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Optimal Developmental Outcomes

The Social, Moral, Cognitive, and Emotional


Dimensions of a Montessori Education

by
Annette Haines
Kay Baker
David Kahn

The human personality is essentially one during the successive stages of its
development. Yet, whatever human being we consider, and at whatever age,
whether children in the primary school, adolescents, youths or adults, all start
by being children, all then grow from childhood to manhood or womanhood
without changing the unity of their persons. If the human personality is one at
all stages of its development we must conceive of a principle of education which
has regard to all stages.

Maria Montessori, The Formation of Man


Contents

Introduction ....................................................................................................1
by Annette M. Haines

The First Plane of Development ....................................................................3


by Annette M. Haines

The Second Plane of Development.............................................................18


by Kay Baker

The Third Plane of Development.................................................................28


by David Kahn
Introduction
by Annette M. Haines

Mario Montessori used to say that one of the differences between animals and humans is that the animal is a body
with just enough psyche to serve it, whereas humans have “a puny body— but a great spirit”:
And that spirit had a life and needs of its own. For it was not only feelings of physical hunger or cold that
drove Man on. The animals are at rest once their needs have been appeased. In Man hunger and cold were
sources of activity for the mind as well as for the body. Once these had been appeased the body was
satisfied, not so the mind. To the mind they gave suggestions, inspiration, problems. And these are for the
mind what cold and hunger are for the body . (20)

Because they needed to satisfy both physical and spiritual cravings, humans evolved certain tendencies. To satisfy
their hunger or solve the immediately pressing problem of cold, they must have explored their surroundings,
oriented themselves to their environment, and ordered their perceptions into classes. Thus, lower or physiological
needs stimulated more than a simple physiological response in human beings. Unlike the lower animals, humans
could imagine and dream, reason and plan. Simple needs evoked not only exploration, orientation, ordering , and
imagining, but also tendencies to work, create, perfect, embellish, and so forth. These tendencies have allowed the
human species to engag e, over the ages, in an ever progressive and cumulative endeavor to create meaning
(Csikszentmihalyi, Flow 214-240).
Each individual seems to recapitulate, in his or her ontogenesis, this very human search for meaning. This
development is driven by the life force— an “inherited code that unfolds (and causes the individual to develop)
along a largely predetermined path or sequence ” (Kegan 43). The “I want” of the preschooler evolves into a
universal kind of “Faustian dissatisfaction ” (Csikszentmihalyi, The Evolving Self 31), which drives people to seek
new experiences and pursue new opportunities. The psychological manifestations of meaning-making change over
a life span in the direction of increasing complexity (Csikszentmihalyi & Rathunde) and are dependent on an
evolving relationship between the organism and its environment.
This relationship is developed and maintained through activity in the environment , requiring physical, cognitive,
affective, and social engagement. Such activity begins at birth and ev olves as an adaptive process driving the
efforts of the organism. It culminates (by the age of three) in the emergence of an autonomous, enduring self — a
self who can store as well as communicate memories, feelings, and perceptions. During the school years the face
of the child ’s activity changes, expressing itself in increased intellectual industry, competence, social and moral
interest, and self -sufficiency. In early adolescence, the self becomes peer -oriented, ideological , and conversational,
finding spec ial nurturance in a cooperative community of peers.
For optimal development, each successive educational environment would have to meet the needs of the growing
individual at every stage. A prepared environment would be less a school than an eco system supporting the
evolution of the psychological individual, an environment to which the self could attach, sustained by optimal
conditions of support, until it was ready to let go and be born into the next stage of development.
If we had environments that met t he changing needs of the growing individual, environments that supported the
evolution of the human being throughout the stages or planes of development, what would result? Dr. Maria
Montessori, throughout her lifetime and in a prodigious volume of written work, outlined what she believed could
be the consequence of such an education. Some of her ideas came from her actual observation of children in what
she called prepared environments. Some of her ideas (particularly in regard to the adolescent) were clearly
hypothetical. Regardless, she believed these ideas provided what we today might call a more positive psychology.
They seemed to be “the bright new hope for mankind. Not reconstruction, but help for the constructive work that
the human soul is called to do, and to bring to fruition; a work of formation which brings out the immense
potentialities with which children … are endowed” (17).
The following is an attempt to create a framework of optimal psychological outcomes for human development
based on the ideas of Maria Montessori. The initial stimulus for the study came from a November 1999 meeting in
Minneapolis between Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi , David Kahn, Kay Baker, Elizabeth Hall, David Shernoff, and
myself. What were the goals, the objectives, of a Montessori education? What might the outcomes be?
Remarkably, although the Montessori method was almost one hundred years old, with over two thousand public
and private Montessori schools in the United States alone, such questions had never really been asked, much less
answered.

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Kay Baker, director of the Washington Montessori Institute at Loyola College in Maryland (Baltimore), agreed to
explore the literature and extract psychological outcomes that would apply to the school-age child (from six to
twelve years). David Kahn, at the time himself profoundly and personally engaged in an adolescent Erdkinder
project, agreed to study what Montessori and others had written regarding environments for the adolescent (ages
twelve to eighteen) that would provide optimal outcomes. I agreed to review the massive pile of Montessori books
and articles on early childhood (birth to age six).
Taken together, we find the possibility of an educational continuum that extends naturally along a developmental
path from birth to adult hood. It is hoped that the delineation of this path within the three distinct developmental
stages will enable educators to look at students and schools from a new perspective.
September, 2000

References
Csikszentmihalyi , Mihaly . Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience. New York: Harper & Row, 1990.
Csikszentmihalyi, M ihaly . The Evolving Self: A Psychology for the Third Millennium.. New York: HarperCollins ,
1993.
Csikszentmihalyi , Mihaly; & Kevin Rathunde. “The Development of the Person: An Experienti al Perspective on
the Ontogenesis of Psychological Complexity. ” Handbook of Child Psychology. Ed. William Damon. 5 th ed.
Vol. 1. New York: Wiley, 1998.
Montessori, Mario. The Human Tendencies and Montessori Education. Amsterdam: Association Montessori
Internationale, 1966.
Kegan, Robert. The Evolving Self: Problem and Process in Human Development . Cambridge: Harvard University
Press, 1982.
Montessori, Maria. The Absorbent Mind. 1949. Trans. Claude A. Claremont . New York: Delta,1967.

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The First Plane of Development (0-6 years)
by Annette M. Haines

Annette M. Haines, EdD, has sixteen years ’experience as a Primary (3-6) directress and serves
as an AMI teacher trainer in St. Louis and Kansas City, MO. She was recently named NAMTA ’s
Associate Director for Special Projects and will focus on Primary-level programming as well as
research and documentation projects. This article was first published as “Optimal Outcomes
along Social, Moral, Cognitive, and Emotional Dimensions,” The NAMTA Journal 25:2, Spring,
2000

Introduction
If intelligence is what distinguishes the human species, certainly the most important act of human development
would be the creation of intelligence. In the first years, each human child creates his or her own unique
intelligence (Stephenson, “Secret” 14). The construction of mind is achieved through an active interchange
between the environment and the child ’s tendencies to explore, reason, imagine, and create. The interplay between
such human tendencies and the environment directs the formatio n of the personality (Osterkorn, “Personality
Substitution” 5-6).
Maria Montessori operationalized human development and called it work. Work, she said, was a vital instinct
whereby human beings organized their personalities and optimized their potentiali ties: “Man builds himself
through working, working with his hands, but using his hands as the instruments of his ego, the organ of his
individual mind and will, which shapes its own existence face to face with its environment ” (Secret 200).
The construction of social, moral, cognitive, and emotional intelligence occurs when this inherent tendency to
work is allowed to manifest itself in the environment. Montessori called this phenomenon “normalisation through
work” (Secret 199). Whether she was talking abo ut self-discipline or character formation or self -concept, etc.,
positive outcomes always were dependent on and awaited the phenomenon of concentration on a “piece of work
freely chosen” (Haines, “Universal Interest Levels ” 12). Personality formation has s ocial, moral, intellectual,
creative, and artistic aspects, but all are inextricably connected.
Unraveling the threads of Montessori ’s thought along social, moral, cognitive, and emotional lines is difficult
because of the integrated nature of her thought. She understood the human being as a psychosomatic unity and
believed the meaning of any phenomenon could only be understood “from examining the meaningful whole of
which it forms a part ” (Mario M. Montessori, Jr. 40). Her nineteenth -century prose is more poetic than analytic
and continually confounds attempts to tease apart the strands. The following, however, endeavors to define the
developmental outcomes Montessori believed were possible if children could live and work in psychologically
supportive environments from birth to six years of age.

Social Development
Birth to Three Years
For the self to be realized— to be made real— means to be born into the world. In order to be in the world, one’s
world-view must shape itself according to the shape of that worl d. The logical process of structuring the
personality must orient that personality to the world of human beings.
From the moment of birth, the infant ’s first “work” is that of personality formation or individuation. The
personality can be developed only by means of social relationships and experiences (Maria Montessori, “Child ’s
Instinct to Work” 7). Individuation takes place within a social context and is the first step toward social
development.
According to Montessori, “An isolated individual cannot dev elop his individuality.… He must put himself in
relationship with his environment and within reach of the events and the life of his times ” (“Child ’s Instinct to
Work” 7).
The baby’s first social environment is the mother. Maternal care is absolutely neces sary not only for the child to
survive physically but also to provide the mother -infant bond, which contains within it the possibility of all future

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social life. This relationship provides the information that life is nice, that the environment is responsi ve, and that
one can trust this new place (Montanaro 14). Maternal caresses are critical in orienting the neonate to the world,
aiding not only the physical but also the psychological processes of adaptation. The mother ’s embrace sustains the
vital energy of the infant, energy that will be needed later on when the little child has to orient and adapt to the
“complicated world” out there (Montessori, Formation 71).
Infants are born with drives that urge them to relate to others and designed so that others r elate to them. The first
impulses to root and suck, to grasp and smile, to gaze and cuddle in the mother ’s arms, are precisely those needed
to establish and maintain closeness. In sequential and characteristic patterns of touch and eye -to-eye contact, the
mother and newborn reconfirm their union. And in the first days, mother and child are entwined in this
synchronized symbiosis whereby the infant comes to understand the world as a comfortable and positive place
(Haines, “Nonverbal Lessons” 10-11). It is in the context of this relationship with the mother that the infant
develops a sense of self. Attachment, the forming of affectional ties to one significant person, binds the child and
adult together in space and time.
At birth all babies are pretty much al ike; babies everywhere babble at six months, walk around twelve months, and
talk around two years. Human development thus unfolds “in the same way and according to the same laws ”
(Montessori, Absorbent Mind 74). Yet each human being is destined to become u nique and different, and much of
that uniqueness, that difference, is extracted from the specific set of circumstances, the particular “place and time ”
(Montessori, Discovery 64) encountered in the first months and years of life.
For such social adaptation to occur, it is necessary for the infant to be brought out from the nursery and into the
life of the family. From the mother ’s lap the baby can view its new domain. Here is the information needed for the
acquisition of spoken language, modes of behavior, and patterns of the culture. Customs, social attitudes and
values, cultural habits, and ethnic idiosyncrasies all act to form the shape of the evolving personality. In the period
of infancy, the mind takes in such impressions “like a sponge” (Montessori, Reconstruction 11).
Thus, the apparent passivity of the infant belies the profound work in which the infant is actually engaged. The
baby, as the “personal constructor” of its own mental and physical functions, is creating a “new being”
(Montessori, Secret 30), a new soul in human form. According to Montessori, the elements of each acquisition —
spoken language, motor coordination, sensory integration, etc. — are constructed separately. When all is ready,
there is an integration of the personality, creating the “psychic unity of the individual ” (Absorbent Mind 51). The
physical inertia of the newborn simply “prepares for the surprises of individuality ” (Secret 30) because by three,
the little child has already laid down the basic foundations of his or her person ality (Montessori, Discovery 7). The
three-year-old has done its first “work” in relation to the environment and is now ready to experience an “ever-
widening circle of adults and other children ” (Waltuch 20).

Three to Six Years


If children have learned to trust, by three years of age they will be able to employ all their previously developed
skills and move out into the world, cutting those same bonds, those same “oedipal apron strings ” (Schiamberg 48)
they have worked to tie so tightly. According to Montessori’s plan, around the age of two and a half or three,
children would enter a Casa dei Bambini or Children ’s House. They “need the society of other children at this
age,” she told students in a 1946 teacher -training course. “They play together in the stre et, in the farmyard or in the
garden. This, ” she said, “is the age when we begin our school” (Unpublished lecture 79).
A good Montessori class provides a fairly large group of children ( Montessori, Absorbent Mind 225) of “very
different backgrounds” (Montessori, Discovery 319) with an expanded social environment within the confines of a
highly structured and stable physical setting. “Children of different ages from three to six … all live together as
members of a family ” (82). This mixed -age group fosters self-discipline, independence, and responsibility towards
the environment and the other members of the community ( Joosten-Chotzen 32).
The activities available to the children in a Montessori classroom are those which Montessori described as
“purposive” (Absorbent Mind 146) and which can be performed by the children for both selfish and social ends.
When children work in this way they increase their level of independence ( Montessori, Discovery 57) at the same
time as they come to realize that their action b enefits others:
We see a child buttoning the clothes of his younger fellow, tying his shoestrings or quickly cleaning the
ground if someone happens to upset the soup. If [a child] washes the dishes he cleans those which others
have soiled, and when he lays the table he works for the benefit of many others who have not partaken the
work with him. And in spite of this he does not consider this work done in service of others as a
supplementary effort deserving of praise. No, it is the effort itself, which is f or him the most sought after

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prize.… In this way the part of the exterior activity of the child which is aimed toward social purposes is
developed. ( Montessori, The Child 15)

