rekhareddy.com

Discovering Grammar

Generally, people think Grammar is difficult. This is because grammar is seen as a separate entity that should be learnt in the classroom and should be forgotten after writing exams. We often hear students and even adults saying grammar was “the toughest” in school. Many even feel that grammar is difficult and of no use for the students and has to be removed from the school curriculum, or make as simple as possible. All this is because of the way and time grammar has been taught.

Dr Maria Montessori has a very different approach to grammar which is still working and logical. The child of 2 ½ years when he starts schooling he already has a language. He can express himself clearly in his mother tongue without any grammatical mistakes to a certain extent. The language program in the Montessori classroom has three objectives apart from enriching his vocabulary.

  1. Phonetic analysis: help him understand that his language is made up of sounds, symbols for the sounds, expressing himself graphically which is writing, and interpret what others have written which is not mere reading.
  2. Grammatical Analysis: Every word he uses in the language has a function, what those functions are
  3. Logical Analysis: There is a logical structure for words in the language

The child is helped in all these areas parallel to each other. The grammatical analysis comprises parts of speech. The child is presented with the word origin of each “part of speech”.

Ex: The Noun. The noun is derived from the Latin word “Nomen”, which means “a name”.

The child is asked to bring some things to the classroom

Bring me a pen

Bring me a pencil

Bring me a plant.

Bring me a book.

What did you bring?

Pen, pencil, plant, book

All these are names. These names are called nouns.

Everything, seen and unseen, touched or not touched, has a name. Most of the language is made up of nouns. Try to count how many nouns we use in a day.

Then we introduce the symbol for the noun. The symbol of a noun is a black square pyramid to represent a noun. Pyramids stand majestically as a symbol of human creation for 5000 years. There is no wind strong enough, no flood big enough to destroy the pyramids. Just like pyramids, a noun is a human creation. Like coal which formed during the Carboniferous, the period noun was formed long ago.

What about Article? The article is a small limb that is attached to the noun. The article tells us how to make a choice.  If we have a choice of many nouns and have to choose one among them, then we use the article ‘a’; when we do not have any choice and have to choose whatever is available, then we use the article ‘the’.

An adjective is something that adds to the noun. While teaching the adjective, the teacher says to the child, “Bring me a pencil.”

The child goes and gets a lead pencil. The teacher says, “Not this one”. The child goes and brings a colour pencil. The teacher says, “Not this one, dear” the child again goes and brings some other colour pencil, the teacher goes on saying not this one and finally the child reaches a point where he/she asks, “what kind of pencil do you want” the teacher says, “I want a small pink pencil.” The child gets the small pink pencil. The teacher summarises, “You could not bring the pencil I wanted because I did not give you enough information about the pencil. The big, small, red, blue, thick, thin, one, two etc., add on to the name. These are called ‘adjectives’.

Noun Family

Noun family: article, adjective and noun belong to noun family. The noun is the mother.  The article is the baby, and the adjective is the big sister. The baby (article) cannot leave without the mother. So it is always with mother. The adjective is like a big sister, although the big adjective needs the support of the mother. Thus the noun holds an adjective; the adjective holds the hand of the article. It denotes the way they appear in English, first article followed by adjective and noun.

Dr Montessori’s greatness lies in her explanation of verbs. It is presented in this manner.

The teacher asks a child,

“Smell the flower” the child smells it.

“Pour the water in the glass” the child pours the water.

The teacher asks, “Where is the flower”. The child shows the flower.

“Where is smell” the child wonders and starts thinking about it.

“Where is glass” the child shows the glass.

“Where is water” the child shows the water

“Where is pour?”

The child becomes aware that there are words that tell us to do something. All these pour smell etc., tell us to do an action. These action words are called verbs. The word verb is derived from the Latin word Verbum which means “a word”.  The verb gives energy to the noun. It completes the thought that started from the noun.

