Montessori Grammar Symbols: Making Language Visible and Alive
Gabriela León • March 17, 2026

Montessori grammar symbols help children see how language works. This post explores how hands-on grammar materials support understanding before memorization.

If you’ve ever noticed small, colorful shapes placed above words in a Montessori classroom, you may have wondered what they mean, or why grammar looks so different from what many of us remember from school!

 

Those colorful shapes are Montessori grammar symbols, reflecting a deeply intentional approach to helping children understand language through function, history, and experience.

 

Words Are Defined by the Work They Do

 

In Montessori, grammar begins with the simple understanding that words are classified by the job they perform in a sentence.

 

●       Some words name people, places, or things.


●       Some express action.


●       Some describe.


●       Some connect.

 

This concept of parts of speech exists in all languages, though the number and categories vary. Montessori embraces this universal truth and introduces it in a way that aligns with children’s natural development.

 

Language Is Experienced Before It Is Named

 

In our Primary classrooms (ages 2.5 to 6), children encounter parts of speech through activity, not terminology.

 

When children explore words that express action, they get to act out simple commands like run, jump, skip. They respond with their bodies, so they can experience the language long before they analyze it.

 

As children develop their reading skills, we begin to introduce the functions of seven parts of speech:

 

●       article

●       adjective

●       noun

●       verb

●       adverb

●       preposition

●       conjunction

 

We save two parts of speech, pronouns and interjections, for the elementary years because both require a higher level of abstraction. To understand a pronoun, for example, a child must first have a strong, concrete sense of the noun. Interjections express internal emotional states, which also require more mature abstract thinking.

 

Young children learn what words do, not what they are called. Questions we explore sound like:

 

●       “Which word tells us what kind?”

●       “Which word shows the action?”

●       “Which word connects these ideas?”

 

We introduce the formal names of nouns, verbs, and so on later in the elementary years, when children are developmentally ready to categorize and label abstract ideas.

 

Enter the Montessori Grammar Symbols

 

Alongside this functional work, children are introduced to Montessori grammar symbols: geometric shapes that represent each part of speech.

 

These symbols are not arbitrary decorations. They are rooted in history, symbolism, and meaning.

 

Children may arrive in the elementary having worked extensively with the functions of nouns and verbs and having used the symbols, even if they have never heard the words “noun” or “verb” themselves.

 

This is intentional.

 

The Noun and the Verb: History Made Visible

 

Linguists believe that early human language likely began with nouns: names for people, objects, and things in the environment. Later, names were given to actions.

 

Dr. Montessori embedded this history directly into the symbols.

 

The noun is represented by a black square-based pyramid.

 

●       The black symbolizes the darkness of ancient time.

●       Some interpret it as representing coal, something very old and foundational.

●       When working on paper, children use one face of the pyramid: a black equilateral triangle.

 

The verb is represented by a red sphere.

 

●       Red symbolizes energy.

●       The sphere represents the sun and its life-giving force.

●       The verb brings energy and movement to the noun.

●       On paper, this becomes a red circle.

 

Through these symbols, children get to imagine and explore the story of language itself.

 

Discovering the Living Nature of Nouns

 

Children are naturally curious about names, and Montessori grammar invites that curiosity. As they work with nouns, children often explore questions like:

 

●       Why do things have the names they do?

●       What do names mean?

●       How are new names created?

 

They may research plant and animal names, country and place names, and first and last names of people. They also discover that language is alive and constantly changing. New nouns are added all the time. Some words that their grandparents used are no longer common. Other words shift in meaning over generations.

 

This exploration helps children see language not as fixed rules, but as a human creation shaped by time, culture, and need.

 

Making the Abstract Concrete

 

The grammar symbols allow children to:

 

●       See patterns in sentence structure

●       Manipulate language physically

●       Analyze their own writing

●       Build sentences and meaning intentionally

 

Sometimes children create symbol patterns first and then find words to match them. This shows deep structural understanding. They are thinking about how language works, not just what it says.

 

And grammar work is often joyful. We invite games, stories, and playful discoveries along the way. Even the symbols themselves have stories: the conjunction was originally designed as a chain, but it proved too difficult to make from paper!

 

By the time children move into Elementary, they have:

 

●       Experienced the functions of the major parts of speech

●       Worked extensively with grammar symbols

●       Developed an intuitive understanding of sentence structure

 

This foundation allows Elementary grammar to unfold naturally and move from concrete experience into abstraction, analysis, and increasingly sophisticated writing.

 

Why Montessori Grammar Looks the Way It Does

 

Montessori uses symbols because they:

 

●       Make invisible patterns visible

●       Support abstract thinking through manipulation

●       Encourage independence and self-analysis

●       Invite curiosity rather than rote memorization

 

In Montessori, grammar isn’t about labeling for its own sake. It’s about helping children understand the logic, beauty, and living nature of language, and it gives them tools to express themselves with clarity and confidence.

