Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Practical Life

Practical Life

We offer a range of Montessori practical life materials, including a teaching manual, child-sized aprons, placemats, and organizing cloth pouches. These thoughtfully designed products support children's journey to independence by fostering synthetic movement, essential for daily living skills and future academic success. High-quality practical life resources and activities are the most important investment you can make to empower children, develop their motor skills, and cultivate a sense of order and responsibility. Click Learn More for additional information about this essential curriculum area.

Learn More

Sort by

46 products

Filters

Practical Life Album (EC)Practical Life Album (EC)
Practical Life Album (EC) Sale priceFrom 119,00 zł PLN
All Five Albums (EC)All Five Albums (EC)
All Five Albums (EC) Sale priceFrom 578,00 zł PLN
Creative Development in the ChildCreative Development in the Child
Creative Development in the Child Sale price99,00 zł PLN
Teacher Favorite Apron & Mat SetsApron & Mat Sets
Apron & Mat Sets Sale priceFrom 462,00 zł PLN
Teacher Favorite Apron Sets: Hook & Loop WaistApron Sets: Hook & Loop Waist
Apron Sets: Hook & Loop Waist Sale priceFrom 344,00 zł PLN
Apron Sets: Tie WaistApron Sets: Tie Waist
Apron Sets: Tie Waist Sale priceFrom 317,00 zł PLN
Aqua Stripe Aprons - Maitri LearningAqua Stripe Aprons
Aqua Stripe Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Blue Flower ApronsBlue Flower Aprons
Blue Flower Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Cerulean Blue Cloth ApronCerulean Blue Cloth Apron
Cerulean Blue Cloth Apron Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Fog Grey ApronsFog Grey Aprons
Fog Grey Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Green Cloth ApronGreen Cloth Apron
Green Cloth Apron Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Ivory Cloth ApronIvory Cloth Apron
Ivory Cloth Apron Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Lavender ApronsLavender Aprons
Lavender Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Lemon Cloth ApronLemon Cloth Apron
Lemon Cloth Apron Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Maize ApronsMaize Aprons
Maize Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Mat SetsMat Sets
Mat Sets Sale priceFrom 119,00 zł PLN
Mats: Laminated Cotton - Maitri LearningMats: Laminated Cotton
Mats: Laminated Cotton Sale priceFrom 40,00 zł PLN

12 colors available

Teacher Favorite Navy ApronsNavy Aprons
Navy Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Orange Cloth ApronOrange Cloth Apron
Orange Cloth Apron Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Papaya Orange ApronsPapaya Orange Aprons
Papaya Orange Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Plum Flower ApronsPlum Flower Aprons
Plum Flower Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Red Cloth ApronRed Cloth Apron
Red Cloth Apron Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Red Slicker ApronsRed Slicker Aprons - Maitri Learning
Red Slicker Aprons Sale price103,00 zł PLN
Sage ApronsSage Aprons
Sage Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Sand ApronsSand Aprons
Sand Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Teacher Favorite Strawberry ApronsStrawberry Aprons
Strawberry Aprons Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Yellow Flower Aprons - Maitri LearningYellow Flower Aprons - Maitri Learning
Yellow Flower Aprons Sale price103,00 zł PLN
2-Pocket Pouches2-Pocket Pouches
2-Pocket Pouches Sale priceFrom 56,00 zł PLN

23 colors available

Teacher Favorite 3-Part Card Pouches3-Part Card Pouches
3-Part Card Pouches Sale priceFrom 68,00 zł PLN

26 colors available

Teacher Favorite Alphabet Pocket ChartsAlphabet Pocket Charts
Alphabet Pocket Charts Sale priceFrom 198,00 zł PLN
Teacher Favorite Phonogram Pocket ChartPhonogram Pocket Chart
Phonogram Pocket Chart Sale priceFrom 158,00 zł PLN
Cloth Pouch SetsCloth Pouch Sets
Cloth Pouch Sets Sale priceFrom 197,00 zł PLN
Definitions All Stages PouchDefinitions All Stages Pouch
Definitions All Stages Pouch Sale priceFrom 103,00 zł PLN