Moreover, some unexpected tastes emerge from the social life of a Montessori clas sroom. The children come to
prefer one another’s company to dolls and the “real” utensils to toys (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 169). While
working with real objects such as “real brushes for cleaning, and real carpets to sweep ” (Montessori, Discovery
92), children attain real skills that allow them to participate more fully in life at home as well as at school.
Along with such practical lessons as cleaning and sweeping, the children in a Montessori class will learn actual
prosocial behaviors. The exercises of Grace and Courtesy, as the name implies, help children control their bodies
and move more gracefully while giving them the courtesies of social life, the “pleases” and “thank yous” that
denote “distinguished manners ” (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 172). “If one teaches them,” Montessori
explained, young children “are interested to know how to greet, how to excuse themselves when they pass in front
of other people, etc.” (“The Child and Society ” 2). The lessons of Grace and Courtesy equip them with the ability
to perform “those actions which have eased the wheels of human congress ” (Stephenson, “First Plane ” 19).
Through these activities, the children develop a true “social feeling ” (Montessori, Discovery 95).
The richness of the social atmosphere in a Montessori classroom is not obvious to the casual observer. During the
period from three to six, little children tend to work side by side rather than together. N ature has provided this time
of solitary or parallel play because, according to Montessori, “the first essential of the child ’s development,” is not
really play at all! Instead, the first essential of the child ’s development is “concentration” (Absorbent Mind 222).
Concentration, she says, lays the basis for the development of an individual ’s character and subsequent social
behavior. Concentration is always solitary, even in the midst of a crowd, and there is no real achievement without
it. To help the child concentrate, Montessori designed an environment replete with things to concentrate on.
Montessori believed that when children concentrated, their personalities were changed. Timid children lost their
shyness and fearful children became at ease ( Secret 137). After completing a cycle of activity, children seem
refreshed and satisfied. They demonst rate “higher social impulses ” (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 98). They
walk calmly about, quietly watch other children work without disturbing them, or come to the teacher to share
some little confidence or story, almost as if they desired to reestablis h the connection with other people after
having been absent.
The work of the children in a Montessori class thus has a purpose far beyond simple academic or pragmatic
objectives. According to Montessori, “First glimmerings of discipline have their origin in work. At a certain
moment a child becomes intensely interested in some task. This is shown by the expression of intense
concentration and his constancy in carrying out the … exercise ” (Spontaneous Activity 174, emphasis added).
When children can bring t heir impulses under control and act intentionally to achieve some external goal, a
profound personality change occurs. According to Jon Osterkorn, they are increasingly empathetic. They begin to
respect the work of others. They can now wait patiently for an object whereas before they might have snatched it
from another child. They begin to walk around the room without knocking against tables or other children, without
“stamping on their feet [or] overturning the table. ” The changes brought about through ind ividual, concentrated
work promote healthy “habits of social life ” (“Socialization ” 16).
Alongside the cubes, prisms, and puzzles, the little tables and chairs, the pretty books and plants, etc., a Montessori
environment includes other, less tangible but e qually important elements. These are ground rules, and they are
designed to enhance the possibilities for socialization. Jon Osterkorn has defined socialization as “the process by
which the individual acquires the knowledge and dispositions that enable him to participate as an effective
member of a social group and a given social order ” (“Socialization ” 12). The ground work for socialization
already having been done in the first period, the Casa now offers the child new opportunities to “participate as
effective members of a social group.” A few simple rules act to harmonize the children ’s combination of activities:
? Children choose their own activities after they have been introduced to a certain material or procedure.
? Since there is only one specimen of eac h object, the child must wait for it to be put back on the shelf or stool
before taking it for him - or herself.
? Children may work with a material or activity for as long or as short a period of time as they wish.
? Each material must be returned to its appro priate place on the shelf in such a way that it is “ready for the next
person.”
? The children are free to move and talk, but they may not disturb another child who is working.
? The children are allowed to solve their problems by themselves.

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In the first Chi ldren’s Houses in Rome, Dr. Montessori was surprised when the young children did not
spontaneously assist other children in difficulty. Rather, they held back — as if remembering their own recent
labors and subsequent triumphs. Little children understand tha t everyone has to figure things out for themselves.
On the other hand, if there is an accident, a time when help is really needed, they immediately rush to assist
(“Moral and Social Education ” 17). In a Montessori community of free and active children, suc h social sentiments
emerge spontaneously (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 151). The older ones help the younger, while the
younger look to the older ones as models (Waltuch 20). The children learn to take turns, to share materials, and to
offer real help when needed. They know that the classroom belongs to all of them (Waltuch 20) and assume
responsibility for its care; they also recognize each other as individuals and “have a reciprocal feeling for each
other’s worth” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 227).
The Montessori teacher uses no rewards or punishments. “No one,” said Montessori, “who has ever done anything
great or successful has ever done it simply because he was attracted by what we call a ‘reward’or by the fear of
what we call punishment.… Every vi ctory and every advance in human progress comes from some inner
compulsion” (Discovery 15).
A non-competitive and free atmosphere is needed for important social impulses to emanate. Through a daily give -
and-take, Montessori says, a kind of cohesion grows— a cementing of the class by affection ( Absorbent Mind 232).
An evident sense of community evolves, a social microcosm united more by the unconscious absorbent mind than
by conscious effort.
According to Montessori, society goes through an embryonic phase (Absorbent Mind 232) in the period from three
to six. This can be observed in the children when “little by little, they become aware of forming a community,
which behaves as such. They begin to feel a part of a group to which their activity contributes. They begin to take
an interest in this community and work on it profoundly ” (Montessori, Discovery 15).
Once they have reached this level, the children no longer act thoughtlessly but put the group first and try to
succeed for its benefit. “This unity born amo ng the children, which is produced by a spontaneous need, directed by
an unconscious power, and vitalized by a social spirit, ” is what Montessori called cohesion in the social unit
(Discovery 232-233).
Children at this age are driven to relate to their env ironment, events, and times. Their personalities continue to
develop and are enhanced by the social relationships they form in daily life together ( Montessori, “Child ’s Instinct
to Work” 7). New bonds are built, which build on the first bonds with the moth er and family but now extend to a
larger family of peers.

Summary of Social Development


Social outcomes of the first phase of life (birth to three) include:
? individuation, the “birth” of the ego or self
? trust in people and the environment
? independence, a chieved by being able to walk, talk, eat table food, use the toilet, etc.
? social adaptation
Acquisition of spoken language, including dialect and gesture, ethnic idiosyncrasies, cultural values, social
attitudes and behaviors, etc. are all absorbed by the infant effortlessly from experiences within society ’s first
representative, the family. Montessori called this incarnation (Absorbent Mind 25) and suggested that it serves an
adaptive purpose.
In the next phase (three to six), the aforementioned outcomes are further developed and enhanced by the child ’s
participation in the expanded social atmosphere of the Casa dei Bambini. Furthermore, the child in a Montessori
primary class acquires:
? self-discipline
? increased independence derived from new skills and com petencies
? knowledge of appropriate and specific prosocial behaviors
? patience and the ability to share
? respect for others

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? a willingness to abide by rules to create social order
Thus, a kind of social intelligence is created which will await further elabor ation and expansion in the next plane
of development.

Moral Development
Birth to Three Years
It was Montessori’s deep belief that each child represents a new hope and promise. Each tiny baby entering the
world is endowed with an “animating human spirit ” driven to take human form “in order to act, to express itself in
the world” (Secret 31). This human spirit is naturally “good” and “tends toward wholesome growth” (Renilde
Montessori 10). But a little baby’s spirit needs care and nourishment — as much as its p hysical body needs food
and attention (Mario M. Montessori, “Dr. Maria Montessori” 55).
Infants-in-arms cannot be influenced “either by example or external pressure ” (Maria Montessori, Absorbent Mind
194). They simply assimilate sensorial impressions: pat terns of color, smell, sound, texture, etc. When they absorb
the “customs, morals and religion of a people, ” Montessori suggested, they take in a pattern. Once the pattern is
fixed, it remains a permanent part of the personality -in-formation (189).
A young mother cannot leave her nursing baby, so when she goes, for instance, to church, she brings the infant
along. Later in life, the individual is drawn to the Sunday morning liturgy. It contains attitudes, values, and moral
sentiments, along with the sounds , smells, and imagery extracted long ago from the environment.
The conflict comes when the baby grows a little older. Once babies learn to crawl, they no longer remain in one
place. Once they begin to walk they will not stay put. Once they begin to chatter , they will not be quiet. They need
to exercise newly formed powers. Their behavior is not good or bad. “The small child has no sense of right and
wrong,” said Montessori. “He lives outside our notions of morality” (Absorbent Mind 194) and is obedient only to
the “law which decrees that development comes from environmental experience ” (89).
Yet suddenly the natural energy of these little children — as they begin to walk and touch things — becomes
threatening to adults: “Grown-ups, no matter how much they love a child, feel an irresistible instinct to defend
themselves from him. It is an unconscious feeling of fear of disturbance by an unreasoning creature, combined
with a proprietary sense where objects are concerned that might be dirtied or spoiled ” (Montessori, Secret 70).
Adults are disturbed by finding a “force of life … in the process of evolution” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 252)
in their midst. The psychological state of the grown -up is so different from that of the toddler that it is almost
impossible for the two to live together unless necessary adjustments are made (Montessori, Secret 70). The adults
want to protect their possessions, their life style. The toddler, however, is compelled by nature: “When we gaze at
the stars, twinkling in the sky, ever f aithfully following their orbit, so steadfast in their position, do we think: ‘Oh!
How good the stars are!’No, we only say, ‘The stars obey the laws that govern the universe ’” (Montessori,
Formation 32).
Montessori believed there is order in nature and th at order manifests itself in the behavior of young children free
to follow what we might call their own orbit. When obstacles are put in the way of this life force, its energy
becomes misshapen and children ’s behavior disordered. She used the word “naughty” to describe behavior that
was infantile as opposed to behavior that was immoral or wrong. Even so, “Children are not naughty by nature, ”
she said in an unpublished 1946 lecture. “It is the wrong treatment they receive that makes them naughty ” (61).
Mental starvation causes naughtiness (62). “Lack of activity causes naughtiness ” (62). The child does not mean to
be bad (33). Disorder is not evil and order does not mean goodness. But ordered behavior, to her way of thinking,
is “an indispensable way to attai n” goodness (33).
Everyone knows young children are innocent, naïve, and gullible: Small children, Montessori said, will accept and
believe anything ( Discovery 298). They understand a behavior as “naughty” if it causes them to be scolded or
punished. They have no moral conscience in the sense of being able to distinguish between good and evil. Nor do
they have interest in such issues because they are “too immature” (298) to “understand or assimilate ” abstract
notions such as “right” and “wrong.”
If the environment is warm and safe, however, and if adults deal “sweetly and kindly ” with them (Montessori,
Discovery 298), even the tiniest babies can develop a feeling for what is good.

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Three to Six Years
Montessori considered the period before six crucial for t he development of “character.” (Absorbent Mind 194).
When she spoke of character, she was not simply talking about attributes or traits; she understood the term in the
“old-fashioned” sense— as moral strength or moral fiber. Morality, she said, would not em erge suddenly in the
adult through sermons or admonitions. “Childhood and years of growth were needed to create this moral power”
(“Child and Society ” 4).
When little children enter a Casa dei Bambini around three years of age, they often move about a great deal. They
touch everything and even throw themselves on the ground. Montessori understood the sensorimotor nature of
children ’s learning and viewed this behavior simply as a sign that the children were alive and growing. Correction
is possible, she said , only by “expansion,” by giving “space.” Such children can only be helped “by opening up the
means for the expansion of the personality. Wider interests than those observed in another individual at our side
must be aroused. Only the poor quarrel over a pi ece of bread. The rich are attracted by the possibilities offered to
them by the world” (Formation 36). It is not a moral question, but “a question of life” (Montessori, Spontaneous
Activity 299). Misbehavior is “pathological” and comes from misfortune, tr auma, or mishap. The naughty child
should excite our “compassion” and needs help rather than punishment ( Montessori, Absorbent Mind 230).
Disordered behavior in young children is a symptom of “an inner disturbance … [an] unsatisfied need, a state of
tension” (Montessori, Secret 94). It indicates that the individuality is “broken up” and the child is “at the mercy of
external objects, like a ship without a rudder ” (94).
Montessori believed one of the main reasons for the spread of her schools was
the visible disappearance of these [character] defects in children as soon as they found themselves in a place
where active experience upon their surroundings was permitted, and where free exercise of their powers
could nourish their minds. Surrounded by interesting things to do, they could repeat the exercises at will, and
went from one spell of concentration to another. Once the children had reached this stage, and could work
and focus their minds on something of real interest to them, their defects disappeared. The disorderly became
orderly, the passive became active, and the troublesome disturbing child became a help in the classroom.
(Absorbent Mind 199)

In a Montessori classroom “naughty” children are given something to do, something to interest them, focus their
energies, and expand their personalities. Especially if children are able to work with their hands, they develop
stronger character (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 152). When children work, they
? demonstrate patience and obedience ( Montessori, Absorbent Mind 224, 257),
? are gentle, polite, and affectionate ( Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 71),
? have better mental balance ( Absorbent Mind 15),
? are content in “doing good” (Montessori, Discovery 317), and
? are respectful of others (Discovery 93).
Concentration also brings about perseverance. When children repeat an activity that interests them, it “produces a
kind of consolidation ” and builds the ability to “carry out … projects they have undertaken” (Montessori,
Absorbent Mind 218). Work becomes a “habitual atti tude” and children begin to prefer it to play ( Montessori,
Spontaneous Activity 105). The intensely formative period of early childhood provides a rich ground for the
formation of character.
“To ‘build the house’ which morality will inhabit, ” Montessori writes in Spontaneous Activity in Education, “some
mastery of the body is … necessary.” This occurs when children, in a process of self -education, “put in motion
complex internal activities of comparison and judgement ” (194). When children are put on a const ructive path, a
path that allows active construction of their mental life, everything improves: Digestion gets better, nightmares
disappear, “greediness subside[s]” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 200). Montessori believed children who
concentrate also become disciplined. Discipline, from a Montessori perspective, is an outward manifestation of an
inner order, a psychological integration ( Montessori, Secret 95).
This phenomenon of normalization appears only when children are free to choose their own activities . New
children in a class will go from one activity to another without showing any real interest. They are merely curious
and respond to the stimuli of all the attractive gadgets and gismos. After they have had presentations with the
material, however, the y come to know the objects on the shelves and their choices become intelligent. The same
inner sensibilities that guided them to sit, stand, walk, and talk now direct them in their choice of work in the
classroom. The children, in a sense, gain control of their own progress and begin to work at their own pace.

