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<h2>A “CHILDREN’S HOUSE”</h2>
<p>The “Children’s House” is the <i>environment</i>
which is offered to the child that he may be given
the opportunity of developing his activities. This
kind of school is not of a fixed type, but may
vary according to the financial resources at
disposal and to the opportunities afforded by
the environment. It ought to be a real house;
that is to say, a set of rooms with a garden of
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which the children are the masters. A garden
which contains shelters is ideal, because the children
can play or sleep under them, and can also
bring their tables out to work or dine. In this
way they may live almost entirely in the open air,
and are protected at the same time from rain and
sun.</p>
<p>The central and principal room of the building,
often also the only room at the disposal of the
children, is the room for “intellectual work.” To
this central room can be added other smaller
rooms according to the means and opportunities
of the place: for example, a bathroom, a dining-room,
a little parlor or common-room, a room
for manual work, a gymnasium and rest-room.</p>
<p>The special characteristic of the equipment of
these houses is that it is adapted for children
and not adults. They contain not only didactic
material specially fitted for the intellectual development
of the child, but also a complete equipment
for the management of the miniature family.
The furniture is light so that the children
can move it about, and it is painted in some light
color so that the children can wash it with soap
and water. There are low tables of various
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sizes and shapes––square, rectangular and round,
large and small. The rectangular shape is the
most common as two or more children can work
at it together. The seats are small wooden
chairs, but there are also small wicker armchairs
and sofas.</p>
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<span class='smcap'>Fig. 1.––Cupboard with Apparatus.</span><br/></p>
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<p>In the working-room there are two indispensable
pieces of furniture. One of these is a very
long cupboard with large doors. (Fig. 1.) It is
very low so that a small child can set on the top of
it small objects such as mats, flowers, etc. Inside
this cupboard is kept the didactic material which
is the common property of all the children.</p>
<p>The other is a chest of drawers containing two
or three columns of little drawers, each of which
has a bright handle (or a handle of some color
to contrast with the background), and a small
card with a name upon it. Every child has his
own drawer, in which to put things belonging to
him.</p>
<p>Round the walls of the room are fixed blackboards
at a low level, so that the children can
write or draw on them, and pleasing, artistic pictures,
which are changed from time to time as
circumstances direct. The pictures represent
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children, families, landscapes, flowers and fruit,
and more often Biblical and historical incidents.
Ornamental plants and flowering plants ought always
to be placed in the room where the children
are at work.</p>
<p>Another part of the working-room’s equipment
is seen in the pieces of carpet of various colors––red,
blue, pink, green and brown. The children
spread these rugs upon the floor, sit upon them
and work there with the didactic material. A
room of this kind is larger than the customary
class-rooms, not only because the little tables and
separate chairs take up more space, but also because
a large part of the floor must be free for the
children to spread their rugs and work upon them.</p>
<p>In the sitting-room, or “club-room,” a kind of
parlor in which the children amuse themselves
by conversation, games, or music, etc., the furnishings
should be especially tasteful. Little tables
of different sizes, little armchairs and sofas
should be placed here and there. Many brackets
of all kinds and sizes, upon which may be put
statuettes, artistic vases or framed photographs,
should adorn the walls; and, above all, each child
should have a little flower-pot, in which he may
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sow the seed of some indoor plant, to tend and
cultivate it as it grows. On the tables of this sitting-room
should be placed large albums of
colored pictures, and also games of patience, or
various geometric solids, with which the children
can play at pleasure, constructing figures, etc. A
piano, or, better, other musical instruments, possibly
harps of small dimensions, made especially
for children, completes the equipment. In this
“club-room” the teacher may sometimes entertain
the children with stories, which will attract a circle
of interested listeners.</p>
<p>The furniture of the dining-room consists, in
addition to the tables, of low cupboards accessible
to all the children, who can themselves put in their
place and take away the crockery, spoons, knives
and forks, table-cloth and napkins. The plates
are always of china, and the tumblers and water-bottles
of glass. Knives are always included in
the table equipment.</p>
<p><i>The Dressing-room.</i> Here each child has his
own little cupboard or shelf. In the middle of
the room there are very simple washstands,
consisting of tables, on each of which stand a
small basin, soap and nail-brush. Against the
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wall stand little sinks with water-taps. Here the
children may draw and pour away their water.
There is no limit to the equipment of the “Children’s
Houses” because the children themselves
do everything. They sweep the rooms, dust and
wash the furniture, polish the brasses, lay and
clear away the table, wash up, sweep and roll up
the rugs, wash a few little clothes, and cook eggs.
As regards their personal toilet, the children know
how to dress and undress themselves. They
hang their clothes on little hooks, placed very low
so as to be within reach of a little child, or else
they fold up such articles of clothing, as their
little serving-aprons, of which they take great
care, and lay them inside a cupboard kept for the
household linen.</p>
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<p>In short, where the manufacture of toys has
been brought to such a point of complication and
perfection that children have at their disposal entire
dolls’ houses, complete wardrobes for the
dressing and undressing of dolls, kitchens where
they can pretend to cook, toy animals as nearly
lifelike as possible, this method seeks to give all
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this to the child in reality––making him an actor
in a living scene.</p>
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<span class='smcap'>Fig 2.––The Montessori Paedometer.</span><br/></p>
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<p>My pedometer forms part of the equipment of
a “Children’s House.” After various modifications
I have now reduced this instrument to a very
practical form. (Fig. 2.)</p>
<p>The purpose of the pedometer, as its name
shows, is to measure the children. It consists of
a wide rectangular board, forming the base, from
the center of which rise two wooden posts held
together at the top by a narrow flat piece of metal.
To each post is connected a horizontal metal rod––the
indicator––which runs up and down by
means of a casing, also of metal. This metal casing
is made in one piece with the indicator, to the
end of which is fixed an india-rubber ball. On one
side, that is to say, behind one of the two tall
vertical wooden posts, there is a small seat, also
of wood. The two tall wooden posts are graduated.
The post to which the seat is fixed is
graduated from the surface of the seat to the top,
whilst the other is graduated from the wooden
board at the base to the top, <i>i.e.</i> to a height of 1.5
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meters. On the side containing the seat the
height of the child seated is measured, on the
other side the child’s full stature. The practical
value of this instrument lies in the possibility of
measuring two children at the same time, and in
the fact that the children themselves cooperate
in taking the measurements. In fact, they learn
to take off their shoes and to place themselves
in the correct position on the pedometer. They
find no difficulty in raising and lowering the
metal indicators, which are held so firmly in place
by means of the metal casing that they cannot
deviate from their horizontal position even when
used by inexpert hands. Moreover they run extremely
easily, so that very little strength is required
to move them. The little india-rubber
balls prevent the children from hurting themselves
should they inadvertently knock their heads
against the metal indicator.</p>
<p>The children are very fond of the pedometer.
“Shall we measure ourselves?” is one of the proposals
which they make most willingly and with
the greatest likelihood of finding many of their
companions to join them. They also take great
care of the pedometer, dusting it, and polishing
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its metal parts. All the surfaces of the pedometer
are so smooth and well polished that they invite
the care that is taken of them, and by their
appearance when finished fully repay the trouble
taken.</p>
<p>The pedometer represents the scientific part
of the method, because it has reference to the
anthropological and psychological study made of
the children, each of whom has his own biographical
record. This biographical record follows
the history of the child’s development according
to the observations which it is possible to
make by the application of my method. This
subject is dealt with at length in my other
books. A series of cinematograph pictures has
been taken of the pedometer at a moment when
the children are being measured. They are seen
coming of their own accord, even the very smallest,
to take their places at the instrument.</p>
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