives that the child is motivated to write, he can do so with a minimum of frustration and anxiety. ..aids the development of self confidence and initiative. Fourth, the materials begin as concrete expressions of an idea and gradually become more and more abstract representations. A solid wooden triangle is sensorially explored. Separate pieces of wood representing its base and sides are then presented, and the triangles dimensions discovered. Later, flat wooden triangles are fitted into wooden puzzle trays, then on solidly colored paper triangles, then on triangles outlined with a heavy colored line, and finally on the abstraction of thinly outlined triangles. At a certain stage in this progression, the child will have grasped the abstract essence of the concrete materials, and will no longer be dependent upon or show the same interest in them.
Lastly, Montessori materials are designed for auto-education, and the control of error lies in the materials themselves rather than in the teacher. The control of error guides the child in his use of the materials and permits him to recognize his own mistakes.
This dialogue with the materials puts the child in control of the learning process. .In time, he will be able to see it and will correct his own errors.
It is not necessary to design the control of error into all the materials in such a mechanical way as the cylinder block. As the materials progress in complication, the control of error is shifted to the child himself, who has gradually developed his ability to recognize differences of dimension by sight. Control of error is also introduced at a later stage by providing the child with models with which to compare his work. He can find the answers to a certain set of mathematical problems, for example, on a chart board designed for that purpose and freely available to him. |