8
Over and over, children in a Montessori primary class are asked to make choices, judgments, and decisions, and
their capacity for free choice is strengthened by exercise. They decide whether to take a n object off the shelf or
not; they decide whether to work at a table or get a floor mat; they decide whether to skip to music or control their
motor impulses to create silence. With freedom, children grow in inner discipline. “The mechanism of the habit o f
decision” (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 182) gives a sense of liberty.
Children gradually come to trust their own inner guide. They defer less to the teacher and begin to self -monitor. As
they repeat activities that require them to carry out goal -directed movements and provide control of error
(Montessori, Discovery 314) their awareness and self -control increases. Through repeated cycles of activity their
concentration becomes methodical and they gain the “equilibrium, elasticity, and adaptability ” necessary to
“perform … higher actions, such as those which are termed acts of obedience ” (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity
104).
To ensure a continuation of such positive attitudes and the development of the personality along these lines,
Montessori says, some real work needs to be performed each day (Spontaneous Activity 104). Work is not only a
means of attaining internal growth but also an indication of the level of development. Children begin to sense their
growing competence and become fascinated by th eir own progress (Montessori, Discovery 307). This motivates
them to work harder. “Discipline, ” Montessori said, “is not … a fact, but a way” (307).
Moral development is tied to cognitive development. Little children who are allowed to pick flowers becaus e they
“want” them will quickly throw them down or pull them to pieces. The desire to possess objects results in
destructive tendencies. But if the child has learned a little about flowers, e.g., “if the child knows the parts of a
flower, the kind of leaf it has, or the branching patterns of its stem, then it will not occur to him to pick it or to
damage” it (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 219). The interest becomes intellectual; the child does not destroy the
flower but wants to study it, to possess not the flower itself, but knowledge of it. Knowledge allows us to make
intelligent decisions.
Thus, knowledge brings confidence. And if we are confident, we become independent of the suggestions of others.
The strength to resist temptation and make reasonable choi ces cannot be summoned by moral exhortations or
sermons on duty or honor or righteousness. Will power, according to Montessori, is built up by the routine of life
itself, by the little decisions of daily living begun in early childhood. “The great achievem ent of ‘The Children ’s
Houses,’” she said, “is the production of disciplined children. ” The pivotal point in the construction of self -
discipline, she continued, is “freedom in intellectual work ” (Absorbent Mind 109).
Moral development is also related to social development. If children are to live together in a little society, there
must be a super-structure, “a set of rules which we call morality” (Montessori, “Moral and Social Education ” 15).
Morality is not an abstraction for young children; it is a techn ique human beings use to live together harmoniously.
As such, it is a form of adaptation to social life. For example, people often have to remain seated quietly together
at a lecture or in church. This requires a great deal of self -control, even for adults. Little children can learn to sit
“arranged in order in their proper places ” (Montessori, Discovery 54). In a good Montessori class, to achieve a
harmonious life together, children follow the rules and behave nicely.
And morality also has an affective di mension. A non -competitive atmosphere is created by the mixed -age group
and the absence of rewards. In a collaborative atmosphere, children are not envious of each other ’s
accomplishments; rather, they admire and praise each other for something well done ( Montessori, Absorbent Mind
231). Montessori thought competition fostered unhealthy sentiments and believed that if children had to be
rewarded or punished, it meant they lacked the capacity to guide themselves (245). Competition between children
of different abilities or backgrounds only makes the high achievers “conscious of their superiority” and does not
contribute to the development of their moral sensibility. This puts them on the “wrong moral track.” They are not
better, said Montessori, but simply “more fortunate than their companions. ” And she hoped that “their kindly
hearts” could be led to recognize the “truth” (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 319). Normalized children are
solicitous, gentle, and affectionate (71).
Thus, the Montessori primary cla ssroom assists the development of a “moral sense” (Montessori, Spontaneous
Activity 326). Just as Montessori teachers know to say “This is red; this is green, ” they must know when to say
“This is right; this is wrong ” (336). Combine the knowledge of “right” and “wrong” with self-discipline and the
love that comes naturally to children, and we have the emergence of conscience and the foundations of moral
intelligence.

9
Summary of Moral Development
The first phase of life (birth to three) is basically outside of morality. However, the groundwork is laid in the first
three years for the formation of moral sensibilities:
? nourishment of the human spirit by a warm and protective family atmosphere
? internalization of ethical behavior patterns, empathic attitudes, religious and positive cultural values, etc.
In the next phase (three to six), the process of normalization through work within the physical and social
environments of the Casa dei Bambini consolidates and expands moral development . Optimal outcomes of moral
development include formation of such personality traits as:
? perseverance, good work habits
? ability to choose
? self-discipline
? independence
? mental balance
? sublimation of the possessive instinct
? care and respect for the environment and for others
? willi ngness to abide by rules to create social order
At the end of the period, we find the awakening of conscience, the inner voice combined with a kind of moral
intelligence that has been internalized from the order of the external environment. Somewhere betwe en six and
seven, children become conscious of this inner voice. Meanwhile, they have acquired the ability to obey and, by
the time they are six, their obedience usually can be depended on. They begin to be responsible and feel a sense of
duty. They can now listen and pay attention (Mario M. Montessori, The Child Before 7). In most countries, formal
education begins at this age.
Yet, says Mario M. Montessori, “Whether we realize it or not, the subconscious of the child is a much more
powerful agent for good, beauty, and religion than any conscious teaching later on. You cannot impart spirituality
to seven-year-olds by teaching moral precepts ” (“Dr. Maria Montessori” 58).

Cognitive Development
Birth to Three Years
The cognitive dimension is the lynchpin of a ll human development (Maria Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 198)
because the ability to think lies at the heart of our very humanity (Stephenson, “First Plane” 21). The creation of
intelligence, “man’s … greatest implement ” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 22), is perhaps the first and most
singularly creative act of a human being ’s life. Yet it is done in the first period of life (Stephenson, “Secret” 14): a
period we can’t even remember, a period without conscious memory, reason, or will.
Infants everywhere acquire intelligence and language through natural processes that allow them to adapt to the
conditions of their world (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 61). Newborns are born only with “constructive
possibilities ” (57) waiting to unfold. Yet “the ‘nothingness ’of the babe,” Montessori said, “is comparable to the
apparent ‘nothingness of the germinal cell ’“ (57) and is designed to evolve in predictable ways through critical
periods or periods of specific environmental sensitivity.
Various functional modalities dev elop independently of one another. For example, “while language is developing
on the one hand, the judgement of distances and of finding one ’s way about, is developing quite separately; so is
the power to balance on two feet, and other forms of coordination” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 51).
The acquisition of spoken language is perhaps the most remarkable creative act of these remarkable first years.
According to Montessori,
nature has placed an extraordinary sensitivity in the child for fixing words and a ccents and it is precisely
during the period of childhood that a person ’s language is fixed for life. There is no going back: what a child ’s

10
mind assimilates during the sensitive period remains as a permanent acquisition for his whole life, and it can
never be acquired at another stage. ( Discovery 171)

Auditory perceptions excite complicated movements of articulate speech which develop instinctively under
environmental stimuli ( Montessori, Discovery 246). Speech develops naturally and reflects the deep gram matical
structure of language since spoken language “comes in what might be called a ‘grammatical ’order” (258), which
is the same for children everywhere. At the same time, the acquired speech reflects the characteristic intonation,
pronunciation, or dial ect of a region. The infant memory, Montessori said, is “particularly tenacious ” (246).
During this time, the child also absorbs an enormous number of sensory impressions ( Montessori, Discovery 260)
and is entranced with even the tiniest things, details of little interest (or scarcely perceptible) to the adult
(Montessori, Secret 67). These impressions “fall at once into pattern in the service of reason: it is in the service of
his reason that the child first absorbs such images. He is hungry for them, we m ay well say, insatiable ” (61).
Infants have only five ways to feed their insatiable mental hunger: sight, smell, feeling, hearing, and taste. To
develop optimally, they must perceive as fully as possible their physical and social environments. Little hands
reach out to the environment and grasp it, bringing it in for closer inspection. As such, the hand is called the organ
of intelligence, “for what is sensed forms the very structure of the mind ” (Osterkorn, “Emotional Foundations ” 6).
All this “wonderful work” is not the product of conscious intention (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 23). Montessori
describes the infant psyche as unconscious but insists that the unconscious mind can be “most intelligent ” (23).

Three to Six Years


A good Montessori classroom prepared for children from three to six contains objects and activities designed to
actualize the potentials that are the result of the previous three years (Stephenson, “First Plane” 17). Three-year-
olds still have what Montessori called absorbent minds; they still have “the power to teach [themselves]”
(Absorbent Mind 6).
If you watch a child of three, you will see that he is always playing with something. This means that he is
working out, and making conscious something his unconscious mind has earlier abso rbed.… He constructs
his mind step by step till it becomes possessed of memory, the power to understand, the ability to think
(Absorbent Mind 27)

But at two and a half or three, the little child ’s mind is in a state of “heavy chaos” (Montessori, Spontaneous
Activity 203). Normal children, said Montessori, do not need more stimulation; they need to “bring order into the
chaos” of mind created by the “host of sensations coming … from the outside world ” (Discovery 105). As
explorers of a new world, children ne ed a road (something straight and limited) to lead them to their goal and keep
them from “wandering aimlessly about ” (105).
The Montessori materials are not instructional in the usual sense. Their aim is less to give factual knowledge than
to help children reorganize what they already know according to new principles. This increases their capacity to
learn by “differentiating ” the intelligence (Mario M. Montessori, “Psychological Background” 21).
When a child ’s natural impulse to activity is mediated by “a cognition,” an idea, a connection with something
known, the more primitive urge becomes a “discerning interest ” derived from the intellectual conquest (Maria
Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 163). Children at this age are particularly interested in things that are familiar,
things they have “absorbed” in the earlier period ( Montessori, Absorbent Mind). When interested, they focus their
minds easily (172). Gradually, there is an “evolution of internal order ” (122) as relationships are seen and
connections made. As a child works in an environment that matches this interest, Montessori said, what is already
known “establishes itself in the child as a complex system of ideas ” (162).
In the first phase it was sufficient for the infant or toddler to perceive imag es; in the years from three to six,
however, to assist the development of intelligence it is necessary that the child perceive “exactly” and connect the
things perceived “logically ” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 226). Images of consciousness need to be put in order
(202). Children ’s natural tendencies to explore, orient, and order assist them in sequencing, classifying, and
organizing their impressions into frameworks for learning.
Montessori believed that the period under six is “decisive” (Absorbent Mind 181); the abilities a child constructs
during this period will remain for life. Consequently she designed the many activities and materials of the Casa dei
Bambini to enhance the possibilities for cognitive development during this critical time. The order o f the
environment — things in their place — gives a means of orienting to the environment and of possessing it
psychologically ( Montessori, Secret 52). A high level of environmental order also helps the young mind “retain its
equilibrium ” throughout its “successive and illimitable enrichment by new material ” (Montessori, Spontaneous
Activity 164). As they work, the children are continually asked to make choices, comparisons, and judgments, and

11
in so doing, the design of the carefully structured Montessori envir onment allows their mental acquisitions to fall
into logical relation “one with another” (164). “The results are a singular facility and accuracy of reasoning power,
and a remarkable quickness of comprehension ” (165).
As they choose and persist in self -educative tasks such as those found in a Montessori primary classroom, young
children become aware of new competencies and skills. They know they are gaining “new power” (Montessori,
Spontaneous Activity 75). This awareness spurs them on to concentrate even m ore and effects a “permanent
attitude of thought, internal equilibrium, and sustained interest. ”
The practical activities focus little children ’s energies by putting the goal of the exercise in clear view and by
breaking down complex actions into simple, doable steps. When children work like this, their muscular movement
“serve[s] the intellect ” and the “functional unity of the human personality ” (Montessori, Discovery 81) is
preserved. From a Montessori perspective, the development of mind comes about thr ough movement because
mind and movement “are parts of the same entity” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 142).
After each cycle of activity is over, a “period of internal work” begins, a period of “assimilation ” or “internal
maturation” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 104). Through the repetition of such experiences, perception, thought,
and expression are integrated ( Montessori, Secret 82); the intellectual level “rises rapidly ” (109) and the
personality evolves (104).
Work with the sensorial materials helps childr en increase their “power of discrimination ” (Montessori, Discovery
182). They concentrate (177). They observe (169), classify, and catalogue external things “on the basis of a secure
order already established in the mind ” (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 205). It is not the teacher’s direction that
can lead a child to such intense activity; it is the natural impulse to satisfy a spiritual “hunger” (153) that directs
the children in a Montessori classroom to work and prompts them to engage in activities inv olving comparison,
judgment, decision making, and the correction of their own error (202).
Knowledge— the ability to recollect quickly and vividly something known — increases in proportion to the level of
engagement (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 154). When distracting factors are eliminated, children become
spontaneously engaged in an “inner and external analysis ” that helps them acquire a more orderly mind
(Montessori, Discovery 102).
The world is no longer a chaos for the child; his mind bears some rese mblance to the orderly shelves of a
library or a rich museum; each object is in its place, in its proper category. And each acquisition he makes will
be no longer merely “stored,” but duly “allocated.” This primitive order will never be disturbed, but only
enriched by fresh material. Thus, the child, having acquired the power of distinguishing one thing from
another, has laid the foundations of the intelligence. ( Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 205)

Such impressive effects, Montessori warned us, cannot be expected unless the material corresponds to a child ’s
level of development and interest. If given too soon, the exercise may be too difficult for the child. If presented too
late, the work will be boring. Like the fable of Goldilocks and the Bears, given a t just the right time, the
experience will provide “a conquest” for the child and learning will be a “pleasurable experience, neither
frustrating nor burdening ” (Mario M. Montessori, “Psychological Background” 23).
From three to six, children are still hyp er-interested in language, so this provides an optimal time to teach “the
exact names of things ” and to help children “speak correctly” (Maria Montessori, Discovery 155). They also enjoy
analyzing words and delight in building words in straight little rows on a rug with loose letters from a box called
the Moveable Alphabet. By five, however, the unconscious, formative interest in language is “already on the
decline” (218), and Montessori believed it much harder to teach a seven -year-old to read than a four-year-old! The
same was true for writing, which little children learned to do with explosive (222) speed if the indirect
preparations had been made, writing “with wonderful deftness, keeping the lines perfectly parallel and an equal
distance between individ ual letters” (227).
A method where children are constantly moving objects with their hands and exercising their sensory powers also
allows for the development of their special aptitude for mathematics. Four -year-old children compose numbers up
to a thousand (Montessori, Discovery 277) and between five and six, they can add, subtract, multiply, and divide
numbers “running into the thousands ” (277). Universal tendencies, common to all human beings, “to abstract, to
investigate, to imagine, to reason, to create, to calculate, measure and use precision, to be exact” (Mario M.
Montessori, “Explanation ” 10) combine to create what Maria Montessori called “the Mathematical Mind ”
(Absorbent Mind 185).

