Another table exercise consists in arranging two groups of fifty cards, of which twenty-five are nouns (constituting the directing group), while the other twenty-five are adjectives. The nouns are put in a row and the child looks among the adjectives (which have been thoroughly shuffled) for those which are best suited to the different nouns. As he finds them he places them by the nouns with which they belong. Sometimes the nouns and adjectives placed together cause a great deal of merriment by the amusing contrasts that arise. The children try to put as many adjectives as possible with the same noun and develop in this way the most interesting combinations. Here are two groups which come prepared with the material:
For a class game with these lists, the nouns may be placed on one table and the adjectives on another. Moving as during the "silence" lesson, each child selects first a noun, and then an adjective. When the selections have all been made, the pairs are read one after the other amid general enthusiasm.
Descriptive Adjectives
The study of the adjective may furnish occasion for giving the child a knowledge of physical properties (of substances) so far unknown to him. For example, the teacher may present a piece of transparent glass; a piece of black glass (or any opaque screen); a sheet of white paper with an oil stain. The child will see that through the transparent glass objects may be seen distinctly; that through the oil stain only the light is visible; that nothing at all can be seen through the opaque screen. Or she may take a small glass funnel and put into it a piece of filter paper, then a sponge, then a piece of waterproof cloth. The child observes that the water passes through the filter paper, that the sponge absorbs water, and that the water clings to the surface of the waterproof. Or take two glass graduators and fill them with water to different heights. In the case of the graduator filled to the very top, the surface of the water is convex; in the other, it is concave.
The commands are printed on little slips of paper which are folded and all held together by an elastic band with a series of brown cards containing the adjectives used in the commands. Here is the material prepared:
—Fill one graduator with water to the point of over-flowing, and another not so full. Notice the form assumed by the surface of the water in each case and apply the proper adjective: convex, concave.
—Take various objects such as filter paper, cloth, a sponge, and see whether water can pass through them, applying the adjectives: permeable, impermeable, porous.
—Take a piece of clear glass, a sheet of black paper, a sheet of oiled paper; look at the light through them, applying the adjectives: transparent, opaque, translucent.
Object lessens demonstrating comparative weights may also be given by putting successively into a glass of water, oil, alcohol colored with aniline, a piece of cork, a little leaden ball (to be dropped). Then the command would be:
—Compare the weights of water and of colored alcohol; water and oil; water and cork; and water and lead. Then tell which is heavier and which is lighter than the other.
As an answer the child should give a little written exercise something like the following: Water is heavier than oil, etc. The children actually perform these little experiments, learning to handle graduators, funnels, filters, etc., and to pour the last drops of water very carefully so as to obtain the concave and convex surfaces. They acquire a very delicate touch in pouring the colored alcohol and oil on the water. Thus they take the first step into the field of practical science.
To continue the study of adjectives of quality, there is a series of commands relating to the comparative and superlative. An example of the comparative crept into these experiments on weight. Here are additional commands where the little slip and the brown cards are kept together.
—Take the blue stairs or any other objects and put with each object the proper adjectives from the following list: thick, thin, thickest (Ital. grossissimo), thinnest (Ital. finissimo).
—Take the eight tablets of the color you like best, arrange them according to shades and apply the proper adjectives of quality from the following: light, lightest, dark, darkest.
—Take the series of circles in the plane insets, and pick out the circles which correspond to these adjectives: large, small, intermediate.
—Take the cloths or other objects adapted to these adjectives: smooth, smoothest, rough, roughest, soft, softest.
—Take the cubes of the pink tower or any other objects adapted to these adjectives: large, largest, small, smallest.
—Grade a number of objects according to weight so as to fit these adjectives to them: heavy, heaviest, light, lightest.
Adjectives of Quantity
Just as above, the slip is tied with the series of brown cards by an elastic band. Thus a group is formed. In our material the following three groups are available:
—Take the counters and make little piles which correspond in quantity to these adjectives: one, two, three, four, five, six, etc.
—Take the beads and make little piles of them to fit these adjectives: few, none, many, some.
—Decide first of all on some definite number of beads (two) and then make other little piles to fit these adjectives: double, triple, quadruple, quintuple, sextuple, tenfold, half, equal.
Ordinals
—Build the blue stair and on each step place the proper adjective from the following: first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth.
—Place the following adjectives on the different drawers of the cabinet, beginning with the top drawer: first, second, third, fourth, fifth.
—Differentiate between the drawers of the cabinet by the following adjectives, beginning with the lowest: first, second, third, fourth, fifth.
Demonstrative Adjectives
As occasion may offer, the teacher may assemble a group of children and give them a few simple explanations on the meaning of certain words: questo, "this" (near us); cotesto, "that" (near you); quello, "that" (over there away from both of us). (Note: English lacks the demonstrative of the second person.)
