Zero Kisses! Montessori Spindle Box


The joy of learning math in Montessori..


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We wait for a child to ask, pointing at the compartment for zero: “And what should I put there?” We then answer: “Nothing, a 0 is nothing.”

But this is not enough. We must make a child feel that 0 is nothing. For this we use exercises that are highly amusing to the children. I place myself in their midst. As they are seated about me in their little chairs, I turn to one of them who has already performed a number of exercises and say: “Come, dear, come to me zero times.” The child will almost always run up and then return to his place. “But, my child, you have come to me once, and I told you to come zero times.” “But what then should I have done?” “Nothing, for zero is nothing.” “But how do I do nothing?” “Don’t do anything. You must sit still. You must not move. You must not come even once. ‘Zero times’ means no times at all.

We repeat the exercise. “You, my dear, throw me zero kisses with your fingers.” The child trembles, smiles, and stays quiet. “Did you understand me?” I repeat in an almost passionate tone. “Send me zero kisses, zero kisses.” I stop. I lower my voice as if I were angry at their laughter and address one of them severely, even threateningly. “You, come here zero times! I tell you, come here zero times! Do you understand. I am speaking to you. Come here zero times!” He does not move. The laughter becomes even more boisterous, aroused as it is by my change of attitude, first of entreaty and then of threats. “But then,” I sadly sigh, “Why do you not come? Why do you not come?” Then all shout in a loud voice, with their eyes gleaming and almost weeping from joy and laughter: “Zero is nothing! Zero is nothing!” “Ah, is that so?” I ask, smiling peacefully, “Then all of you come here to me at one time!” And they rush up to crowd about me.
— Maria Montessori, The Discovery of the Child
In [my hometown] they had opened a Montessori school ... It was wonderful to be alive then — studying was like playing.
— Gabriel García Márquez, Living to Tell the Tale

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