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Summary of Cognitive Development
Optimal cognitive outcomes of the first phase (birth to three) involve laying the procrustean bed for such basic
structures as:
? the creation of mind
? the acquisition of spoken language
? development of memory, the power to understand, the ability to think and move intentionally
? formation of consciousness, self-awareness, ego
The unconscious absorbent mind, paired with the sensitive periods, creates the very mind of the human being in
the first phase. The potentialities created — intellect, memory, reason, will, etc. — are expanded and refined i n the
second period.
Optimal cognitive outcomes in the second phase (three to six) of the first plane of development include:
? the clarification and classification of impressions absorbed in the first period ( “bringing order into the chaos ”)
? increase in kn owledge/vocabulary
? refinement of sense perception/discrimination
? logical/linear thinking
? new skills and competencies
? sustained interest
? augmentation of intellect
? internalization of symbol systems: language and mathematics
? concrete operations on the above symbol systems with Montessori materials
The cognitive accomplishments of the first six years are truly astounding. As Mario M. Montessori remarked:
“Any normal six -year-old is intelligent and can use his intelligence. When he was born he could not speak o r
understand. Now he can do both.” (The Child Before 7 n.p.).
Montessori classroom environments, designed to meet specific and expanding cognitive needs of individuals
during this critical stage, enhance the chances for optimal development from birth to si x by providing
opportunities for the formation of intellect.

Emotional Development
Birth to Three Years
If this has been put last, it is not to imply that emotional development takes a back seat to social, moral, or
cognitive development in Maria Montesso ri’s scheme. Emotions are at the core of human development. As she
remarked, in the embryos of mammals, “the first organ to appear is the heart ” (Secret 14) and “the inner drama in a
baby’s life is a drama of love.… Love in its widest sense is the sole gre at reality, which evolves in the hidden
recesses of the soul and from time to time fills it wholly ” (39).
The newborn’s first spontaneous expressions are of emotion. They are specifically designed to provide a powerful
control over the mother’s behavior (Haines, “Nonverbal Lessons” 11) and establish and maintain significant
relationships between the infant and the environment. An atmosphere of love and affection is the most critical
influence on the child in the early years of development (Osterkorn, “Emotional Foundations” 14). Thus, the
emotional environment influences the infant and the infant influences the emotional environment. The quality of
that environment determines the quality of the infant ’s adaptive functioning in that environment (Haines,
“Nonverbal Lessons” 10).
The human infant, according to Montessori, is born with potentialities that do not exist in later life. The child is
“guided by the unconscious through feelings which are known as instincts ” (Mario M. Montessori, “Explanation ”
9). Through the close emotional ties with the mother, basic behavior patterns are absorbed from the social

13
environment. Innate emotional sensitivities take the form of a “series of keen emotions rising up from the
subconscious” (Maria Montessori, Secret 38) and act to tune the sensory system to specific impressions from the
outside, impressions that are necessary for development. Such impressions are assimilated easily and eagerly.
Certain aspects of the environment “awaken so much interest and so much enthusiasm t hat they become
incorporated in his very existence ” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind 24). If mental stimulation is lacking in the
baby’s environment, “the baby cries and becomes disturbed, has screaming fits and rages, because he is suffering
from mental hunger ” (107). This emotional relationship with the world is so intense that it influences an infant ’s
entire being. Children in this first phase of development are spiritual embryos, Maria Montessori said (cited in
Mario M. Montessori, “Psychological Background” 17). They “become like the things they love ” (Maria
Montessori, Absorbent Mind 101).
Personality formation is a consequence of unconscious mechanisms primarily determined by emotional factors
such as the child ’s close relationship with the adults who car e for it. By three years, the personality reaches a first
level of integration. If the child is not rejected, it responds “with feelings of gratitude, trust and respect for those
superior beings who are willing to help it orient itself in its world ” (Mario M. Montessori, “Help to Life” 7). “A
sense of worth, security and a means for emotional expression ” have evolved, along with “autonomy and
independence ” (Osterkorn, “Emotional Foundations ” 1). If the baby is treated with love and respect within the
family and without violence or oppression, it will grow to have feelings of “confidence and adequacy” (Swamy 6).

Three to Six Years


“The unity of the human being is built up and formed by active experiences in the real world, to which it is led by
the laws of nature,” writes Maria Montessori in The Absorbent Mind (203). Psycho-motor systems created in the
first period need to be integrated so that the parts act together “in the service of the individual ” (203). As
integration is achieved, and as differentiation p rogresses towards higher levels of maturity, the conscious ego
begins to assume guidance over the individual (22).
Every new competency, every skill, every new bit of knowledge gained by the young child provides a concomitant
increase in independence. The young child works at this self -construction feverishly. It is as if the child were
pleading: “help me to do it myself ” (Minwalla 8). If the child ’s energies are restricted, protest, tantrums, and
naughtiness result. Worse are feelings of indifference, apat hy, and hatred.
At this later stage, children continue to be led towards maturity by the unconscious intelligence of the sensitive
periods, which stimulate them to carry out certain activities and acquire certain experiences. Their choices can
also, however, be dictated by subconscious feelings arising from repressed negative experiences that distort the
child ’s outlook, such as feelings of insecurity, inadequacy, inferiority, or fear (Osterkorn, “Personality
Substitution” 10).
A good Montessori primary classroom creates conditions that allow children to manifest their natural
developmental propensities. With a prepared environment and freedom to act within it according to their “inner
needs, individual rhythm, and tempo ” (Mario M. Montessori, “Help to Life” 9), children exhibit characteristics not
generally attributed to them:
This included prolonged concentration, the repetition of exercises for their own sake, an urge to make a
maximum effort, control of movements, a sense of order, and other phenomena. Perhaps the most
astounding result of her approach was the intensity with which children approached activities. Their whole
personalities were involved in them, and it was obvious that they were finding in their experiences the kind of
pleasure and satisfaction that only results when basic needs are gratified. (9)

The activities young children are most enthusiastic about are those that are necessary for the further structuring of
the personality “under the impact of processes of differentiation and integrat ion” (Mario M. Montessori,
“Psychological Background” 17). With the “polarization of attention ” that comes with concentration, children
become “calmer, more intelligent, and more expansive ” (Maria Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 68). “Doubt and
timidity d isappear” (185). After working in such a way, the children appear to be “rested, satisfied, and uplifted ”
(97), “capable of controlling their nerves ” (94). “Broken bits of personality” are “reunited” (Minwalla 8). A new
emotional equilibrium is achieved; t he spirit is “organized” and “fortified” (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 82).
“The child who concentrates, ” Montessori writes, “is immensely happy.… Love awakens in him for people and for
things. He becomes friendly to everyone, ready to admire all that is beautiful. The spiritual process is plain: He
detaches himself from the world in order to attain the power to unite himself with it. ” (Montessori, Absorbent
Mind 272-273).

14
When the child works to assimilate the environment, the personality is unified. “Individuality develops and
organizes itself round the action of this motive -principle in relation with the outside environment ” (Montessori,
Secret 32). Once achieved, however, it cannot rest content. The personality must “continually maintain its
sovereignty by its own strength” (32). The improvement will be “purely temporary” (Montessori, Absorbent Mind
205) if children go back to live in conditions that have not been altered.
Montessori’s unifying vision does not separate emotional wellness from moral, s ocial, or intellectual health. “The
life of the body,” she wrote in Spontaneous Activity in Education, “depends on the life of the spirit ” (25): Grief
makes the heart beat feebly; anger contracts the capillaries. But pleasure dilates the blood vessels and is like “an
injection of health. ” And morality has an emotional component: Good brings serenity; evil brings anguish and
remorse (337). Moral education must be based on feeling, she said (331). Yet the strongest linkage is probably
between the cognitive and emotional dimensions. Because humans are thinking beings, and because each child
needs to become a human being, “every intellectual conquest is a wellspring of joy to our free children ” (218).
“The opening of the mind ” is a “creative phenomenon,” an active Eureka!, accompanied by “great emotions”
(217).
Children derive so much joy from constructive activities that satisfy inner needs, that it seems as if they are
playing (Minwalla 8). They are “supremely happy ” (Montessori, Formation 35) when given the opportunity to
simply realize their own development. The acquisition of new skills and new knowledge changes children; they
are not longer “discontented.” “The joy of life” is in them (Mario M. Montessori, “Keys” 14). “Joy,” Maria
Montessori says, “is the in dication of internal growth, just as an increase in weight is the indication of bodily
growth” (Spontaneous Activity 93). She quotes an early Montessori directress, Anne E. George: “They skip around
me, and throw their arms around my neck, when they have l earned to do some simple thing, saying: I did it all
alone, you did not think I could have done that; I did it better today than yesterday ” (93).
The love of such children “seems to expand” (Montessori, “Child and Society ” 2); they have an “anxious concern
for living things ” (Montessori, Discovery 71); they are “in love” with their world ( Montessori, Absorbent Mind
84). This love of the environment is not the “fluffy kind ” (Stephenson, “First Plane ” 19) usually thought of, but a
“love inspired by knowledge ” (Montessori, “Two Natures” 5). When children willingly explore their surroundings,
they experience “a new happiness at every discovery they make ” (Discovery 231). These “normalized children ”
are “warm, expressive, outgoing, and optimistic ” (Osterkorn, “Socialization ” 16).

Summary of Emotional Development


Optimal outcomes along the emotional dimension for the period from birth to three include:
? the establishment of close emotional ties with the adult caregiver
? a sense of security and safety within the famil y
? the first level of personality integration
? feelings of gratitude, trust, and respect for significant adults
? feelings of adequacy, autonomy, independence, and confidence
When the right conditions meet the child ’s need for love and security, then with the second phase (three to six),
manifestations are further articulated and advanced as the child enters a Montessori Casa dei Bambini. In this
environment, children can concentrate their energies on constructive activities. When children work in this way,
they demonstrate:
? pleasure in purposeful activity
? serenity, calmness, satisfaction, emotional equilibrium
? happiness, joy
? an anxious concern for life
? love for people and things
? emotional wellness
? warm, expressive, outgoing, and optimistic personalities

15
Such children have already begun to make a positive adaptation to their world and have discovered how to find
happiness, spiritually and physically, in the conditions of that world. A kind of emotional intelligence has been
created, which will hopefully serve t hem throughout the coming stages of life.

References
Haines, Annette M. “The Nonverbal Lessons of Attachment.” AMI Communications (1995, #1): 9-16.
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Minwalla, Gool K. “Being and Becoming — a Montessori Approach.” AMI Communications (1983, #2/3): 2-13.
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Montessori, Maria. “The Child and Society [Lecture, London, 1939]. ” AMI Communications (1973, #4): 2-6.
Montessori, Maria. “Child ’s Instinct to Work [Lecture, London, 1939].” AMI Communications (1973, #4): 6-9.
Montessori, Maria. The Discovery of the Child. Trans. M. Joseph Costelloe. New York: Ballantine, 1967.
Montessori, Maria. The Formation of Man. 1955. Trans. A.M. Joosten. Oxford: Clio, 1989.
Montessori, Maria. “Moral and Social Education [Lecture, Edinburgh, 1938]. ” AMI Communications (1984, #4):
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Montessori, Maria. Reconstruction in Education. 1942. Adyar, Madras, India: Theosophical Publishing House,
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Montessori, Maria. The Secret of Childhood. 1936. Trans. Barbara Barclay Carter. Hyderabad, India: Sangam
Books, 1983.
Montessori, Maria. “The Two Natures of the Child.” 1933. AMI Communications (1995, #4): 4-9.
Montessori, Maria. Unpublished lecture. Dr. Maria Montessori ’s International Training Course. London. 1946.
Montessori, Mario M. 1. The Child Before 7 Years of Age. 2. The Child After 7 Years of Age. 3. What Children
Taught Dr. Montessori. Amsterdam: Association Montessori Internationale, 1959.
Montessori, Mario M. “Dr. Maria Montessori and the Child. ” 1961. The NAMTA Journal 19.2 (1994, Spring): 47-
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Montessori, Mario M. “Explanation of Certain Leading Concepts. ” AMI Communications (1978, #2): 6-12.
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(1980, Spring): 19-20.

