Building The Mathematical Mind-1
Building The Mathematical Mind-1
"We have to let children experience the beauty of arithmetic... it is always something to discover
and to perceive by the hand before being understood by the mind."
—Philip D. O'Brien, from the introduction to Psychoarithmetic by Maria Montessori
Montessori education is famous for its ingenious, multi-sensory materials which gradually
introduce children to more and more complex concepts. Because the materials allow for self-
monitoring and self-correction, instruction is minimal. Rather than listening to a teacher explain
concepts, children manipulate the materials and make their own discoveries. Using Montessori
math materials, children wire their brains "for higher thinking, creative problem-solving, and for
logical processing of information." (Michael Duffy, Math Works)
Both the Practical Life and Sensorial curriculums play an essential role in indirectly preparing the
child's mathematical mind. Practical Life helps children to order their minds by presenting activities
with sequential and logical step-by-step precision.
Sensorial materials help to bring order to the many sense impressions in a child's world. As they
explore and manipulate the concrete materials, children's powers of observation, judgment, and
reason develop. Mathematical concepts are unconsciously absorbed. Working with materials such
as the Pink Tower, Brown Stair, and Red Rods, children attend to dimension and learn to recognize
similarities, differences, and gradations in size, width, weight, and length.
When children learn to count, they may be able to recite numbers, but understanding number-
quantity correspondence is an abstraction that comes at another stage of development. Many of
the ingenious Montessori math materials help children develop this link.
By working with the Spindle Boxes, children count and see the difference between one spindle and
nine. Montessori education is unique in introducing the concept of zero to young children. They can
see and feel that there is nothing in the Spindle Box compartment labeled "0". Children delight in
learning that the number zero - a numeral like the others - means "nothing." I was told in my
training that Maria Montessori reinforced this concept by asking the children to "blow her zero
kisses."
When children play the Bank Game, they feel how much heavier their tray is when they fetch a
higher number with more hundred squares and thousand cubes. Laying out and then walking the
length of the Thousand Chain in a long hallway, children experience firsthand the astonishing
length of the quantity of 1000 beads.
As children progress through the mathematical materials, they are gradually set free of the
material. "When they leave the material, the children very easily reach the point where they wish
to write out the operation... and acquire a kind of natural and spontaneous inclination for mental
calculations." (Maria Montessori, Discovery of the Child)
Many Montessori teachers have had "aha" moments in their training when the math they
memorized as children suddenly makes sense. One teacher realized with astonishment, as she
worked with the Bead Chain cabinet, that a number squared actually forms a square and that a
number cubed forms a cube that you can hold in your hand.
The materials of the Bead Cabinet are well-known for teaching linear counting
and skip counting. They can also be explored in a purely sensorial way, helping
children discover a variety of mathematical concepts. You can show children how
to:
• fold the ten bars of the 100 bead chain together, alternating sides
until they form a square. Place the 100 square next to the folded
chain. All of the squaring chains can be folded to form their squares.
• stack the squares to build the cube for each number. Compare the
cubes.
The focus in Montessori math education is not on getting the right answer, but rather on the
process of how an answer is reached and what is discovered along the way. Children who have
worked sensorially with the Binomial and Trinomial Cubes in the primary classroom can discover,
as elementary students, the algebraic formula for finding the volume of those cubes. Imagine
sitting for your SAT test and seeing the Trinomial Cube in your mind, rather than hoping to recall a
memorized formula!
In a pamphlet jokingly titled, "Those Horrible Mathematics," Mario Montessori described a class of
9-12 year-olds whose "enthusiasm had become a flood" as they discovered mathematical patterns
while calculating squares and cubes of numbers. More children joined in, helping glue 32 feet of
paper together to record their calculations and newly discovered algebraic formulations. Their
teacher reported, "Though the quantity of the paper consumed was enormous, the happiness
derived from the work was in proportion, if not raised to the second or third power."
As primary teachers, we help children lay the foundation for these future discoveries and higher
learning. When young children explore and manipulate the Montessori materials, they build their
mathematical minds and begin a lifelong passion for learning.
"...the absorption of mathematical knowledge can be natural, easy, and a source of joy; the joy of
one who discovers in himself powers that he had not even suspected."
—Mario Montessori, Maria Montessori's Contribution to the Cultivation of the Mathematical Mind
—by Irene Baker, MEd, Montessori Educational Consultant at Montessori Services. She holds both primary (ages 3-6)
and elementary (ages 6-12) Montessori certifications and has taught at all three levels. For over 20 years, she has
served as a Montessori consultant and teacher-trainer for primary and elementary levels, and has presented
workshops for teachers at schools and AMS conferences. Her work with students and teachers is infused with her
passions: storytelling, history, social justice, non-violent (compassionate) communication, poetry, meditation, music,
Montessori Services (2021) Building the Mathematical Mind [online] available from:
https://www.montessoriservices.com/ideas-insights/building-the-mathematical-mind (date accessed 30.03.2021)