The symbol of the verb is “red sphere”. It is like the sun. Sun is a symbol of energy. It gives life to earth. As the sun gives life to earth, the verb gives life to the noun. Compared to the stable noun, the verb is fluid and rotates around the noun.

Now let us look at the class hunt for the action.  Can you see any action going on in the class? Reading! Who is reading Ajith is reading. Anything else do you see? “Thinking”. “Who is it that thinking?” “Bhavyata is thinking”. The child can hunt the actions in the classroom. He writes the sentences and symbols with the symbols.

Preposition – a bridge that connects two nouns. The symbol is a primitive green hanging bridge.

Adverb – orange sphere – derived from ‘adverbium’ means close to the verb.

Pronoun – purple pyramid of the same height as the black pyramid but the base is smaller – Derived from the Latin word ‘pronomen’, which means in the place of a noun.

Conjunction – pink strip – Derived from the Latin word ‘conjugere’, which means joining together.

Interjection – a combination of pyramid and sphere – ‘interjecto’ which means to throw between – are the words thrown in between to express more emotion or emphasis.

Every time a part of speech is taught, the child is helped to apply it to a miniature environment or a dollhouse, then to the real environment like a classroom. The child is helped to know the transposition in each “part of speech”. Transposition is changing the place of the words. Sometimes the meaning of the sentence is completely changed when the places of the words are changed; sometimes, they sound absurd. For example:

Book on the table

The table on the book

On the book, the table

The Table the book on

The first one is the sentence that has the intended meaning. The next two are grammatically correct but distort what intended meaning. The last one has no meaning.

Each “part of speech” has a command box. The command boxes have command cards that help the child understand the minute difference between different parts of speech. For example, for verb, we have a command card that reads,

“Ask one of your friends to listen carefully to what you say. Murmur a short sentence as though you were speaking to yourself. Mutter the same words in a louder voice and see whether he understands. Whisper the same words in his ear. Grumble the same words and watch how your friend looks at you. Speak the same words aloud and as distinctly as you can.”

“Take a book and a large piece of cloth. Lay the book on your table and cover it with the cloth. Take the cloth and wrap it around the book so that the book cannot be seen. Tie a string around the cloth so that the book will not fall out. Undo the bundle and return each object to the place where you found it.”

(Advanced Montessori Method Vol. II)

The child literally has to perform these actions and experience the difference. Then there is a material which is called “Grammar boxes”.  Grammar boxes help the child to consolidate his knowledge regarding parts of speech and their position. A word, which is an adjective in one sentence, would be a pronoun in another sentence.

All these activities are repeatedly presented in the first, second and third standards. That means the lesson is attended by a child who is very new to this concept, a child who has heard of it last year, the one who has heard and understood and has been working at a higher level.

Like grammatical analysis, which deals with the function of words, Logical Analysis deals with the structure of words in a sentence.

Logical analysis is taught after the presentation of verbs. All the words revolve around the “Verb”.

Mary sings a song for her brother

Which is the verb in this sentence?

Sings

Who is it that sings?

Mary

Mary sings what?

A song

For whom does she sing?

For her brother

The word which answers the question who is it that or what is it that for the verb is “subject”, the word which answers the question “What” and “Whom” for the verb is the “Direct Object”, the word which answers the question “for whom” for the verb is the indirect object.

The logical analysis helps the child who can understand English and are not confident enough to speak. The students are motivated to form similar sentences and sometimes try the words at different places and discover how some sentences have objects. Some sentences do not, which will lead to the lesson on transitive and intransitive verbs.

Thus the presentation of grammar in the Montessori environment is interesting, innovative and productive. It doesn’t restrict grammar learning to the four walls of the classroom but helps the child discover grammar in their own language. It stimulates learning, and the learning goes on, not for writing examinations but for the urge of making one’s own discoveries.

Tagged AdjectiveAdverbEnglishMontessoriMontessori GrammarNounVerb

Credit

Noun Family – https://pin.it/73NW5pf