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The Second Plane of Development (6-12 years)
by Kay Baker

Kay M. Baker, PhD, is AMI Elementary Director of Training at the Washington Montessori
Institute at Loyola College in Maryland. She holds AMI Primary and Elementary diplomas, a
BA in mathematics from the College of New Rochelle in New York, and both an MA and a PhD
in mathematics education from the University of Maryland. In addition to ten years of
experience in Montessori classrooms, she has taught in public schools and worked as a
computer programmer. This article was first published as “Optimal Developmental Outcomes
for the Child Aged Six to Twelve: Social, Moral, Cognitive, and Emotional Dimensions,” The
NAMTA Journal 26:1, Winter, 2001.
Thinking about human development permeates human history. The fact of development appears before our eyes
with the birth and growth of e very baby, yet we cannot help but wonder about the details. These details are
endlessly fascinating because of the variance in human development and the variance in human cultures. The
human mind searches for the simplest theory of human development that e xplains the variance, generalizing over
all differences in culture and time. Furthermore, this simple theory should allow for the description of optimal
human development, encompassing both philosophical and psychological elements.
If we are to describe optimal development, then the nature of the human mind and the nature of human behavior
need description. In a sense, the human being needs to be idealized; human nature and behavior must be described
before optimal development can be described, much less r ealized. Yet a description of the ideal human being must
be gleaned from the actual human being. This is Maria Montessori ’s great contribution. She established
observation of the human being as the sine qua non underlying a theory of human development. Fro m the many
instances of actual human beings, she hypothesized that one could describe the nature of the ideal human being
and its optimal development. Her contributions began in observation and ended with the message, look where I am
pointing — to the child, who undergoes the development leading to the human being.
Maria Montessori’s approach varies substantially from the approach that if one “first articulates a clearer picture of
desirable adult developmental outcomes, then it is easier to search the litera ture about earlier developmental
periods and, it is hoped, find the connections that link certain patterns in childhood with desirable adult outcomes ”
(Csikszentmihalyi & Rathunde 639). Montessori ’s approach is instead to observe the human being in the pro cess
of development. But how does one observe this, given that the process of development is obstructed from the
beginning by lack of optimal conditions? Montessori ’s answer is to place the child in an environment and remove
obstacles to development: “It is Nature, ‘creation,’ which regulates all these things. If we are convinced of this, we
must admit as a principle the necessity of ‘not introducing obstacles to natural development ’” (Montessori,
Spontaneous Activity in Education 5). That is to say, we must remove as many contaminants to normal
development as possible. It is then that one can identify what the normal process of development is and only then
hope to find the connections between childhood patterns and desirable adult outcomes.
Montessori’s idea of an uncontaminated environment came from two sources. The first was accidental: One day in
the San Lorenzo Casa dei Bambini, the teacher was late, and the children, who were already oriented to the
environment, simply started their activity. The second was taken from history: How did human beings of long ago
find their way on earth? They simply followed their natural urges to find means of survival and then to perfect
these means. Thus the nature of the uncontaminated environment was revealed: an enviro nment that allowed for
spontaneous activity and an environment that contained means for surviving and for perfecting these means.
In this way, too, the nature of the human being can be described. The human being is active and finds the means to
live a huma n life by activity in the environment. But there is one more element necessary for normal human
behavior to show itself. This is the element of freedom. Montessori calls this spontaneous activity. The basic
premise is that the particular human being in its process of development cannot develop its own being without
choice of activity in the prepared environment. Freedom to choose is an element of individual human
development. Montessori writes, “the child must learn by his own individual activity, being giv en a mental
freedom to take what he needs, and not to be questioned in his choice ” (Montessori, To Educate the Human
Potential 7), and, in another place, “Instead of having to deal with many separate problems — such as, what are the
best aids to the development of character, intelligence and feeling? — one single problem will present itself as the
basis of all education: How are we to give the child freedom? ” (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 5).
In freedom, the particular human being constructs the personality — that is to say, constructs this human being.
“The more the babe is left free to develop, the more rapidly and perfectly will he achieve his proper proportions

18
and higher functions ” (Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 4). The stage is now set for the theory of human
development proposed by Montessori.

Four Planes of Development


In the psychological theory proposed by Maria Montessori, there are four well -defined periods of life during which
adaptation to society and the world and a unique self -construction of the individual personality are accomplished:
(a) the first plane, birth to age six; (b) the second plane, age six to puberty; (c) the third plane, puberty to age
eighteen; and (d) the fourth plane, ages eighteen to twenty -four (Montessori, The Four Planes of Development). At
the end of these four periods, the individual personality is considered developed and complete in the acquisition of
those aspects that allow the individual to enter into society and take on a career, mission, or life ’s work.
Childhood encompasses the first two planes of development; together, these two planes constitute the period of
adaptation of the human being to society. This adaptation is peculiar to childhood: “The task of adapting seems to
be set by nature only for childhood’s accomplishment; the adult is not adaptable ” (Montessori, Education for a
New World 27). The process of adaptation is, in fact, social development. Moreover, the second plane
complements the first. Whereas in the first plane the adaptation results in the chi ld’s being able to live within the
confines of the home and a limited area outside the home, the adaptation of the second plane results in the child ’s
feeling at home on the planet.
Adaptation (from Latin adaptare, “to fit”) is always an individual accompl ishment. Each person has to find out
what it means to be “at home,” first in the home and eventually on the planet. Further, adaptation suggests
flexibility. It seems superfluous to say that living on this planet requires flexibility — the weather changes, the
length of day and night changes, mountains grow, bodies of water change in size and volume, parents die. So one
not only has to feel at home on the planet; one has to feel at home with change and the possibility of change:
“Adaptation to the environment and efficient functioning therein is the very essence of a useful education ”
(Montessori, What You Should Know about Your Child 87).
The construction of self occurs by means of several factors, among which are the child and the work of the child,
the adult and the work of the adult on behalf of the child, and the environment, within which and upon which the
child works. In a Montessori context, work is a term used to describe the activity of the individual across
developmental stages. Thus the activity of the child is not separated into play periods and work periods but
includes any time the child is active. Activities that engage the child ’s interest and use both mind and body
contribute to health, well -being, and self -construction: “Man builds himself thr ough working, working with his
hands, but using his hands as the instruments of his ego, the organ of his individual mind and will, which shapes
its own existence face to face with its environment ” (Montessori, The Secret of Childhood 200).
This paper will discuss the second-plane child with respect to the development of social, moral, cognitive, and
emotional dimensions of the human personality.

Social Development in the Second Plane


According to Webster’s New World Dictionary, social is defined as “of or having to do with human beings living
together as a group in a situation in which their dealings with one another affect their common welfare. ” The
etymology of social is from the Latin socius, “companion,” and akin to sequi, “to follow.” Thus social
development is the facet of development that addresses the formation of the personality with regard to how human
beings live together and affect each other.
Montessori states the desirable social outcome of the second plane of development as a question, “Do we merely
live here for ourselves, or is there something more for us to do?, ” and its answer, “The answer was ever what it
still is — God has sent you upon the earth to work and do your duty” (To Educate 9-10). What is work? What is
duty? At the second plane of development, work is defined in its cosmic dimension; Montessori speaks of
children ’s need to understand “the part they play” in the work of the cosmic plan ( To Educate 33).
Bringing God into the discussion underscores the fact that development is not gui ded solely by other human
beings; rather, it is guided above all by nature. Therefore, the normal development of the child — that is,
development in accordance with the inherent laws of nature — secures all optimal outcomes, social and otherwise.
What laws, th en, are specific to social development?
If, in the first plane of development, the child has formed a personality oriented to the world of human beings as
experienced by the child within its cultural environment, then in the second plane the child must for m a personality

19
oriented to the world of human beings outside its cultural environment. The child has no choice but to live in a
social context with others in the world. If the personality formed is not adapted to both the birth culture and other
human cul tures, then the person is unable to achieve social development. The more the child is adapted to the
whole of human society, the more possibilities exist for the child to work and thereby do his or her duty. How does
this adaptation to the whole of human c ulture occur? The means to bring a child to this realization are not through
sermonizing but through bringing about in the child a love of humanity (Montessori, To Educate 23).
Furthermore, it is only in the second plane of development that a love of human ity can be developed, for it is only
in this period of life that the child “begins to be interested in outer things ” (Montessori, From Childhood to
Adolescence 41). How is this love to be awakened? Montessori states:
What is very necessary is that the indi vidual from the earliest years should be placed in relation with
humanity.… The child will have the greater pleasure in all subjects, and find them easier to learn, if he be led
to realise how these subjects first came to be studied and who studied them. W e write and read, and the child
can be taught who invented writing and the instruments wherewith we write, how printing came and books
became so numerous. Every achievement has come by the sacrifice of someone now dead. Every map
speaks eloquently of the w ork of explorers and pioneers, who underwent hardships and trials to find new
places, rivers and lakes, and to make the world greater and richer for our dwelling. ( To Educate 23)

Love of humanity is awakened through knowledge of the achievements of human b eings who have come before.
Knowledge about how culture has evolved allows the child to see the big picture. Not only that, but the child will
have pleasure in acquiring the elements of culture. At the same time, the child is led to a love of humanity and thus
to social development. As the child recognizes the origins of the elements of culture and then acquires these
elements, the child simultaneously learns how individual actions affect all others, a key element in socialization.
What does a Montessori environment prepared for the child of the second plane contribute to the child ’s social
development? Montessori suggests that emphasis must be placed on self -discipline and character. When individual
self-discipline and character are integrated with educatio nal development, then and only then will social harmony
ensue: “If education is to be an aid to civilization, it cannot be carried out by emptying the schools of knowledge,
of character, of discipline, of social harmony, and above all, of freedom ” (Montessori, What 98).
How should we go about filling rather than emptying schools of such abstractions as knowledge, character,
discipline, social harmony, and freedom? First, we should fill the schools with sensorial objects, which constitute
motives for activity, thus leading to the acquisition of knowledge. Second, we should fill the schools with
opportunities to choose, thus leading to the formation of character and the development of inner discipline. Third,
we should fill the schools with an enlargement of the field of action, so that the freedom to choose and act within
the prepared environment leads to freedom to choose and act within the larger environment of society — fostering
social harmony.

Sensorial Objects
The human mind receives impressions through t he senses, and thus knowledge enters the human mind through the
senses. Therefore, sensory input is central to Montessori pedagogical theory. In the second plane of development,
the sensorial objects that are the child ’s motives for activity and the means by which the child acquires knowledge
fall into two categories: (a) objects of the environment and (b) materialized abstractions. The objects of the
environment represent themselves and their function. Examples include cleaning supplies, calendar, clock, p encils,
paper, books, and other such objects. The materialized abstractions represent functions of objects and ideas.
Examples include posters that represent such abstractions as photosynthesis, the relationship of rainfall to plant
growth, or global wind patterns; three-dimensional sensorial materials that represent such concepts as the decimal
system, common and decimal fractions, or area and volume; and materials used to represent algorithmic
procedures such as division, multiplication, square root, and cube root. The child learns to use sensorial objects
either functionally or representationally.

Opportunities to Choose
Activity freely chosen is the genesis of the development of the individual personality. Therefore, the more that
freely chosen activitie s within the limits of the prepared environment constitute the work of the child, the more the
individual personality develops according to the child ’s potential. In addition, the more that freely chosen activities
occur in conjunction with other individua ls, as occurs in the environment prepared for the child in the second
plane, the more the social personality develops. In the social dimension, the potential of the individual within
human society translates, first, to the recognition of personal choice wi thin the limitations of the social
environment and, second, to the acceptance of individual responsibility. One who has developed these two aspects
of the personality is said to have character and certainly can be said to possess a discipline of self.

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Enlargement of the Field of Action
The environment prepared for the child of the second plane is specifically designed for enlargement beyond the
confines of the classroom. “Storytelling” about basic facts of the world constitutes a major feature of this
environment, and the very first story that is told is that of the existence of the universe. This is the method used to
signal to the child that there is more beyond what he or she sees and has experienced. To be able to place oneself
in a time and place beyond the present is to be able later to place oneself in another ’s place and to appreciate the
other. So freedom to act and to choose activities is enlarged with every new story. The child in the second plane is
encouraged to learn about things in a larger and larger environment and, in particular, to develop a love of
humanity by learning about people in time and space. To Montessori, social harmony is built on a love of
humanity, itself built on what others have done for us.
Here, then, are Montessori directives for the teacher of children aged six to twelve. Note how the children ’s
engagement in these activities becomes progressively deeper. First they learn, then they go and observe, then they
stay and help. The classroom is not big enough to contain the act ivities of the child, thus guaranteeing that the
child becomes a child of society and the world, not merely of a particular time and place. This enlargement of the
field of action ends with the child ’s “intimate contact with the world, ” both social and nat ural, on the face of it a
blueprint for social harmony:
Children should be taken on one or two trips in the year. Everything should be planned out beforehand, the
itinerary, the expenses, time tables. On these trips children will put into practice what the y have learnt, their
knowledge of plants, animals, the lives of the insects and observation of nature in general. They can also
collect specimens, biological, botanical, and the collection may be for the school, the house, or the museum.
They can observe f acts of geography and collect zoological specimens. They should observe the animals in
the zoo and on the farm, visit botanical gardens, see how the cattle are looked after, know how to fish, go to
historical places and also see the pre -historical excavati ons in the neighborhood, if any.
Children between the ages of 10 and 12 should visit the places of work and production; i.e., industrial centers,
factories, see how the minerals are extracted from their ores, come in touch with the products of civilization to
learn under what conditions man produces different articles. To live with the fisherman and help them in their
work, and to do the same with the miners. To visit farms where agriculture is carried out scientifically, to visit
printing presses and to se e how the dailies are being printed and distributed. To visit the centers of exchange
and trade, to see the arrival, and loading and unloading of boats in the harbors, to travel in bullock cars and in
boats, to row and to be towed along.
All this is direct ing and helping the individual to prepare for the period of rest between the ages of 12 and 14
years. This helps the child to gain an intimate contact with the world. The child must explore the social
conditions of man and the different aspects of society and also of nature. (Montessori, Mario, Sr. n.p.)

Summary of the Social Dimension


Social development is closely intertwined with the other dimensions of personality development. One cannot
develop a love of humanity without knowledge (cognitive dimension). Love stirs up the emotions (emotional
dimension). What you love you do not harm (moral dimension).
When the child forms a love of humanity, the following outcomes result:
? “The child becomes obedient, ever ready and willing to sublimate the will in the in terests of society”
(Montessori, To Educate 100). “However, this obedience is not a blind obedience but rather an obedience
granted when the mind understands the reasons why the obedience is necessary ” (Montessori, Education 82).
As the child gains experie nce and knowledge, the mind understands the effects that actions have on others.
When this understanding becomes totally conscious to the child, the child is able and willing to forego and
forebear, a key ingredient in social harmony.
? “The child becomes sociable, ready to interact with others ” (Montessori, What 66). The developed child is
ready to socially interact. This development includes knowing the practicalities of social interaction. In this
sense, the comparable practical life of the child in the se cond plane of development is knowing and practicing
a code of social customs and rules.
? “The child becomes enabled to render service to civilization ” (Montessori, What 95). The result of practicing
social interaction and of loving humanity is service. The child wants to serve and is not hindered by ignorance
of how to serve gracefully.
? The child becomes a moral person and “does not wish to have any trace of disorder on his person, nor does he
wish to leave any trace of disorder in his wake ” (Montessori, Education 28).