Child painting at a table in a cozy home, focused on colorful artwork.
By Gabriela León June 16, 2026
With the slower pace of summer, more time at home and outdoors, and more unstructured hours to fill, it’s a perfect time to pull art supplies out fo the closet, cover tables with paper, and unleash some creative energy! What happens in these creative moments matters more than most of us realize. And how we respond to what children make matters just as much as the making itself. The Process Is the Point A foundational principle behind Montessori's approach to children's artmaking is that the process of making art is far more important than the product. This can be difficult for us to internalize, because the product is what we most often see. It’s not that we don’t care about our children’s experience. But the painting is what comes home. The drawing gets taped to the refrigerator. We get handed the collage at pickup. So it’s natural to focus on what is right in front of us. But it is the moments when children are deeply absorbed in moving paint across paper, pressing clay between their fingers, or scribbling long, looping lines with a crayon that something essential is happening. This is a deep form of creative expression and an outlet for feelings children may not yet have words for. Plus, children are developing visual-spatial skills, fine motor coordination, and the capacity for innovative thinking. During art-making, children are problem-solving in real time, making decisions about color, form, pressure, and space. And they are experiencing the deep satisfaction of following an internal creative impulse all the way through to its end. What Not to Say and What to Say Instead One of the most important things we can do to support young children's creative process is to be thoughtful in our comments. Even well-meaning responses can shift children's focus from their own inner experience to an adult's reaction. Once that shift happens, children begin making art for the audience rather than for themselves. Comments like, "That's beautiful!" or "What is it?" or "Can you make one for Grandma?" are all, in different ways, asking children to produce something for someone else or to explain and justify what they've made. Neither of these supports genuine creative development. Instead, focus on objective, process-focused observations. For example, "I can see you used a lot of green and purple today," or "Your lines extend all the way to the edge of the paper," or "It looks like you really enjoyed making that." These responses acknowledge children's work without judging it, and they communicate that what they made matters, and what they experienced while making it also matters. Young children often cannot (and should not have to) explain their art. The experience of making art is enough. A Summer Opportunity: Freedom to Explore Summer is an ideal time to offer children a real variety of creative materials and the freedom to choose what calls to them. Different children will be drawn to different media, and what each child gets from a new experience will be entirely their own. Variety is important precisely because it sparks different kinds of interest and expression in different children. Here are some starting points for summer art exploration, appropriate for toddlers and young children: Offer crayons and large paper for open-ended scribbling and mark-making. It’s best to begin by offering large spaces before moving to smaller ones. Large paper means that children's bodies have room to move freely. Easel painting or watercolors offer the joy of color mixing and the experience of a brush moving across a surface. Play-dough and clay can satisfy children's deep need to manipulate, press, and build with their hands. Collage materials (paper scraps, leaves, fabric, natural objects) invite children to arrange and compose in ways that feel both free and purposeful. Chalk on pavement (or dark paper, if the weather isn’t cooperating) is especially magical outdoors on a summer morning. From a practical standpoint, it’s helpful to protect clothing and surfaces before beginning, so children can work freely without worry (theirs or ours!). Choose non-toxic materials, particularly for the youngest children who may still explore things with their mouths. And resist the urge to direct the outcome. Children who cover their paper entirely in black paint are not doing it wrong. They are doing exactly what they need to do. What to Do With What They Make Not every piece of art needs to be saved or displayed. Saving a selection of artwork from across the summer (early pieces, middle-of-summer pieces, late-summer pieces) can serve as a timeline or record of your children's creative development and a meaningful way to look back together at the end of the season. If there isn’t room to display selected pieces, a simple folder or large envelope can also work perfectly for this. When you look through the artwork together, let your child lead the conversation or simply look at it together without words. The goal is never gallery-ready products. The goal is children who trust their own creative impulses, who feel free to experiment and make a mess and start over, and who carry the confidence of someone who has been allowed to make things in their own way. Summer is long, and the canvas is wide! Let children fill it however best suits their needs! We'd love to hear how your family is spending the summer months. And we always love to share how we support creative exploration in our prepared environments in our school. Contact us to learn more!
Child sitting on a carpet, fastening a white sandal while wearing a floral top and mustard pants
By Gabriela León June 9, 2026
