Sometimes this is the hardest question of all. Your language area should include the materials on the six shelves as described below. But why should you believe me? Because I'm following the guidance of my favorite researcher, Angeline Lillard, on getting back to the basics. Dr. Lillard led a well-designed study that found that children in classrooms that stuck with the traditional Montessori materials rather than including lots of supplemental materials had better learning outcomes. So, based on her advice, the list here includes only the materials listed in the AMI Montessori Primary Training. 

To make life easy, I've boiled down the basics of the AMI Language Area into the six shelves described below. You can buy many of these materials from us (marked with * and linked). Others can be purchased from Nienhuis in the US or E&O Montessori in Canada (marked with **). The rest you should really make yourself (marked with ***). Note: When you receive your Montessori training, you should receive precise instructions on how to make all materials. When you make them yourself, the children will love them more and treat them with greater care (because you will too).

All objects/card materials should be rotated regularly so that the room is always alive and fresh. For example, you'll only have two or three baskets/pouches on your shelf that contain classified vocabulary cards (e.g., Pets, Fruit, Around the House). The baskets/pouches stay the same all year long but the contents of the baskets change. For example, after a week, remove the Around the House cards and replace them with Around Town cards. The next week, swap out a different set or more than one. The point is to keep the content of the shelves dynamic but consistent/reliable without the possibility of gathering dust from lack of use. If the children aren't drawn to a packet after you have presented it several times, swap it out and try it again later in the year.

Shelf 1: Spoken Language

  • Artwork of a human (to remind you to give 3-period vocabulary lessons on the parts of the body and to offer conversations at a picture lessons)***
  • Picture of your classroom (to remind you to give 3-period vocabulary lessons on the names of everything in the environment)***
  • Lyrics from a song (not to read, but to remind you and your assistant to sing a new song each week)***
  • Words from a poem (not to read...poetry should be memorized...but to remind you and your assistant to present a new poem each week)***
  • Sound Game basket (also called I Spy, this includes either prepared objects or is empty so you can teach the children how to gather objects from the environment to use for Sound games)***
  • Two or three sets of Vocabulary cards* (that isolate their subject and include NO letters/words) from different categories to use for 3-period lessons and sorting
  • Object matching (with real miniatures of fruits, vegetables, shells, etc.)***
  • Three or Four sets of Matching Cards* (one or two for picture to picture matching; two for sorting/matching)

           

           Shelf 2

           Shelf 3

          • Scissors***
          • Pencil sharpening activity (2)***
          • Metal insets and pencils**
          • Trays for metal insets**
          • Metal inset paper supply***
          • Supply of different size paper slips (for labelling the classroom, grammar/sentence analysis activities)***
          • Pencils (not colored; no erasers) of various sizes***
          • Glue sticks
          • Staple-free stapler
          • Empty handwriting tray (for carrying paper slips/pencils)

          Shelves 4 & 5

          Note: The shelves pictured below are too crowded...best to split these up on two shelves to leave adequate white space between each work.

          Shelf 6

          Reading Area

          Invest in a lovely child-sized reading chair and place it in a special spot in your room. It may be next to a window or in a quiet corner with a special lamp, a plant, and a decorative rug. Have a sturdy, floor basket that can hold about 10 books. These are not for the classified books on Shelf 2 (above) or for the reference books you keep in your room (like the Audubon field guide to insects and birds for your region, a great visual dictionary, etc.). Use this just for story books. I would go to the library every Wednesday afternoon and check out 10 reality-based books and return the books from last week. Remember that at this age, the child is learning what reality is. In school, our job is to give them the best the world has to offer...the real world. Good exemplar books are:

          • The Dot by Peter H. Reynolds
          • Make Way for Ducklings by Robert McCloskey
          • Blueberries for Sal by Robert McCloskey
          • Dory Story by Jerry Palotta
          • Every Friday by Dan Yacomma
          • Splash by Flora McDonnell
          • My Bunny & Me by Lindsay George
          • All the Way to Morning by Marc Hartman
          • Going to Sleep on the Farm by Wendy Cheyette Lewison
          • I Can by Helen Oxbury
          • Time for Bed by Mem Fox
          • The Bus Stop by Janet Morgan Stoeke
          • Tattered Sails by Verla Key
          • Musical Beds by Mora Bergman
          • Round is a Mooncake by Roseanne Trey
          • I See Me by Pegi Deitz Shea
          • When Night Time Comes by Judy Pederson
          • Madeline by Ludwig Bemelmans
          • Sail Away by Donald Crews
          • One Morning in Maine by Robert McCloskey
          • Beach Day by Karen Roosa

          More Thoughts

          You may have noticed that your language area can include many scientific and cultural items. For example, you can rotate Zoology cards through one of your 3-part card baskets and "Parts of" anatomy cards through another. By rotating these materials as described above, you can save a lot of space in your classroom while still offering children all that they need.

          That said, there are two sets of card materials that you may want to have out all year long: the Land & Water cards and Leaf Shapes (Botany Cabinet) cards. The Land and Water 1 cards can be shelved with the land & water forms while the Leaf Shape cards can be shelved with the Botany Cabinet.

          In a perfect world, a 3-to-6 class would be stocked with our Complete Classroom package (offered at a 10% discount as compared with buying individual items).  This will give you everything you need to rotate your card materials regularly so that there is always something new for the children to discover on the shelves. But when you are just starting out, you can begin with several vocabulary, matching, phonetic, and 3-part card packets along with movable alphabets and a few book and card sets. Buy different titles for each format so you can still offer a rich variety of language and topics to match the interests of the children. We offer a Classroom Starter Package to help make things easy. As with our complete package, the starter package is offered at more than a 10% discount.