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Cognitive Development in the Second Plane
The cognitive (Latin cognitio, “knowledge”) dimension of the human personality would encompass the process of
knowing in the broadest sense. The most famous statement made by Dr. Maria Montessori about the cognitive
development of the child in the second plane may be the following: “We claim that the average boy or girl of
twelve years who has been educated till then at one of our schools knows at least as much as the finished High
School product of several years’seniority, and the achievement has been at no cost of pain or distortion to body or
mind ” (Montessori, To Educate 1). If one were to stop reading the passage at this point, then it would merely be
necessary to detail the curriculum of high schoo l and demonstrate how this curriculum is delivered in fewer years.
However, it is in the next part of the passage that Montessori consolidates what it means to complete the two
stages of childhood: “Rather are our pupils equipped in their whole being for t he adventure of life, accustomed to
the free exercise of will and judgment, illuminated by imagination and enthusiasm. Only such pupils can exercise
rightly the duties of citizens in a civilised commonwealth ” (Montessori, To Educate 1). The word rather seems to
relegate the acquired knowledge to a place within the total development of the child. The connection of total
development to social development is made. Only such persons can take their place in society, i.e., are socially
developed.
Nevertheless the cognitive development of the child is part of total development. Knowledge is the foundation
upon which the child can build the ability to make choices, to act, and to interact with other human beings. What is
cognitive development for the child of the se cond plane? Montessori states that development in the second plane is
not a direct continuation of what has gone before. The thrust of cognitive development at the second plane has two
facets: (a) The consciousness of the child extends to life outside the home and limited circle of relatives and
friends; and (b) There exists an unusual demand to know the reasons for things (Montessori, To Educate 1).
Because these characteristics are part of the second-plane child ’s psychology, a pedagogy responsive to these
characteristics has a greater possibility of contributing to the total development that leads to taking a place in
society. Therefore these characteristics guide Montessori pedagogy for the child of the second plane.
To want to know the reasons for things governs the delivery of content knowledge. Content knowledge is a
universal among all forms of pedagogy. What distinguishes Montessori pedagogy is the manner of delivering the
content. More precisely stated, second-plane children want to understand for t hemselves, not simply accept what
they have been told. Hence cognitive development is best served by presenting material that can be understood
even though the child has limited experience. This means input through the senses that reveals basic principles —
the reasons for things.
If, for the child in the first plane, Montessori pedagogy uses a concrete approach, there is now, for the child in the
second plane, a concrete approach to abstract things. More than that, there are presentations of activities in wh ich
the child manipulates concrete objects that mimic abstract processes: “Children show a great attachment to the
abstract subjects when they arrive at them through manual activity ” (Montessori, To Educate 12). Activities are
presented that “satisfy the child ’s yearning to use its eyes, ears, hands, legs and limbs, to apply its mind to the
surrounding objects and to gather knowledge directly from them ” (Montessori, To Educate 9-10). “The
intelligence of the child will reach a certain level without the use of the hand, but with it a still higher level is
reached, and the child who has used his hands invariably has a stronger character ” (Montessori, What 53).
What activities to choose? Again the child ’s characteristics guide the choice. The child is now incre asingly
conscious of the world outside the limited environment into which the child was born. What better to study than
the universe in which human beings have developed their knowledge? The child at the beginning of the second
plane is presented with the existence of the universe and is then presented with many details — knowledge of what
exists in the universe. Thus all content knowledge is placed within the context of all that it is possible to know:
“Knowledge, carrying its conclusion, radiates as though from a center, much as a seed develops little by little ”
(Montessori, From Childhood xii).
The advantage of the presentation of the universe is that giving the child knowledge in the context of the universe
“helps the mind of the child to become fixed, to stop wandering in an aimless quest for knowledge ” (Montessori,
To Educate 8). In the second plane the child is helped to recognize and understand the reasons for things, thereby
fixing the attention by catering to the child ’s characteristic of wanting to know the reasons: “We must seek the
symbols accessible to the child that bait the primitive logic that makes him reason ” (Montessori, From Childhood
63-64).
The most important consequence of this fixing of the attention is the power of concentration. Wherea s
concentration in the first plane of development was manifested in total fixing of the child ’s attention on an activity,
concentration in the second plane of development is manifested in total fixing of the child ’s attention on finding

22
the reasons for things. Therefore the child ’s mind is capable of reflection, no longer needing sensory input to
concentrate.
There is no need to detail a curriculum here except to point out that the presentation of knowledge pays particular
attention to another characteristi c of human beings — the power of imagination. “True imagination based on true
images or ideas derived from reality forms an important part of human intelligence ” (Montessori, What 66).
Because the child received knowledge first through the senses, the child is given images of the reasons for things.
For example, the child is given figures that can be handled and thereby understands the formula for the area of a
parallelogram by establishing the equivalence of the area of the parallelogram to that of a rectang le having the
same base and altitude. The image of the transformation of the rectangle into a parallelogram and vice versa is
permanently present in the imagination and provides the means for the child to recall and even to reconstruct:
“Touching is for th e younger child what imagining is for the older child ” (Montessori, From Childhood 38). “The
world is acquired psychologically by means of the imagination. Reality is studied in detail, then the whole is
imagined. The detail is able to grow in the imaginat ion, and so total knowledge is obtained ” (Montessori, From
Childhood 34). The words of Montessori are echoed in this passage from the writings of L.S. Vygotsky:
The essential feature of imagination is that consciousness departs from reality. Imagination is a comparatively
autonomous activity of consciousness in which there is a departure from any immediate cognition of reality.…
At advanced levels in the development of thinking, we find the construction of images that are not found in
completed form in reality. (349)

In addition to sensorial manipulation and the use of the imagination, the child is also led to acquire knowledge by
being helped to observe and to seek knowledge independent of the adult. The child literally or figuratively held by
the hand is r estricted to the knowledge given by the person who holds the hand (Montessori, From Childhood 29).
What is the purpose of serving the cognitive development of the child? Montessori answers with a question: “What
purpose would education serve in our days unless it helped man to a knowledge of the environment to which he
has to adapt himself! ” (Montessori, The Formation of Man 10).
There is another important part of cognitive development of the second plane — the acquisition of written language.
Of course, much learning occurs without reading and writing, but Montessori considers the acquisition of written
language a characteristic of civilized human beings, those prepared to live in social harmony:
Language is an expression of the intelligence. What would be th e purpose of such an intelligence if man were
not able to understand and transmit his thoughts? Spoken language is like a breath of air which can reach
only the ear which happens to be close to it. That is why men, from remotest antiquity onwards, have loo ked
for means to transmit their thoughts over a great distance and to fix their remembrance. After many tries, the
alphabet gradually evolved.
Written language, therefore, must not be considered merely as a subject in school, and a part of culture. It is,
rather, a characteristic of civilized man. (Montessori, The Formation of Man 93)

Summary of the Cognitive Dimension


So there is again the interrelationship of the elements of total development. Cognitive development serves the
adaptive process and the adaptive process results in a person socially developed and able to live in social harmony.
Following are cognitive outcomes of Montessori education at the second plane of development:
? “But if neglected during this period [the second plane], or frustrated in its vital needs, the mind of the child
becomes artificially dulled, henceforth to resist imparted knowledge ” (Montessori, To Educate 5). Supporting
the eagerness of the child to learn during the second plane of development has serious consequences for late r
life. If this eagerness is given priority, the child ’s cognitive functions are heightened and left open to later
acquisitions.
? “All factors of culture may be introduced ” (Montessori, To Educate 6). An important outcome for the second
plane is that the ch ild receive the basic elements of as much as can be introduced.
? “We seek to sow life in the child rather than theories, to help him in his growth, mental and emotional as well
as physical, and for that we must offer grand and lofty ideas to the human mind, which we find ever ready to
receive them, demanding more and more ” (Montessori, To Educate 14). Knowledge, given as grand and lofty
ideas, is the means to total development. Knowledge is what the human mind strives to acquire and what gives
the child a re warding life.

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Moral Development in the Second Plane
The moral dimension concerns relating to, dealing with, or being capable of making the distinction between right
and wrong in conduct. The moral person would be a person of good conduct, even virtuous. Montessori
admonished the adult: “Before we offer moral education to the child, let us imitate the priest who is about to
ascend to the altar: he bows his head in penitence and confesses his own sins before the whole congregation ”
(Montessori, Spontaneous Activity 17). Insofar as the adult is a social part of the child ’s community, first the adult
must remove pride and hypocrisy from the observation of the child ’s moral behaviors. Montessori would consider
moral education to be an integral part of social deve lopment. In the course at Kodaikanal, India, in 1944, Mario
Montessori also mentioned social relations as related to the morality of the child in the second plane.
Certain social behaviors are, on their face, intrinsically moral: respecting elders, caring for the wounded,
respecting animals and plants, generally being of help, not trying always to be first, avoiding useless discussion,
withstanding with dignity one ’s own failures, not whining or grousing. This link of practical directives to the
development of the conscience (moral development) is congruent with the sensorial approach in the cognitive
dimension. The child begins in the sensory world with activity and progresses to the cognitive world of reflection.
The desire to know the reasons for things in the cognitive realm is akin to the desire to know how to decide in the
moral realm: “In the field of morality, the child now stands in need of his own inner light ” (Montessori, To
Educate 6). Whereas in the first plane the child looked for guidance from the adult, now the child needs to learn
how to guide the self. Moreover, from a purely intellectual standpoint, a problem of good and evil is an interesting
question. Second-plane children have been called philosophers because they explore such questions. First the child
ponders theoretical questions, then, over time and experience, the child learns to relate the questions and answers
to real-life situations.
There is no doubt that the first plane and the second plane are connected in the moral realm. “The period from 3 to
6 is the time for developing character, each child developing by his own laws unless obstructed ” (Montessori,
Education 71). Character is the pattern of behavior or personality found in an individual, the person ’s moral
constitution. With out this development of character, the child “is unlikely to have the moral conscience that should
develop from 7 to 12” (Montessori, Education 75). This development of character in the first plane is focused on
the internal strength of personality. Now th is strengthened personality turns outward and develops the conscience,
the moral compass that guides behavior in the social realm. Montessori claims that the conscience awakens in the
second plane (Montessori, Education 81). The awakening of conscience is linked to the child ’s cognitive
functions: “At this age the concept of justice is born, simultaneously with the understanding of the relationship
between one’s acts and the needs of others” (Montessori, Education 12). It is the responsibility of the adult to
prepare social experiences so that the child may discover the relationships between his or her behavior and the
needs of others (Montessori, Education 26).
The development of the cognitive functions supports the moral development of the child. The child at the
beginning of the second plane is exposed to the law and order of the universe. The child experiences the benefits
of natural law: Gravity keeps objects on earth, water cracks the rock so that niches form in which organic matter
supports the growth of plants, light and heat from the sun travel through the atmosphere keeping the earth warm.
Harmony is the natural condition underlying all that exists. The extension to social harmony is natural and
expected. Just as life forms in the sea restore the bal ance of minerals and liquid, humans must restore social
harmony when it becomes unbalanced. It is through the cognitive realm that the child is led to make sense of what
is sometimes an unpredictable realm — that of social interaction.
The most important ele ment of the environment for the child with reference to moral development is the Going
Out program. The program begins with activity in the limited environment of the classroom. As the child ’s self-
control and obedience to social rules develops, the child simultaneously is seeking to know the reasons for things.
Many of the child ’s questions can be answered in the classroom. There comes a time, however, when the
classroom does not hold the answer. When the child has the necessary amount of self -control, the child goes
outside the classroom to resolve the question. So catering to the needs and characteristics peculiar to this stage of
development allows the child to realize what self -control is, to know the consequences of choice, and to
understand the rules governing conduct in society. Since the child must have a companion when leaving the
classroom, the child practices seeking answers for the self while attending to the other. Children must be able to
practice these elements, or else they will not be able t o act on their own or to make judgments. In other words, they
will not develop a conscience.
In fact, it is the daily activity of finding out the reasons for things in the company of others that supports
development in the moral realm: “The children not on ly make progress in a marvelous acquisition of culture, but

24
they acquire more mastery of their actions, more assuredness in their behavior, without any stiffening or any
hesitation due to timidity or fear ” (Montessori, Education 49).
The development of the will is also a necessary ingredient of the development of conscience. Of what good is the
intellectual understanding of relationships if one is timid about choosing the harmonious path? Not to walk on
someone’s literal mat at the first plane is not to wal k on someone’s figurative mat later in life: “If important before
not to bump someone, now important not to offend someone” (Montessori, Education 18). The development of the
will is accomplished in the first plane insofar as the child is “accustomed to the free exercise of will and judgment ”
(Montessori, To Educate 1). In the second plane, this free exercise is consciously moderated by the needs of
others.
It is worth emphasizing the interplay of the cognitive and moral realms. Montessori states, “A turnin g toward the
intellectual and moral sides of life occurs at the age of seven ” (Education 11). These two ideas are linked because
the human being wants to know the reasons for things. Without knowing the facts of the planet and the
relationships therein, it is quite unlikely that one can even think about one ’s moral responsibility to the
environment. The presentation of ecology to a child in the second plane is at first a presentation of facts. But the
child from six to twelve, who questions everything at th is time, responds by asking “what if” questions. What if
the predator disappears? What if food for the predator disappears? What are the moral implications of disrupting
the web of life?

