"I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." Mark Twain
Sensorial Learning Curriculum
In the Montessori classroom, sensorial materials play a key role. They are designed to sharpen the senses of the young child. Further, they enable the child to understand the many impressions received though the senses.
Examples of Sensorial Materials
Each of the sensorial materials isolates one defining
quality, such as:
- color
- weight
- shape
- texture
- size
- sound
- smell
Sound boxes, for example, are all the same size, shape, color and texture; they differ only in the sounds which are made when a child shakes them. Other sensorial materials include:
- geometric solids
- fabrics
- square pythagoras
- color tablets
- temperature bottles
- cylinder blocks.
Natural Learning
The Montessori sensorial materials help the child to distinguish, categorize, and relate new information to what he already knows. The child finds a sense of order in these materials. More imporantly, he discovers the joy of learning that his environment has order. His intellect is trained to make order out of a multitude of experiences--this is the natural learning process.
New England School of Montessori