Then she can distribute these commands which require collective actions of the class:—
—Gather in that (codesto) corner of the room near you; then all of you come over to this (questo) corner near me; then all of you run over to that (quello) corner over there.
—Choose one of your school-mates and tell him to put a box on this (questo) table; a small plate on that (quello) table over there.
—Tell one of your companions, pointing at the place, to put a green bead in this (questo) vase; a blue one in that (codesto) vase; a white one in that (quello) vase over there.
Arrange the children in groups in three different places in the room, and then give this command:
—Let that (quello) group over there take the place of this (questo) group. Let that (codesto) group break up, the children going back to their tables.
Possessive Adjectives
In like manner the teacher explains the meaning of the words my, your, his, her, etc. She may do this with a simple gesture. Here are the commands:
—Point out various objects saying: This is my slate; that is your slate; that (over there) is her slate.
—Point at the different seats, saying: That (over there) is his place, that is your place, and this is my place.
—Pass around the little baskets, saying: This is my basket. Whose is that other basket? Is it your basket? And this one? Ah, this one is his basket.
—Let us take a turn around the room and then return to our seats. You go to your seat and they will go to their seats. Then we will divide up our things. Let us put our things here and their things there. We will go to your seats and you go to their seats. Meanwhile they will get up and then come over here to take our places.
[Signora Montessori does not differentiate between the possessive adjective and the possessive pronoun; perhaps because there is in Italian no characteristic pronominal form. Strictly speaking the Italian predicate form mio (e.g., Questo libra è mio) is adjectival, while the form il mio (i.e., with the definite article) is pronominal (e.g., Questo è il mio). English has, however, the pronominal possessives: mine, yours (thine), his, hers, ours, yours, theirs, used also as predicate adjectives. The above exercise should therefore he repeated later under the subject of pronouns in a slightly different form.—Tr.]
VI
When I gave the first grammar lessons to defective children I put special emphasis on nouns and verbs. The noun (= object), and the verb (= action) were distinguished with the greatest clearness, much as we distinguish matter from energy, chemistry from physics. Condition and motion, as potential and kinetic energy, are both expressed by verbs. Whereas formerly the child took the objects in his hands and studied their name and attributes, here he must perform actions. In the execution of actions he must necessarily receive some help, for he is not always capable of interpreting the word with the precise action which corresponds to it. On the contrary, the study of the verb is necessary to initiate him into a series of "object lessons" upon the different actions he must perform. The teacher therefore must give individual lessons teaching the child to interpret the verb.
Analyses
In the usual manner we present a box which has four compartments, for the article, the noun, the adjective, and the verb. The sections are designated by the usual title cards: tan, black, brown, and red. In the compartment at the back of the box there are six slips for each exercise, and for every written word there is a card, except for such words as are repeated in successive sentences. For example: if the following sentences are written on the cards:
Lock the door!
| Lock | the door. | |
| Close |
And so the child after he has composed his first sentence needs to change only one card (lock for close) for the second sentence. This brings out the force of the verb, showing that one sentence may be changed into another by indicating an entirely different action. The child performs the action and then on his table he builds the sentences with the cards. In the series we have prepared, the verbs are either synonyms or antonyms. Here is the material:
Lock the door
—Tie a knot
Untie a knot
—Spread your beads
Collect your beads
—Fold the paper
Unfold the paper
—Open the book
Shut the book
—Speak a word
Whisper a word
Lower your hands
—Toss the ball
Throw the ball
—Show your right hand
Hide your right hand
—Touch the velvet
Feel the velvet
—Write a short word
Erase a short word
—Draw a circle
Fill a circle
Drag a chair
—Lace a frame
Unlace a frame
—Raise your head
Bow your head
—Fill a glass
Empty a glass
—Arrange the brown cards
Mix the brown cards
—Roll the white handkerchief
Twist the white handkerchief
Kiss your nearest schoolmate
—Gather your prisms
Separate your prisms
—Borrow a black pencil
Lend a black pencil
—Cover your face
Uncover your face
—Lift the red counter
Drop the red counter
—Smooth the white paper
Crumple the white paper
Open your two hands
—Spread the large carpet
Fold the large carpet
—Bend your left arm
Straighten your left arm
—Rub the table
Scratch the table
—Pour the water
Spill the water
—Comb your hair
Part your hair
Permutations
The teacher should have in mind the grammatical rules for the position of the verb in the sentence, to give the child a clear idea of its normal location before the direct object: "first the verb, then the object upon which it acts."
Example:
the brown cards arrange.
Drop
the red counter.
the white handkerchief roll.
white the handkerchief roll.
white roll handkerchief the.
Lessons and Commands on the Verb
The children take considerable delight in our verb lessons which develop through interpretations of actions. We use packs of red cards, tied with an elastic, each pack containing ten cards. The child executes the actions indicated on each card, one after the other. He may afterward copy the cards—an exercise specially attractive to very young children.
