Menu

Montessori Sensorial Materials Lead to Sensory Awareness

The materials in the Sensorial area of the Montessori classroom are quite unique – they speak to the tactile observer in all of us. When you consider the way humans take in information, you realize how often we use more than one sense to explore. Maria Montessori’s work in the Sensorial environment was designed to take advantage of this tendency. Today, I will discuss the materials featured in the Children’s House classroom (ages 3-6). 

We commonly think of the five senses as hearing, touching, seeing, smelling and tasting. However, Maria Montessori considered and designed materials to stimulate also the baric sense (sensing weight), chromic sense (sensing color), thermic sense (sensing temperature) and stereognostic sense (ability to identify shapes and objects based on touch alone).  

The beauty of the sensorial materials in the Primary environment is that they are not meant purely for the exploration of the sense; rather they are intended for the refinement of the senses. It is this refinement that leads to new discoveries. For example, a child has likely experienced the concept of “light” and “heavy” in their real-world experiences; however, they need additional understanding to discern between “light” and “very light”. This understanding is brought about by exploring and experiencing the graded materials in the Sensorial area. The controlled exploration of these materials allows them to distinguish weight, texture, shades of color, and more. 

The Sensorial materials all isolate a particular quality (such as length, weight, etc.) which allows the child to focus on that one quality. In addition, the materials all have a control of error, enabling the child to notice when something doesn’t seem right and make the corrections themselves.  

When visiting a Montessori classroom, here are some of the Sensorial materials you will see: 

The Pink Tower (incidentally one of my favorites) features 10 pink cubes with a side measuring 1 to 10 centimeters, at regular intervals. Children often build a tower of the cubes, which reinforces the concept of large, small and its gradation.

The Brown Stair has 10 prisms, each 20 cm in length and varying in thickness from 1 to 10 cm. They help children understand the concept of thick and thin through exploration of the prisms, especially placing increasingly thinner prisms in succession to create a downward staircase. 

The Red Rods include 10 rods which are equal in diameter but vary in length, providing a tangible way for children to experience long and short. 

The Cylinder Blocks are wooden blocks that contain 10 cylinders of various sizes. There are 4 sets of blocks in total, designed to help children to distinguish between large and small, tall and short, and thick and thin. 

The Binomial Cube contains colored cubes and prisms, all which are stored in a box with the color pattern on it.  The child is able to sensorially explore the mathematical equation (a+b)3. The Trinomial Cube is similar to the binomial cube, but has slightly different colored cubes and prisms.  It represents the mathematical equation (a+b+c)3.

The Constructive Triangles are a set of wooden triangles that can be combined to form various shapes such as a parallelogram, hexagon, rhombus, and trapezoid providing children a tactile and visual experience with geometric shapes.  

These are just a few of the materials in the robust Sensorial area of a Montessori classroom. I hope you get the chance to explore them yourself!

Want to learn more? Read our next article:

LEARNING MATHEMATICS IN OUR PRIMARY CLASSROOMS

Další články

Embracing the Multi-Age Group

It is no surprise to hear parents expressing doubts about a multi-age classroom, and questioning how children of different ages could work together harmoniously in the same environment, and if there are any benefits to this approach. 

Read more

Freedom and the Montessori Classroom

“To give a child liberty is not to abandon him to himself."

Read more

IMSP’s LIDOVÉ NOVINY

Introducing IMSP’s LIDOVÉ NOVINY, a Czech-language newspaper written, edited, and assembled by our Upper Elementary students. This project was inspired by renowned Czech writer Karel Čapek. Čapek, best known for inventing the word „robot“, was beloved for his versatile and multi-genre pieces. Bouncing between modern fairytales, short stories, travel-logs, and biographical work, Čapek also had a particular affinity for the feuilleton, a short newspaper essay designed, not only to inform the reader, but to amuse them as well.

Read more

Understanding your child's inner sense of order

Have you ever noticed that your child enjoys singing the same song over and over again, or wants you to repeat the same story for what feels like a million times? Dr. Montessori highlighted the importance of sensitive periods in children, which are known as windows of opportunities for children to develop skills, including movement, language and most definitely, order. A child’s need for external order is present as early as childbirth and peaks in their second year, before fading at about the age of 5. This period of development helps a child to develop a connection between themselves and the world, process information and overcome challenges.

Read more

Video: Blueprint for the classroom: A Way to Move Forward

How do we encourage peacefulness and respect in the Montessori classroom? Together with the children, we prepare a blueprint for our classroom community!

Read more
26.02.2018
Join us for an Interactive Open House Register for
Baby & Me
Register for
Toddler & Me
Virtual tour