Summary of the Moral Dimension


The developing child cannot make mora l decisions about that which is not known. What you do not know about
you cannot care about. What you do not care about is least considered when making decisions.
Following are moral outcomes of Montessori education at the second plane of development:
? The child becomes a moral person and “does not wish to have any trace of disorder on his person, nor does he
wish to leave any trace of disorder in his wake ” (Montessori, Education 28). Moral development concerns
both the self as self and the self in relation to the other. The interplay of serving the self and serving the other,
always with awareness of the effects, characterizes the morally developed person.
? “The laws governing the universe can be made interesting and wonderful to the child, more interesting even
than things in themselves, and he begins to ask: ‘What am I? What is the task of man in this wonderful
universe? Do we merely live for ourselves, or is there something more for us to do? Why do we struggle and
fight? What is good and evil? Where will it all end? ’” (Montessori, To Educate 9). The philosophical nature of
the human being comes to the forefront in the second plane of development. If the laws of the universe have
priority at this stage, the child, knowing that laws exist in the sensorial wo rld, now can reflect on laws in the
abstract world.
? “At this age the concept of justice is born, simultaneously with the understanding of the relationship between
one’s acts and the needs of others” (Montessori, Education 12). The intimate connection of kn owledge to
justice is an outcome of the second plane. It is only when one understands the connections between one ’s acts
and the needs of others that the person can be said to be morally developed.

Emotional Development in the Second Plane


The emotional di mension of the human being concerns strong feelings or excitement. Emotions are referred to as
the arousal of feelings, as opposed to other mental states such as cognition, volition, and awareness of physical
sensations. The etymology of the word emotion is interesting to consider with respect to Montessori thought. The
Latin is emovere from e-, “out” + movere, “move.” Montessori says, “Without movement there is no progress and
no mental health ” (Education 49).
The emotions form part of the total personalit y and states of consciousness of the person. If all aspects are in
balance, the personality is in a state of mental health. So what is interesting is that movement, the basis for self -
construction in the cognitive, social, and moral dimensions, can also be said to be the basis for the emotional
dimension, another part of the human personality. Put another way, “the secret of a happy life is congenial work ”
(Montessori, What 101). Work that is suited to one’s needs and disposition arouses feelings of happine ss and
contentment, helping to support normal development or mental health. “Personal experiences carried out by reality
are the basis of mental growth but also of mental health ” (Montessori, What 63)

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Aiding the process of adaptation, wherein the child fin ds a place in the world, is the aim of any adult effort to
educate the child. Adaptation secures for the child satisfaction in life: “The child is satisfied, having found a
center, a place in the totality of the universe ” (Montessori, To Educate 8). “Sanity, balance and mental health are
conditioned by harmony with the external world ” (Montessori, What 67). Montessori speaks of the emotions as
she describes the results of activity on the child: The active child is said to be “illuminated by enthusiasm ” (To
Educate 1); such children are “equipped in their whole being for the adventure of life ” (To Educate 1); “a unit of
purposeful work well achieved is an uplifting experience and a source of happiness ” (What 61). She does not
directly speak of the development of emotions but does state that desirable emotions are elicited by purposeful
work.
In another demonstration of the interplay of all dimensions of the human personality, Montessori offers a
description that encompasses the cognitive, moral, social, and em otional dimensions: “As they are more balanced
and more capable of orienting and valuing themselves, they are characteristically calm and serene, and for that
reason also easily adapt themselves to other people ” (Education 49).
A good example of work linked to the emotional dimension at second plane is scientific experiments. With regard
to experiments requiring pouring into small test tubes, measuring substances, and heating to the desired state,
Montessori writes:
Calm and attention are required. The psyc hological effect produced on the children at this age may be
compared to that of the silence lesson on the younger. The small children severely restrict their movements,
while the older ones must measure their movements and must therefore pay concentrated attention to them.
(Education 62)

With these and the many other materials that require care and attention, the children intuitively sense that they are
working with materials and procedures that could create danger if they are not careful. Adaptation requi res that
one learn how to prevent or deal with dangerous situations. The experiments provide for adaptation by giving the
child the opportunity to harness the emotions — to remain calm and at attention.
Another support to the emotional dimension of developme nt is the patience of the adult with regard to the child:
“The mind takes some time to develop interest, to be set in motion, to get warmed up into a subject, to attain a
state of profitable work” (Montessori, What 102). “If enthusiasm is not shown we do n ot delay but pass on. If the
enthusiasm is shown we have apparently opened a door ” (Montessori, Education 77).

Summary of the Emotional Dimension


The emotional dimension of the child is important to the process of adaptation. The adult also needs to keep
emotion under control. The admonitions of Montessori are directed to aiding the child by providing an atmosphere
in which the child can freely choose to work, even if this takes time and even if what we do has no immediate
effect.
Following are emotional o utcomes of Montessori education at the second plane of development:
? The children are “equipped in their whole being for the adventure of life ” (Montessori, To Educate 1). To be
emotionally invested in one ’s future work is to be totally invested. It is this emotional attachment to one’s
future task that is the final triumph of the elementary -age child.
? “As they are more balanced and more capable of orienting and valuing themselves, they are characteristically
calm and serene, and for that reason also easily adapt themselves to other people” (Montessori, Education 49).
To equate balance with calm and serenity implies the possibility that upset and disturbed emotions might
unbalance the individual. All that the child undergoes in the care of the adult who knows the dimensions of
the total personality contributes to balance and to a fully adapted individual.

Summary of All Dimensions


It has been stated many times that Montessori is interested in total development. She formulated a theory and a
practical pedagogy dedicated to the unity of the human personality, not its dissection. While it is interesting to
reflect on each aspect of development to uncover its particularities, it is even more interesting to realize that if one
observes that the child of the second plane seeks to know the reasons for things and seeks the company of others,
and then proceeds to guide the child with this in mind, total development is achieved in all dimensions.

26
References
Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly, & Kevin Rathunde. “The Development of the Person: An Experiential Perspective on
the Ontogenesis of Psychological Complexity. ” Theoretical Models of Human Development. Ed. R.M. Lerner.
New York: Wiley, 1998. Vol. 1 of The Handbook of Child Psychology. William Damon, ed. in chief. 5th ed. 4
vols. 1998.
Montessori, Maria. From Childhood to Adolescence. 1948. Trans. Montessori Educational Research Center. New
York: Schocken, 1973.
Montessori, Maria. To Educate the Human Potential. 1948. Adyar, Madras, India: Kalakshetra, 1986.
Montessori, Maria. Education for a New World. 1946. Adyar, Madras, India: Kalakshetra, 1963.
Montessori, Maria. The Formation of Man. 1955. Trans. A.M. Joosten. Oxford, England: Clio, 1989.
Montessori, Maria. The Four Planes of Development. Amsterdam: Association Montessori I nternationale, 1971.
Montessori, Maria. The Secret of Childhood. 1936. New York: Ballantine, 1981.
Montessori, Maria. Spontaneous Activity in Education. 1917. New York: Schocken, 1965. Vol. 1 of The Advanced
Montessori Method. 2 vols.
Montessori, Maria. What You Should Know about Your Child. 1948. Adyar, Madras, India: Kalakshetra, 1966.
Montessori, Mario, Sr. “Lecture 76 (March 24, 1944).” Unpublished. Advanced Course, Kodaikanal, India. 1943 -
44.
Vygotsky, L.S. The Collected Works of L.S. Vygotsky. New York: Plenum, 1987.

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The Third Plane of Development (12 - 18)
by David Kahn

David Kahn holds a B.A. in fine arts and classics from the University of Notre Dame (IN) as
well as the AMI Montessori Elementary diploma from Bergamo, Italy. He has seventeen years o f
Montessori teaching experience, twelve of them as teaching principal at Ruffing Montessori
School (Cleveland Heights, OH). Currently, he serves as Program Director at The Hershey
Montessori Farm School in northeast Ohio, an internationally acclaimed Mont essori model for
adolescent education. This article was first published as “Philosophy, Psychology, and
Educational Goals for the Montessori Adolescent, Ages Twelve to Fifteen” in The NAMTA
Journal 28:1, Winter 2003.

Introduction
Since Maria Montessori ’s seminal thinking about the adolescent is rooted in the land -based model, the discussion
of social, moral, cognitive and emotional outcomes is based on her writings about Erdkinder. However, the
outcomes as stated are generalized psychological descriptions a nd therefore may have applications to Montessori
adolescent education in non -farm settings as well. Dr. Montessori envisioned the Erdkinder prepared environment
for adolescents as a place that develops their bodies as well as their sense of social order an d their expanding
intellect (97 -109). The prepared environment of the Erdkinder includes a working farm, a “museum of machines, ”
a market for selling the farm ’s produce, gardens, natural spaces, a “hotel” (or what we would now call a bed-and-
breakfast), and a home or residence for the adolescents.
While formulating the program for the farm, Montessori recognized the need for a framework of study that
emerges in direct contact with real life. Real -life experiences at the farm should be rooted in the
interconnectedness of this specific natural and human -built place for the young adolescent:
… the exploration is even wider [than in the elementary], encompassing the farm and the community of the
rural area. It echoes what the children explored at the second plan e: civilization and how it came about. But
now the exploration takes place in reality because the adolescents are actually doing it. Cooperation with the
land, cooperation in commerce, and cooperation in the cultural life of the rural society touch materially the
things studied in the second plane and afford the adolescent the opportunity to see his or her place in society.
(Margaret Stephenson, cited in The Adolescent Colloquium 35)

The “program for study and work” grows out of the concept of the farm as prepared environment (Montessori,
Maria 111). Although the social, moral, cognitive, and emotional dimensions of the adolescent are fully integrated
into living as a farm community, the following separate discussions around each dimension seek to find commo n
ground with developmental psychology outside of Montessori education.

Social Development
The Socially Prepared Environment
Maria Montessori calls her “essential reform ” of secondary education a “school of experience in the elements of
social life ” (107). First and foremost, work and study in the environment prepared for the adolescent would be
based in economic and social understandings similar to those suggested more recently by both David Orr and
David Hutchison in their descriptions of the educational value of place. Place builds a context for social relations;
it is the staging area for human community structure, enhanced by a deep encounter with the natural world.
In his book Ecological Literacy, Orr emphasizes education with nature and with the
community:
The idea that place could be a significant educational tool was proposed by John Dewey in an 1897 essay.
Dewey proposed that we “make each of our schools an embryonic community … with types of occupations
that reflect the life of the larger society. ” He intended to broaden the focus of education, which he regarded as
too “highly specialized, one -sided, and narrow.” The school, its relations with the larger community and all of
its internal functions, Dewey proposed to remake into curriculum. (127)

David Hutchison underscores Orr’s principles with what he calls “the spirit of place. ” The spirit of place is rooted
in community relationships and values implicit to “ecologically sustainable contexts ”:

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To know one’s place is to have an intimate knowledge o f the local environment (both natural and built) and
the various professional roles, shared histories, and interdependent relationships that sustain the community
over the long term. To further strengthen children ’s ties to the local community, their parti cipation in
community projects that help to nurture culturally significant relationships between young and old can be
fostered by way of apprenticeship -style programs and community renewal efforts that arise within ecologically
sustainable contexts. (129)

Place is defined by its limits; it is immediate and on a small scale: a building, a neighborhood, a hundred acres
easily walked across in a day. Place is where we live — a source for food, water, energy, materials, friends, and
recreation. Place in a diminis hed sense is real estate, but the Erdkinder definition of place refers to the larger
economic, ecological, social, political, and spiritual elements of the immediate surroundings. Place is a community
to which the adolescent feels he or she both belongs an d contributes.

Occupations or Work as Social Activity


Occupations, as both Maria Montessori and John Dewey envisioned them, are the point of engagement for the
adolescent on the land. They are a source of meaningful work, work that will be valued by the co mmunity itself,
work that challenges both the mind and the body, work that is recognized as legitimate by the culture, work that
has economic validity, work that is made noble by being done with integrity and passion. Engagement leads to a
sense of ownership and stewardship.
The specific nature and purpose of an occupation may inspire a student to commit to the occupation, not as part of
a vague choice for the moment, but with spurts of passion about what needs to be done as part of belonging to a
community. As an individual thus begins to develop a specific interest and expertise in an occupation, community
recognition of the individual ’s contribution usually follows. The adolescent ’s resulting sense of pride and
accomplishment matures the occupation into a role.
The transition from occupation to role is subtle. In effect, the student tries on the role and becomes immersed in
the knowledge and the process of a specific calling: “I am the sugar bush builder, I am the videographer, I am the
beekeeper, I am the bookkeeper.” Being an interdependent part of a concrete venture, learning how to interact in
order to cooperate freely, and trying on different occupations and roles matures young people and makes them
useful in their own eyes.
Looking to the economic self-sufficiency of the adolescent farm community, Maria Montessori highlights
economic independence as “the general principle of social education for adolescents ” (104). She speaks of the
“wide social connotations of productiveness and earning power ” (106). She remarks that “If the produce can be
used commercially this brings in the fundamental mechanism of society, that of production and exchange, on
which economic life is based ” (107).
Most importantly, on the farm, the work role will function for the grea ter good. The adolescent’s desires,
emotions, and attachments are tied up with the whole community — the work is connected with the social
enterprise of the farm. Social aims convert an occupation into a role. Assuming a role in something implies that the
occupation touches or engages a person and transforms that person, elevates that person ’s aims in life, validates
the self, centers the personality, and adds impetus to learning. The adolescent ’s interest evolves into a “community
task,” where the student sees the work as essential to the whole. A higher socialization occurs, which is able to
translate the experienced roles on the farm into a view of the collective role of humanity: the “cosmic task” of the
individual and of humanity in general. The adolescen t is a “social newborn,” which means that the adolescent is “a
newborn member of adult society, a newborn participant in adult society; he or she is newly born as one who can
‘take an active part in society ’s productive labors or in regulation of its organ ization’” (Grazzini & Krumins 136).

Social Outcomes
Social outcomes for the early adolescent stage of life include these:
? learning to live in domestic relations with others and to work through human problems;
? learning what it means to make a contribution;
? understanding interdependency and the need to cooperate with adults and peers in relation to the rest of the
world;
? assuming work roles and their social and cosmic implications, projecting the benefits of an active role in
society;

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? adapting to a variety of work demands for the sake of others— the beginning of social consciousness;
? understanding work as a product of commerce necessary to community life, leading to a beginning view of
economic independence and interdependence;
? balancing individual initiative s in relation to community goals; and
? learning the meaning of rules and their importance to harmonious living.

