Language is an
ongoing acquisition in a Montessori classroom. Since the
earliest Practical Life and Sensorial activities things have been named
and identified. Comparatives and Superlatives e.g. big, bigger,
biggest are integrated into these activities. In the science and
Geography materials animals, countries, land forms, water forms, insect,
plants, parts of trees, leaves and flowers have been discussed.
Children learn the names of shapes, parallelogram, rhombus, pentagon,
curvilinear triangle, all with hands on experience with these shapes.
Children love language, English as well as other languages are easily
assimilated at this age. Exposure to the diversity of life around
us is part of the curriculum.
Reading begins early by tracing sandpaper letter and learning the
phonetic sound of these letters. Children can handle objects that
begin with these sounds. Reading starts out much more abstract
that Math, but it involves a finite number of sounds to experience and
memorize. Once these have been mastered a child can begin to build
words with the moveable alphabet. This is more of a phonetic
spelling activity than reading. By repeated experience with this
sounding out of words, the child comes to the spontaneous
discovery one day that this arrangement of symbols has meaning
c-a-t translates into cat, the child has taught herself how to read.
Now they begin to sound out all words around them, on signs, cereal
boxes, anywhere. This "explosion" into reading is the culmination
of all the language experiences. Since English is not a truly
phonetic language we then present the "exceptions" such as the, ch, sh.
The child now has the skills to attack any new words they come upon.
This is one of the advantages of a phonetic approach to reading.
Story writing and creative expressions
are encouraged. Spelling is not corrected in the beginning
of these activities. It is more important that the idea be
expressed. Later, corrections can be made when the child has
experienced success.