Examples:
—walk, sing, jump, dance, bow, sit, sleep, wake, pray, sigh.
—write, erase, weep, laugh, hide, draw, read, speak, listen, run.
—arrange, clean, dust, sweep, button, lace, tie, hook, greet, brush.
—comb, wash, wipe, embrace, kiss, smile, yawn, scowl, stare, breathe.
These are fairly common words, representing actions more or less familiar to the pupils. But this exercise is only an introduction to the real verb-lessons. For these the teacher selects, as subject for a lesson, a series of synonymous verbs. Their shades of meaning are taught to the children by translating them into action, the teacher executing the action herself. She then distributes around the class commands making use of the verbs in question. There may be several copies of a given command if the pupils are very numerous. The child reads by himself the card he has received, executing the action from memory of what he has seen the teacher do. We have tested experimentally the Italian material (i.e., the verbs in parentheses), as follows:
lay, throw, toss, hurl (posare, gettare, lanciare, scagliare).
—Take a counter and lay it on the floor. Pick it up again and throw it on the floor.
—Roll your handkerchief into a ball. Toss it into the air. Pick it up again and hurl it against the wall.
—Lay your handkerchief carefully, very carefully, on the floor. Pick it up again and throw it on the floor. Make a ball of it and hurl it across the room. Pick it up and toss it into the air.
lie, crouch, sit, rise (sollevare, alzare, levare).
—Go to the sofa and lie with your face to the wall. Now rise, go to your table and sit with head erect.
—Rise from your chair and crouch behind the table, as though you were playing hide-and-seek. Rise and go back to the sofa.
open, close, lock, unlock (aprire, spalancare, chiudere, socchiudere, serrare, disserrare).
—Go to a window and open it a little; wait a moment and then close it again. Open the window as wide as you can and close it immediately.
—Go to the door and open it wide. Then close the door gently. If the key is in the key-hole lock the door; but before you go away, unlock it again, so that everything is left just as you found it.
breathe, inhale, exhale (respirare, sospirare, inspirare, espirare).
—Go to the window, open it, and inhale and exhale the fresh air five times. Then after a moment inhale once and hold your breath as long as you can. When you can hold your breath no longer, exhale as slowly as you can.
—Take a hand mirror and breathe upon the glass. What happens?
hang, attach (appendere, affiggere, sospendere).
—Hang one of your best drawings on a hook in the room.
—Attach the drawing you like best with two pins to the wall near the door.
cover, wrap, tie, undo (avvolgere, involgere, svolgere).
—Take a book, a string and a large piece of cloth. Lay the book on your table and cover it with the cloth.
—Take the cloth and wrap it around the book so that the book cannot be seen.
—Tie a string around the cloth so that the book will not fall out.
—Undo the bundle, and return each object to the place where you found it.
turn, invert, revolve, whirl, reverse (volgere, capovolgere, rovesciare).
—Turn a picture toward one of your school-mates so that he can see it clearly.
—Invert the picture, so that it will be upside down.
—Reverse the picture so that the back only can be seen by your school-mate.
—Revolve the seat of the piano-stool as rapidly as you can.
—Stand with your back to the window and turn slowly on your heel till you face the window. Whirl on your heel completely around till you again face the window.
breathe, blow, puff, pant (sbuffare, soffiare, alitare).
—Tear a large piece of paper into tiny bits on your table. Blow steadily upon the table till the pieces of paper are all on the floor.
—Pick up the pieces of paper and place them on the table. Puff three times upon them and see if they all fall to the floor. Gather up the pieces and throw them into the waste-basket.
—Breathe softly upon the back of your hand. What do you feel?
—Blow upon the back of your hand. What do you feel?
—Puff upon the back of your band. What do you feel?
—Pant noisily as though you had been running a long way.
murmur, mutter, whisper, speak, grumble (mormorare, sussurrare, brontolare).
—Ask one of your school-mates to listen carefully to what you say; then murmur a short sentence as though you were speaking to yourself.
—Mutter the same words in a louder voice and see whether he understands.
—Whisper the same words in the ear of one of two children. Then ask the other whether he has heard.
—Grumble the same words and watch how the two children look at you.
—Speak the same words aloud and as distinctly as you can. Do the children understand?
touch, rub, graze (toccare, tastare, palpare, sfiorare).
—Go to your table and with your eyes shut touch it as though to recognize it.
—Rub the table with the tips of your fingers, bearing down as hard as you can. What do you feel?
—Graze the table with the tips of your fingers, trying not to touch it.
spread, sprinkle, collect, scatter (spargere, spruzzare, aspergere).
—Take a box full of beads and spread them evenly around the center of your table. Then collect them in a pile in the center of the table.