Moral Development
Maria Montessori points out that “the observation of nature has not only a side that is philosophical and scientific,
it has a side of social experiences that leads on to the observations of civilization and the life of men ” (106,
emphasis in original).
A social spirit and moral conduct permeate the developing Erdkinder. Social perception is enhanced through
shared experience of common activities. In order to function as an interdependent whole, basic information needs
to be exchanged, tasks need to be recorded, and skills need to be imparted to the next members of the community
who come along.
All occupations on the farm give rise to communication and cooperation with an underlying perception of
connection to the greater good. Companionship is ongoing; relationships to the neighbors and neighboring
community are part of the social fabric of the Erdkinder community. Every member of the Erdkinder community
is a learning member of an ongoing moral concern — day and night. The learning is to be shared and reflected
upon, and the educational plan includes a formal place for this sharing and reflection. The fullest examination of
social roles leads to an understanding of right and wrong actions in relation to work, study, the environment, and
social responsibilities.
Emerging out of these maturing roles on the farm is the “more dynamic training of character and development of a
clearer consciousness of social reality ” (Montessori, Maria 100). Adolescent psychological characteristics
described by Montessori include “a state of expectation, a tendency towards creative work and a need for
strengthening of self confidence ” (101). She further ascribes to adolescents a “sensitive period when there should
develop the most noble characteristics that would prepare a man to be social, that is to say, a sense of justice and a
sense of personal dignity. ” The occupations and roles on the land provide “an exercise of ‘utilized virtues, ’of
‘super-values’and skills acquired beyond the limits of one ’s own particular specialization, past or future ” (103).
Thus it is through the occupations and roles on the land that “valorization ” of personality takes place; the students
feel valued because they are making a tangible contribution. The individual student succeeds in a task by very
personal effort with a sense of accomplishment arising out of the work completed and the economic benefits
therein.
The philosophical adolescent mind, which has already experienced the Great Stories of evolution in the
Montessori elementary program, can easily intuit that humans must all choose a way of life and ecological identity
compatible with the rest of biological existence — past, present, and future. The Montessori adolescent has already
well understood the philosophical arrangement of events in the history of humanity and how they are configured in
human, geological, and cosmic terms. Human consciousness strives to understand huma n progress in evolutionary
terms. Simply stated, the adolescent must know where humanity has come from and where humanity is going,
especially in light of the well -being of the planet. This is not to make the Erdkinder community a place for
ecological politics. Rather, the ethic of the land and its destiny is deeply personal, touching at some unconscious
level the will to live and to provide for future generations. The ethic of the land and its preservation is a moral
principle calling to work of the mind a nd heart to make sense of the world and what is most valued.
Looking at history from the ethical standpoint of our real relationship to the natural world as lived on the farm —
involving the right use of water and land, plants and animals, air and energy — brings history into focus with the
world’s present environmental questions and with the adolescent ’s inner sense of balance. These are moral
considerations. Points of comparison with the past around questions of environment transform history from a mere
logic and sequence of events to a search for answers to the moral questions about survival, about living on a planet
with limited resources, and about planning lifestyles that will adapt to the scarcity of resources. History thus makes
humans wiser about how they will live, both present and future. When history interfaces with formative adolescent
thinking about what life will bring, it can be an inexhaustible source of motivation, identity, vocation, and
morality.

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Moral Outcomes
Moral outcomes for the early adolescent stage of life include these:
? respect for others and their roles;
? a sense that work is noble and the assumption of adult -like responsibilities;
? grappling with social and moral problems, such as the right use of the natural environment or the ethics of
science;
? individual initiative and commitment to freely chosen work;
? pleasure in individual progress that enhances group progress and contributes to others;
? the development of a mission orientation and service to the universal needs of a larger humanit y;
? the asking of big ethical questions — e.g., What makes for a virtuous life? How can we build a better world?;
and
? conscience exercised by community values and responsible dialogue.

Cognitive Development
Place, Study, and Work
Maria Montessori wrote, “It is impossible to fix a priori a detailed program for study and work. We can only give
the general plan. This is because a program should only be drawn up gradually under the guidance of experience ”
(111). Therefore it is helpful to draw on the experience o f contemporary environmentalists, such as David Orr and
others, who provide insight and some specific techniques for using the natural environment and its occupations to
generate options for study and academic projects that will motivate adolescents and in volve them in the
community process. Dr. Orr refers to study of place:
The classroom and indoor laboratory are ideal environments in which to narrow reality in order to focus on
bits and pieces. The study of place, by contrast, enables us to widen the focu s to examine the
interrelationships between disciplines and to lengthen our perception of time. (129)

Study of place refers to studying a living space framed by the interdependent “cosmic agents”— land, water, air,
energy, plants and animals, and humans. Th e interdependencies learned in Montessori elementary take on a new
sense of reality when experienced in the Erdkinder environment. The adolescent has the ability to abstract place —
to perceive all at once its ecological and cultural features, its history, i ts present functioning, its related literacy, its
convergent meanings, its future possibilities. When exploring place, the adolescent examines the natural data of
the community — the flora and fauna, the archives of the region, the architectural remnants of its settlement period,
and its diverse communities, each with respective unfolding histories.
But it is not until the student actually takes on real -life occupations that the cognitive process truly integrates with
the social, moral, and emotional element s. Occupations not only fulfill the adolescent ’s need to belong and be
valued, but they also provide the motivation for academic study: “work on the land is an introduction both to
nature and to civilization and gives a limitless field for scientific and h istoric studies.… there is an opportunity to
learn both academically and through actual experience what are the elements of social life ” (Montessori, Maria
107).
In a progression derived in part from John Dewey, an occupation leads naturally to a search fo r contextual
knowledge (academic study):
? An occupation provides direct experience, which by nature is urgent, intimate, and engaging. It contrasts with
symbolic experience, which can be remote, detached, and even beyond the comprehension of the adolescent.
(Note the similarity to an exercise of practical life in the Casa.)
? An occupation is limited in nature. The contextual knowledge to which it leads has concrete boundaries (like
the Montessori materials), keeping work and study always in relation to the su rrounding environment and the
specifics of the occupation.
? Within these limits, the occupation demands knowledge, which may involve measurement, refinement of the
senses, precision, coordination, research, and, finally, expression in oral or written form. The knowledge

31
demanded is rigorous and, if incomplete, means that the occupation cannot be fully engaging, understood,
integrated into the surrounding whole, or even completed.
The web of life (interdependencies) provides a cognitive framework. When occu pations are structured around
different interdependent parts of nature, a whole interdisciplinary science study emerges, which is required to
inform those occupations. Here are a few examples:
? Work with the soil introduces both geological and biological st udies. The biological applies to the teeming life
in the soil. The geological aspect extends to soil ’s mineral content.
? Work with water suggests studies related to the origin of life and to earth ’s history. It is studied for its
physical and chemical prop erties relevant to farming, geology, and geography.
? Air is studied for its role in earth ’s climate and in plant and animal life cycles.
? Energy is studied as a comprehensive force that begins with the Big Bang and has global implications as a
universal huma n resource. It can be viewed from the standpoint of alternative technology for the production of
energy available to the farm.
? Animals and plants are studied for their role in natural ecosystems and for their relationship to humans in
agricultural science, food processing and distribution, domestication, and the history of civilization.
? The human organism is studied for its collaboration with the life agents and its building of human systems that
are compatible with the systems found in the natural world.
The knowledge demanded for a project-based, experience-based kind of learning is not a subject to be covered, but
rather knowledge to be applied for the greater good of the operating Erdkinder through the work of a common
enterprise. Thus, the occupation ’s roots in meaningful work extend to the related contextual study and provide
adolescents with the motivation to become an “expert” in their occupational area. This infuses academic work with
purpose and meaning.

Montessori’s Educational Syllabus


Maria Montessori’s “Educational Syllabus ” is not a mere subject list. She describes knowledge in psychological
terms such as “opening up ways of expression,” addressing the “‘formative forces’ in the evolution of the soul of
man,” or making the “individual a part of … civilization ” (115).
Montessori divides the “Educational Syllabus ” into three parts (115-119). The first, “opportunities for self-
expression,” encompasses artistic, linguistic, and imaginative activities — music, language, and art. Next is “the
‘formative’ education that will construct firm foundations for the character, ” consisting of moral education,
mathematics, and languages. Finally, “general education” is presented as “the preparation for adult life, ”
encompassing three divisions of history: “The study of the earth and of living things ” pertains to natural history;
“the study of human progress and the building up of civilization ” refers to the history of human achievement and
technology; and, finally, “the study of the history of mankind ” encompasses the physical and intellectual range of
human activities: migrations, exploration, human settlement, government, and civics. Closer examination of these
divisions of history suggests a myriad of intellectual studies.

Cognitive Outcomes
Cognitive outcomes for the twelve- to fifteen-year-old in an Erdkinder setting include these:
? opportunity for personal expression integrated within a variety of artistic, speaking, musical, and media
modalities in direct relation to occupations and role development within the community;
? philosophical consideration of questions of nature and cosmos;
? analysis of scientific causality in the natural world and the cosmos;
? increased understanding of the mathematics directly connected to the practical needs of the farm environment
and to the symbolizing of scientific observation of data;
? increased facility in a variety of languages and the ability to use language to penetrate different cultures and
improve human understanding;

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? ability to connect the history of life on earth and its ci vilizations with principles of the evolving self as well as
the social evolution of a human community;
? a view of the whole of history and the future destiny of humans, and reflection on the individual contribution
one makes to the creative direction of the future; and
? understanding of the nature of interdisciplinary studies, the relationship between the disciplines and the
totality of the natural and human -built worlds, and the available tools and technology to continue the inquiry
as to how knowledge can best be used.
Cognitive extends to all parts of human functioning; it is embedded in knowing not only the facts of the world but,
in the words of Maria Montessori, “a clear picture of ‘mankind in the world ’” (cited in Montessori, Mario M. 3).

Emotional Development
In the first chapter of the Erdkinder essays, Maria Montessori speaks of the insecurity of modern children, “We
have lost that security which we had in the past ” (98), alluding to the shifting nature of modern conditions. She
uses an interesting a gricultural metaphor to describe the extreme changes of the world: “The world is like a piece
of land that is going through the vicissitudes of a settlement of the soil ” (99).
To counter a world that has an unsure future, especially from the point of view of the adolescent, Montessori
writes:
… a man must have strong character and quick wits as well as courage; he must be strengthened in his
principles by moral training and he must also have a practical ability in order to face the difficulties of life.
Adaptability— this is the most essential quality; for the progress of the world is continually opening new
careers, and at the same time closing or revolutionizing the traditional types of employment.… there is a need
for a more dynamic training of character a nd the development of a clearer consciousness of social reality.
(99-100)

Adaptation at the adolescent level, because it encompasses a widening level of social reality, entails a higher level
of complexity and a direct connection to emotional life. Mario M . Montessori suggests a broad definition of
adaptation that is measured by an optimal state of happiness:
Dr. Montessori explained what she meant by “adaptation.” To her the word meant happiness, ease and the
sort of inner equilibrium which gives a sense of security.… It is based on the permanency of the spiritual,
ethical and economical equilibrium of the group environment he may grow up in. For adaptation thus
considered, “stability ” plays a great role, because it represents the basis from which to start towards the
realization of the individual ’s aspirations. It is as the solid ground is under one ’s feet when walking. (1)

Referring to spiritual equilibrium or sense of balance as the basis of educational success, Maria Montessori places
emphasis on the va lorization (strengthening) of self -confidence, sociability, and a sense of dignity and justice
(101). The greatest source of valorization is work, noble work, two forms of work— both manual and
intellectual — work that is productive, work that is rooted in independence (112). Work must be freely chosen, and
therefore a natural “change over” of occupations (as opposed to “units”) must provide a variety of ongoing work
options as well as a time for reflection and quiet. Maria Montessori also talks about “the opening of ways of
expression,” which include music, speech, drama, and art (115).

Emotional Outcomes
As a result of engaged work, the following outcomes lead to harmonious feelings as suggested by Montessori ’s
keen vision of what is innermost to adolescent e motional life:
? revelation of the innermost “vocation” (deep calling) of the soul, a sense of mission or commitment to one ’s
work and life;
? understanding of the connection between personal vocation and the “vocation of man” (Montessori, Maria
112);
? feeling of self-sufficiency, of self -confidence, of taking care of self and others;
? inner harmony and happiness due to personal contribution, love of work, love of study and achievement, and a
personal participation in the work of society;
? hope of future world progress;

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? joy in seeing the relationship of one ’s own life with the history of human culture, recognition of the
importance of being a keeper of human culture;
? freedom in spontaneous collaboration with others in a harmonious connection with the natural world ;
? feeling that human life has value and a role to play in the cosmos — a feeling of triumph;
? feeling of belonging to the world human community and to the earth;
? feeling of personal discipline, creativity, beauty, and productiveness in connection with the lea rning of hand -
crafted art and practical achievement;
? feeling that one can be in control of change, internally and externally, in one ’s personal and social evolution;
? feeling of usefulness and an understanding of one ’s “many sided powers of adaptation” (Montessori, Maria
102); and
? belief in the human capacity to solve problems and in the spiritual source of life to overcome adversity.
The emotional dimension of the early adolescent stage of development (ages twelve to fifteen) might be viewed
perhaps as the end state for childhood, now setting up terms for the unveiling of just what joining a society of
adults really means. The work is a “great work,” a natural work having the intense emotions of a “vocation,” not in
the career sense, but in satisfying a psyc hic need to meet real-life challenges, to grow, and to make a contribution
to the whole of humanity.

References
The Adolescent Colloquium: Summary of the Proceedings. Cleveland, OH: Montessori Teacher Education
Collaborative, 1997.
Dewey, John. Democracy and Education: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Education. 1916. New York: The
Free Press, 1997.
Grazzini, Camillo, & Baiba Krumins. “A Montessori Community for Adolescents. ” The NAMTA Journal 24.1
(1999, Winter): 133-165.
Hutchison, David. Growing Up Green: Education for Ecological Renewal. New York: Teachers College Press,
1998.
Montessori, Maria. From Childhood to Adolescence. 1948. Trans. A.M. Joosten. Rev. ed. New York: Schocken,
1976.
Montessori, Mario M. The Human Tendencies and Montessori Education. 1957. Rev. ed. Amsterdam: AMI, 1966.
Orr, David W. Ecological Literacy: Education and the Transition to a Postmodern World. Albany, NY: SUNY
Press, 1992.

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