Montessori AMI Primary Guide
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Introduction
     
Three Period Lesson
     
Memory Games
     
Visual Sense
  Cylinder Blocks
  Pink Tower
  Brown Stairs
  Red Rods
  Color Tablets
  Geometric Cabinet
  Constructive Triangles
    Rectangular Triangles
    Blue Rectangular Box
    Triangular Box
    Large Hexagonal Box
    Small Hexagonal Box
  Geometrical Figures
  Sensorial Decanomial
  Knobless Cylinders
  Binomial Cube
  Trinomial Cube
  Leaf Cabinet
     
Tactile Sense
  Sensitizing Fingertips
  Touch Boards
  Touch Tablets
  Fabrics
     
Baric Sense
  Baric Tablets
     
Thermic Sense
  Thermic Bottles
  Thermic Tablets
     
Auditory Sense
  Sound Boxes
  Bells
     
Olfactory Sense
  Smelling Jars
     
Gustatory Sense
  Tasting Bottles
     
Stereognostic Sense
  Geometric Solids
  Sorting Trays
  Mystery Bag
  Sandpaper Globe
  Painted Globe
  Puzzle Maps
    The World
    The Continents
    The Country
     
     
     
 

Geometric Cabinet

Materials

A wooden cabinet with 6 drawers and a presentation tray. Each drawer and the tray contain 6 wooden divisions. In most of the divisions, there is a wooden inset with a knob to lift it out. The inset and the bottom of the drawer are painted the same color blue. The square frames of the insets are a contrasting wood color and are removable. In the presentation tray as, in some drawers where there are not 6 insets, the remaining square divisions are whole.


Presentation Tray
Contains the basic geometric figures (circle, square, and triangle). The circle is the calculator of angles. The square is the measurer of areas. The triangle is the constructor of the other figures.

Drawer 1

Contains 6 circles increasing in diameter from 5cm to 10cm.

Drawer 2
Contains 1 square and 5 rectangles, the bases vary from 10cm to 5cm, while the height remains the same.

Drawer 3
Contains 6 triangles: equilateral, acute-angled isosceles, right-angled isosceles, obtuse-angled isosceles, right-angled scalene, obtuse-angled scalene.

Drawer 4
Contains 6 regular polygons: pentagon, hexagon, heptagon, octagon, nonagon, and decagon.

Drawer 5
Contains 4 quadrilaterals: rhombus, parallelogram, right-angled trapezoid, isosceles trapezoid, and 1 triangle – acute-angled scalene.

Drawer 6
Contains curved figures: curvilinear triangle, ellipse, oval, and quatrefoil.


3 sets of cards, matching each figure in the geometric cabinet:
Card Set 1 With figures completely filled in.
Card Set 2 With figures in a think outline.
Card Set 3 With figures in a thin outline.

Presentation

Introduction

Invite the child by telling him you have something to show him. Bring him over to the correct shelves and point to the Geometric Cabinet. Show the child the demonstration tray and name it. Have the child take the demonstration tray off of the shelf and place it in the middle of the table.

Constructing
- Using your right thumb and index finger, pinch the knob of the circle and lift the circle out slowly of its inset.
- Gently place the circle in the middle of the empty wooden space above.
- Lift the square inset in the same manner and place it below in the empty wooden space.
- Lift the triangle in the same manner and place it above in the empty wooden space.
- Lift the circle by the knob as before but this time with your left fingers.
- Rotate the circle slightly to the vertical position.
- Place two of your right fingers on the edge of the circle nearest you and trace the edge of the circle all the way around.
- Remove your right fingers and then repeat the tracing of the edge.
- Place the circle on the empty wooden space.
- Trace the inset edge of the circle in the same manner as above and using your two right fingers.
- Repeat the tracing of the inset.
- Gently replace the circle into its inset.
- Repeat in the same manner for the square and then for the triangle.

Offer the child to do the lesson.
Show the child how to change out the insets with other shapes from the Geometric Cabinet.


Exercises

Exrcice 1

The child works individually with the material as shown in the presentation. The child can also repeat the lesson using 3 other figures, repeating and changing as often as he likes.

Exercice 2
The child works with two drawers at a time. (This can be done on a mat by placing the shapes directly onto the mat to be traced. He then traces a shape and its inset before replacing the shape back.) He then moves up to working with three drawers at a time. He can continue adding drawers until he is working with all six drawers. (Once the drawers no longer fit onto mats, have the child take the insets out of the drawers to create more space. Then place the drawers to the side, or back into the cabinet until needed to put the insets away.)

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CARDS

Presentation

From Card to Inset
The directress will choose 4-6 cards at a time. (Begin with cards of contrast.)
Isolate one of the cards and have the child match the shape with an inset from the cabinet.
Have the child superimpose the inset onto the card to verify.
Repeat for each of the cards by isolating them.

From Inset to Card
Similar to the lesson above but this time show the inset and have the child find the correct card form the pile of cards.


Exercises

Exercice 1
The child works as in the presentation.

Exercice 2
Introduce the second set of cards with the thick outline of the shape. Repeat the lesson as above but now using the two cards.

Exercice 3
Introduce the third set of cards with the thin outline of the shape. Repeat the lesson as above but now using the three cards.


Games
Matching at a distance
Find the missing card using the insets
Find the missing card without the insets

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Language

Quadrilaterals rectangle, square, rhombus, parallelogram, trapezoid, right-angled trapezoid

Curved Figures circle, oval, ellipse, quatrefoil, curvilinear triangle.

Triangles equilateral, right-angled isosceles, acute-angled isosceles, obtuse-angled isosceles, right-angled scalene, acute angled scalene, obtuse-angled scalene.

Polygons pentagon, hexagon, heptagon, octagon, nonagon, decagon.

Purpose

Direct
Discrimination of form, to provide the child with the key to orient himself in the world of shapes.

Indirect
Preparation for mathematics: geometry.
Preparation of the hand for writing.


Control of Error
There is a build in control of error in the material.


Age
3 to 4 1/2 years          



 
 
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