25 colors available

Phonogram Red One Pocket PouchPhonogram Red One Pocket Pouch
Phonogram Red One Pocket Pouch Sale priceFrom 16,00 zł PLN
Math Cloth PouchesMath Cloth Pouches
Math Cloth Pouches Sale priceFrom 40,00 zł PLN
Large Cloth PouchesLarge Cloth Pouches
Large Cloth Pouches Sale priceFrom 60,00 zł PLN

26 colors available

Long Cloth PouchesLong Cloth Pouches: One-Pocket - Maitri Learning
Long Cloth Pouches Sale priceFrom 40,00 zł PLN

25 colors available

Medium Cloth PouchesMedium Cloth Pouches
Medium Cloth Pouches Sale priceFrom 40,00 zł PLN

24 colors available

Teacher Favorite Small Cloth Pouches: One-Pocket - Maitri LearningSmall Cloth Pouches: One-Pocket - Maitri Learning
Small Cloth Pouches Sale priceFrom 40,00 zł PLN

25 colors available

Small cork pouchsmall cork pouch with ruler
Cork One-Pocket Pouches Sale priceFrom 36,00 zł PLN
Fine Art 4-Part PouchesFine Art 4-Part Pouches
Fine Art 4-Part Pouches Sale priceFrom 68,00 zł PLN

24 colors available

Fine Art Matching PouchesFine Art Matching Pouches
Fine Art Matching Pouches Sale priceFrom 68,00 zł PLN

24 colors available

Definition Stage 3 PouchesDefinition Stage 3 Pouches
Definition Stage 3 Pouches Sale price56,00 zł PLN

15 colors available

Black Licorice Cloth ApronBlack Licorice Cloth Apron
Black Licorice Cloth Apron Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Toffee Cloth ApronToffee Cloth Apron
Toffee Cloth Apron Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN
Pine Cloth ApronPine Cloth Apron
Pine Cloth Apron Sale priceFrom 115,00 zł PLN

More Information:

Practical Life

 

Montessori practical life

Overview

The ultimate aim of practical life is to lead the child to physical and intellectual independence; this is specifically where we give the child what they need to prepare them for life—to answer their unconscious drives. By so doing, we aid the child in developing synthetic movement.

Synthetic movement is movement directed by the mind to an intelligent purpose. The ability to intentionally direct the movements of the body is necessary for all future academic work. Thus, all practical life activities indirectly prepare the child not only for the requirements of daily living but also for all future learning.

Remember that the child’s nature is non-utilitarian at this age. This means they do things just for the sake of doing them; they do not necessarily work towards a larger goal. For example, many young children love the challenge of carrying a bowlful of water across the room without spilling a drop. They don’t need to deliver the bowl to anyone. They are just happy to carry it back and forth across the room! It is this unique nature of the young child that we must take advantage of by offering preliminary exercises that prepare them for the larger tasks ahead.

Preliminary Exercises

Preliminary exercises isolate individual tasks that will later be combined into a larger task. For example, before a child can be expected to wear a smock while painting, they are first taught how to put on, take-off, and store a smock. This is done without any connection to painting. It is just a preliminary exercise involving only the child and the smock. Examples include:

  • How to use the sink
  • How to wet and wring out a sponge
  • How to get the right amount of toilet paper
  • How to carry a book
  • How to turn a page in a book
  • How to tuck in a chair
  • How to carry a pitcher/jug
  • How to fill a pitcher/jug in the sink
  • How to empty/dry a pail
  • How to use clothespins
Care of the Person

These activities prepare the child to meet the requirements of tending to their own bodily needs each day. They are critical for the development of self-confidence (which develops as a natural consequence of the child seeing himself succeed repeatedly at the tasks before him). Examples include:

  • Buttoning, zipping, tying, lacing
  • Washing hands/face
  • Taking socks/shoes on and off
  • Preparing food
  • How to use a knife/cutting sequence:
    • Spreading jam
    • Cutting/spreading butter
    • Cutting bananas/tofu/watermelon
    • Cutting banana bread
    • Cutting pickles
    • Cutting apples
    • Cutting carrots
    • Cutting loaf bread
  • Sewing
Care of the Environment

These activities connect the child with her surroundings and allow her to assume responsibility for her environment. Care of environment activities create a sense of joy, pride, and delight in not only cleanliness but the artistic and wholesome elements (e.g., plants, pets) of our human spaces. Examples include:

  • Dusting
  • Sweeping
  • Folding
  • Washing a table
  • Washing cloths
  • Ironing
  • Setting a table
  • Polishing
  • Caring for pets
  • Caring for plants
  • Flower arranging
Control of Movement

It is through movement that the child is able to organize and build their intelligence. Movement cannot be set apart from higher cognitive skills—they are intrinsically related (as are the mind and body). These include activities that isolate the quality of bodily movement for its own purpose. Examples include:

  • Walking on a line heel-to-toe
  • Marching on a line
  • Carrying a bowlful of water across the room
  • Wearing a blindfold and finding someone who is ringing a bell
Grace & Courtesy

The grace and courtesy exercises allow children to adapt in a beautiful fashion to the culture around them. These exercises help the children acquire self-confidence and independence because they prepare them to behave well in all likely social situations. These are taught by playing let’s pretend/ role-plays. Examples include:

  • How to offer help
  • How to politely get someone’s attention
  • How to say excuse me, please, thank you, and you’re welcome
  • How to ask for a turn
  • How to wait for your turn
  • How to invite someone to play with you
  • How to politely decline an invitation
  • How to respond if someone says they don’t want you to come to their birthday party
  • What to do if someone grabs your toy

When setting up the child’s environment, Montessori Guides may choose to place pictures of children behaving well (e.g., shaking hands, sitting politely at a restaurant, holding a door for another) in sequence on the practical life shelves. This is her reminder to give these lessons to the children and it reminds the children that they have learned these behaviors and may practice them by repeating the let’s pretend role plays they were taught.

All of the above exercises are dynamic—they must be changed by the guide throughout the year to keep up with the abilities of the class. For example, if everyone can use a spoon well, you don't need spooning on the shelf. While maintaining the child’s sense of order is critical, minor adjustments of the shelves when an old activity is removed and a new one is introduced is acceptable; this in fact must occur to maintain the logical sequence and progression of difficulty of the shelves.

Here is an example of a practical life presentation on using the buckling frame.

Creating Practical Life Activities

So far you have seen many examples of possible practical life activities but not one concise list. There is a reason for this. Practical life exercises vary based on culture. In some Latin cultures, children are taught to always look down when speaking with an elder. In the US, we are taught to look people in the eye. In some cultures, people are taught to remove their shoes before entering a room. In Kazakhstan, if you complement your host, your host is obligated to give you whatever you say you like…to keep forever! Thus, Kazakh children are never taught to offer complements while children in London become skilled at this.

So, a trained Montessori Guide must be prepared to create her own practical life curriculum based on the situations children will encounter in their contemporary culture. To help, we have the general guidelines set forth by Dr. Montessori—the prerequisites for practical life exercises. When the trained guide creates a practical life exercise, the activity must:

  1. Aid the child to mastery of self—developing their movements to an intelligent end
  2. Be relevant for what happens in the child’s world today—current/contemporary
  3. Have a purposeful, intelligent reason (not just busy work)
  4. Be presented at the child’s level using real items that he will find in their own environment for their actual use (e.g., using a melon baller only to ball melons; using a strawberry huller only to hull strawberries)
  5. Require purposeful movement
  6. Lead to the refinement of gross and fine motor skills
  7. Be ordered and sequenced
  8. Allow for independence (the order will free them)
  9. Allow for both physical and mental functioning
  10. Correspond to the abilities of the group (ranging from easy to difficult to meet the needs of all children)
  11. Allow for repetition
  12. Encourage silence (which encourages concentration)
  13. Have points of interest (to maintain the child’s interest and allow them to stay with the work so they can develop their attention span); there are generally 2, 3 or 4 points of interest for each work

Here's an example of a polishing activity.

Additional Resources

Be sure to practice your presentation alone or with a friend many times before presenting any materials to a child... you want your presentation to be flawless, precise, consistent/repeatable, and completely free from distractions so that the child can focus on, connect with, and learn from the materials.  Each lesson is like a choreographed dance that you memorize the movements for. Your performance of the movements must be precise but your interactions with an individual child will of course vary somewhat as you adapt to meet the needs of the moment. This flexibility amidst precision is the true art of guiding children.