Summer has a rhythm that the school year rarely allows. Mornings without a clock ticking. Afternoons that stretch and meander. The unhurried pace of days that don't need to be anywhere quite so urgently. And tucked inside all of that spaciousness is one of the most valuable gifts the season can offer young children: time to do things for themselves. In Montessori, we don’t rush through the practical life activities that help children care for their own bodies: washing hands, dressing, brushing hair and teeth, wiping a nose, and putting shoes away. We don’t even think of these as chores because they are among the most important developmental work in our children’s early years. And summer, with its slower tempo, is the perfect season to lean into them. Independence Is the Destination and the Journey Dr. Montessori understood that, from the very first moments of life, children are moving toward independence. The newborn who moves toward the breast has already taken a first step. That milestone transforms the toddler who learns to walk: their hands are suddenly free, they can move toward or away from people and objects in their world, and they can begin actively shaping their own experience rather than merely absorbing it. Every act of self-care that children learn to do for themselves is another step along this path. Not because independence is about doing things alone, but because the child who can care for their own body develops a sense of genuine capability, a trust in themselves, and a growing understanding of who they are as unique human beings. As the Montessori principle goes: Help me to do it myself. Collaboration Before Independence One of the most important things to understand about supporting self-care in young children is that the path to independence moves through a collaborative process. Often, things go awry when we swing between getting caught up in instruction, resorting to doing something for them, or stepping back entirely before they are ready. The progression looks something like this: first, we do the activity with or for the child, using gentleness and narration, so the child is always a participant, even before they can act. "I'm going to put on your shirt. Let's put your arm through the sleeve." Gradually, the adult and child do the activity together. Eventually, the child begins to imitate, then to do it in their own way, imperfectly, slowly, and with deep satisfaction. This progression is not a straight line. There will be days when a child who has been dressing independently for weeks suddenly wants help again. This is entirely normal and simply calls for a gentle return to collaboration: "Let's do this together." Our goal is always to offer just enough support and no more. We want to find the balance between honoring children's need for assistance and protecting their emerging sense of capability. What Summer Makes Possible The school year, for all its richness, is often defined by time pressure. Mornings, especially, can become a sequence of things that need to happen faster than children can manage them independently. Shoes get put on by adults. Jackets get zipped by adults. Hair gets brushed quickly and without much ceremony. During the summer months, there is often more space to let a three-year-old button their own shirt, however long it takes. There is time to stand back and watch a toddler figure out how to pull on their own socks. There is room for the unhurried back-and-forth of teaching a child to wash their hands properly, step by step, at a sink they can actually reach. If we think of these moments as children’s real work, we can avoid getting caught up in the sense that the process isn’t efficient! This is a long-term game. Our children are building their abilities and their internal sense of capability. Practical Suggestions for the Summer Months Here are a few ideas for bringing the Montessori approach to self-care into your home this summer: Set up the environment for success. Small adjustments allow children to manage their own needs without regularly needing adult assistance. Perhaps place a step stool at the bathroom sink. Provide low hooks for towels and clothing. Create a low shelf for children to store their belongings. Choose clothing that supports independence. Elastic waistbands, velcro shoes, and loose-fitting shirts can be respectful of children's current physical abilities. Children who can dress themselves feel capable. Narrate without taking over. When a child is struggling with a button or a zipper, resist the impulse to fix it immediately. Try instead: "You're working hard on that. Would you like to try once more, or would you like some help?" This keeps the child in the driver's seat of their own experience. Begin with larger movements, then refine. Just as with any practical life work, self-care builds from the general to the specific. Children learn to pull a shirt over their head before they learn to fasten buttons. They learn to remove their shoes before they learn to tie them. Follow your child's current capacity and build from there. Move without talking; talk without moving. This Montessori principle helps us demonstrate a self-care activity most effectively. When showing a child how to wash their hands, do it slowly and silently, so the movement is fully visible. Then, separately, use words to name the steps. Children often find it difficult to simultaneously track our narration and demonstration. Self-Care Activities Worth Practicing This Summer Consider the range of self-care activities appropriate for our children. Do they include undressing and dressing, hand washing, brushing hair, brushing teeth, wiping the nose, and caring for shoes? What else would your child benefit from learning how to master? Your child can practice these skills gradually as part of the natural rhythm of daily life. There is no hurry. There is no single right timeline. What matters is the collaborative attitude that underlies each interaction. The adult and child are working together. We honor children's participation. Our goal is always to help children come to know what they are capable of. The Deeper Meaning Dr. Montessori was clear that the destination of this entire developmental arc, across all four planes of development, all the way to young adulthood, is a person who can provide for themselves, take responsibility for their own actions, plan for their own future, and perhaps even support others on their own path toward independence. It begins here with a small person pulling on their own socks or learning to wash their own hands, and in a summer that is long enough and slow enough to let them try. We hope your summer is full of these quiet, meaningful moments. If you would like to learn more about honoring children’s journey toward independence, please schedule a visit to our school!