—Take a handful of the beads and scatter them over the table. Return all the beads to the box.
—Take a glass of water and sprinkle two or three handfuls on a plant in the room.
walk, stagger, march (barcollare, dondolare, erigersi).
take, seize, catch (acchiappare, acciuffare, afferrare).
—Walk to the cabinet and take a box of counters in your hands.
—Run to the sofa, seize the sofa-pillow, and run around the room with it, holding it in your arms.
—Roll your handkerchief into a ball, toss it into the air and try to catch it before it falls to the floor.
Lessons with Experiments
The function of the verb can be still more interestingly emphasized by suggesting actions designed to increase the child's knowledge in the direction of elementary science. Here the teacher, instead of executing simple movements, performs experiments, which on the same day or on succeeding days the child can imitate guided by the directions in the commands.
stir, mix, beat, flavor (mescolare, emulsionare, stemperare).
—Take a bowl half full of water and drop into it a half cup of flour; stir with a spoon until the mixture is thick.
—Place a table-spoonful of vinegar and a table-spoonful of olive-oil in a clean bowl; beat them together until an emulsion is formed.
—Place a tea-spoonful of chocolate and a tea-spoonful of sugar in a cup and mix them thoroughly. What color was the chocolate? What color was the sugar? What color is the mixture?
—Take a little milk in a cup and taste of it; add a drop of vanilla extract. Then taste of the milk again. Do you taste the vanilla? In the same way flavor a glass of water with the vanilla. Flavor another glass of water with vinegar.
dissolve, saturate, be in suspension (sciogliere, fare la sospensiona, saturare).
—Place a spoonful of sugar in a glass of warm water and dissolve the sugar by stirring with a spoon. Is the water still clear?
—Saturate the water with sugar by continuing to add sugar and stirring till you can see the sugar at the bottom of the glass. Allow the water to rest a moment. Is the water still clear?
—Mix a spoonful of starch in the water. The water becomes white, since the starch does not dissolve but remains in suspension in the water.
strain, filter (decantare, filtrare).
—Take the glass containing the water saturated with sugar and the one with the starch in suspension, and allow the starch and sugar to settle for some time, until the water is clear. Taste the water in each glass, and then strain each glass of water separately.
—Filter the water saturated with sugar and the water with the suspended starch. Then taste of each.
By the time all these commands have been executed, the child will have developed a keen desire to go on, becoming so interested in the meaning of verbs as not to require further commands to stimulate his study of these words. The most frequent question now is "How many verbs are there in the language?" "Are there more in other languages?" etc. To satisfy this new curiosity of the children we have dictionaries of synonyms and antonyms, and word-charts. But meantime they have been building their own dictionaries. One by one they begin to own copy books (rubrics) with illuminated letters of the alphabet. Under the proper letter the child copies his words as fast as he learns them. We are still experimenting on the question of the exact amount of information that may successfully be offered to elementary school children of various ages and stages of development, with the word material required for the notions of natural history, physics and chemistry they may be expected to acquire. We can say, at this moment, simply that each experiment involves the use of a certain number of new words (nouns, adjectives and verbs), which are copied into the word-books (rubrics) as fast as they occur.
VII
Analyses
Here also the first exercise is to compose sentences analyzed with the colored cards. This grammar box has five compartments, each with a small title card of the color corresponding to the different parts of speech, red for the verb, black for the noun, brown for the adjective, tan for the article and violet for the preposition. In the compartment at the rear of the box are six cards with printed sentences. The colored cards do not correspond exactly to the number of words used in the sentences because the words of one sentence which are repeated in the next are not duplicated in the cards. In this case it is the change in preposition only which alters the meaning of the sentence. Here are the series of sentences, some of which the teacher may have used already in previous lessons (commands).
SERIES A
Take the box without the colored beads.
Take the box together with the colored beads.
Place the prism upon the cylinder.
Lay the pen behind the ink-well.
Lay the pen beside the ink-well.
Put the green bead inside the box.
Arrange a few beads among the red counters.
Set one chair next to another chair.
SERIES B
Lay the counter outside the box.
Place a chair on that side of the door.
Place a chair beyond the door.
Stand to one side of the blackboard.
Stand to the other side of the blackboard.
Arrange the chairs against the wall.
Place the blue cone against the pink cube.
SERIES C
[Note:—Such relationships are expressed in English preferably by adjectives: cloth of cotton = cotton cloth; or by the possessive inflection with -s: the drawing of George = George's drawing. In Italian they are expressed by the prepositions di, per, da, etc.: stoffa di cotone "cotton cloth," piattino di vetro "glass saucer." For Signora Montessori's simple exercise we suggest for English the following definitions (Tr.)].
Woollen cloth is cloth of wool.
Silk cloth is cloth of silk.
The wooden triangle is a triangle of wood.