What is Cosmic Education?

Meagan Ledendecker • March 22, 2021
Female elementary student at table looking at test tubes in a rack

As your child nears the end of their early childhood years and edges toward elementary, you may begin hearing the term cosmic education. Ever wonder what Montessorians are referring to when they say this? The short answer is that cosmic education is the term Maria Montessori gave to the elementary cultural curriculum (and by cultural, we mean history, science, and geography).

 

As you may have guessed, to truly understand cosmic education, it takes much more than a short answer. Read on to learn more!

 

Hallmark Traits of the Second Plane

Before we explain what cosmic education is, it will help if we explain why it was developed in the first place. As you know, Montessori education relies heavily on our knowledge of the developmental characteristics of children. As children grow and change, so should our approaches in how we serve their educational needs. Montessori organizes the stages of development into four planes, and children ages six to twelve fall within the second plane of development. Some of the most notable characteristics of children this age include:


  • A shift from concrete learning and understanding to more abstract concepts
  • A strong sense of justice and fairness
  • A desire to cultivate social relationships with peers
  • A tendency toward imagination
  • A deep interest in the world around them
  • A need for work that feels big and important

 

Montessori education takes these unique characteristics into account in the way we approach our work with children at the elementary level. We allow for more social work experiences, we give plentiful opportunities for cultural learning, and even the lessons and materials were created to appeal to the needs of school-aged children.

 

A Deeper Definition

When we think about cosmic education, we think about our aims to give children a bigger picture of the world, their place in it, and the interconnectedness of everything. It is during this time they begin seeking answers to questions related to these topics, and their desire to learn as much about the world as possible is satisfied by the large amount of information they can access through their classroom environments and beyond.

 

Each year during the elementary begins with a study of the beginnings of the universe. From here, and throughout the year, the study trickles outward. Children may learn about our solar system, basic chemistry, or how science experiments are conducted.

 

They learn about the evolution of life on earth, as well as in-depth unit studies in botany and zoology. There are opportunities for research (independent and alongside peers), presentations, and exploration.

 

The children learn about our ancient human ancestors, the civilizations of centuries past, and the origins of writing and mathematics. The latter are perfectly timed, considering elementary children are in the process of discovering reading, writing, and math for themselves.

 

Impactful Lessons and Materials

Have you heard of the Montessori Great Lessons? These five impressionistic lessons are considered the springboard into cosmic education. They are theatrical and make quite an impact on children. They are presented in a storytelling fashion, which appeals to children’s imagination, yet they are rooted in facts, which appeals to their desire to learn the truth.

 

Each of these five lessons is given repeatedly throughout a child’s years in elementary, and each time they receive a lesson they will glean something new from it, and the follow-up studies may be different as well.

 

The Beginning of the Universe

The first great lesson is dramatic and exciting. The guide begins telling the story of when everything was darker and colder than they can imagine, and how a great flaring forth was the beginning of our universe. There are moments in the lesson when they are shown grains of sand in comparison to the number of stars, they learn about the attraction and repelling of particles, how weight and density affects matter, and what the three states of matter are on earth.

 

Following this storytelling lesson, the class will launch into a different, related unit of study each year, giving children the ability to see things from a different perspective.

 

Before the second great lesson, students are able to interact with a number of materials that put the vastness of time in perspective. The Clock of Eons reimagines Earth’s history and major periods of time on a 12-hour clock. The Long Black Strip illustrates how much time passed with an actual long black strip of fabric, before reaching a tiny section of red at the end, signifying human’s history on the planet.

 

The Coming of Life on Earth

Children love learning about animals, so this particular work is always approached with great enthusiasm. The main material used is called the Timeline of Life, and it colorfully and beautifully illustrates the evolution of life on our planet from the early Paleozoic Era through today. Being able to see how life has changed over time, and even the ways in which it has remained the same, always makes an impact on children. This work naturally lends itself to in-depth studies of both plants and animals, with various methods of classification.

 

The Study of Early Humans

We are all fascinated to learn about our ancestors, and the Timelines of Early Humans give children a sense of gratitude for those that have come before us and for all the great work that has been done throughout history.

 

Not only do children have an opportunity to study early hominids, but as mentioned earlier they take a look at early civilizations and how they changed over time.

 

The History of Writing

From the earliest cuneiform, hieroglyphs, and ancient scripts, to the various languages written around the world today, the history of writing is fascinating. To learn about such information while also developing one’s own writing life sparks a curiosity that is difficult to replicate.

 

The History of Mathematics

Math is a subject that grows in sequential building blocks, and so it was with the discoveries of various mathematical concepts. Over time, humans discovered more complex and abstract ways of expressing the numerical world. Just as with learning about the beginnings of writing, children are always excited to learn about how mathematical thinking has evolved throughout time and in various cultures.

 

Now that you have a basic understanding of cosmic education, we would love to hear what you think. Curious to learn more? Call us to learn more or to schedule a visit.


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If you've spent any time in a Montessori early childhood classroom, you've likely noticed the sandpaper letters on the shelf: elegant, tactile, traced by small fingers again and again. And if you've looked closely, you may have noticed something that surprises many families. Those letters are in cursive. In a world where most children learn to print first, Montessori's cursive-first approach raises questions. Why cursive? Why so early? The answers reach back to Dr. Maria Montessori's own careful observations of children, as well as forward to what modern neuroscience is now confirming about the developing brain. What Dr. Montessori Actually Observed Dr. Montessori was a meticulous observer of children, and her thinking about writing developed through years of direct experimentation. 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Brain imaging studies show how multiple areas of the brain are activated simultaneously during cursive writing in a way that doesn't happen with typing or print. The integration of sensation, movement control, and thinking that cursive requires appears to support broader cognitive development in genuinely significant ways. Klemm also suggested that learning cursive trains the brain for more effective visual scanning, with potential benefits for reading speed and hand-eye coordination. In other words, the child who traces cursive sandpaper letters with their fingertips is developing neural pathways that support a wide range of future learning. Clarity, Beauty, and the Practical Benefits Beyond the neurological research, there are practical reasons that Montessori educators have observed over generations of practice. Cursive provides a better visual distinction between letters that are easily confused in print. Think about the pairs that trip up so many young learners: b and d, p and q. In cursive, these letters look different from one another, which reduces the visual confusion that causes so many children to struggle in the early stages of reading and writing. And then there is the matter of beauty, something Dr. Montessori took seriously in everything she prepared for children. She wrote that, in teaching writing, we should pay close attention to "the beauty of form" and "the flowing quality of the letters." Cursive handwriting, when developed well, is genuinely lovely. It is a form of penmanship that connects children to a long tradition of human expression through the written word. The Montessori approach treats handwriting as a craft worth caring about. What This Looks Like in the Classroom In a Montessori early childhood environment, the path to writing begins long before a child picks up a pencil. 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We'd love to show you how the path to writing unfolds in Montessori.
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