Materials Spotlight: The Montessori Bells
Rebecca Lingo • October 28, 2024

Music is a form of language. Because our young children effortlessly absorb language, we, of course, provide them with opportunities to express themselves musically! One key material we use for this is the Montessori Bells. 


The bells are perfectly tuned, each designed to deliver a distinct, pure tone when gently played with a mallet. Also aesthetically pleasing, the bells invite children into the world of music. This helps children develop a keen ear for pitch and tone, while encouraging an appreciation of musical instruments and expression.


The Montessori Bells


In Wheaton Montessori School’s primary classrooms, the Montessori Bells are easily accessible all day long, each bell arranged in order according to its pitch. 


There are two sets of 13 bells. One set has black and white stands and is set up in the back to serve as a control and is arranged like a piano keyboard (the white bells represent whole notes, while the black bells serve as the sharps and flats). The other set of bells has stands of natural, varnished wood, so we call them the brown bells. Each brown bell is paired with a white or black bell, and these 13 pairs of bells comprise the chromatic scale beginning at middle C. 


The bells sit on boards that also serve as guides. The brown bells rest on a pattern of black and white rectangles corresponding to the keys of a piano.


Playing One or Two Bells


After our youngest children have learned how to care for materials and have had plenty of experience discriminating sounds with our sound cylinders, we show them how to play a single bell. This is a multi-part process: how to carry the bell, use a mallet to gently strike the bell to make a tone, appreciate the sound the bell makes, use a damper to stop the tone, and return the bell to its proper place in the set.


Returning the bell to its proper place prepares children for future work of pairing and grading the bells. So, we take time to model how to check that the tone of the brown bell matches the corresponding white (or black) bell behind it.


Once children learn these steps, they can select any of the brown bells to play. Eventually, we also show children how to choose and play two different brown bells. This experience helps children focus on the fact that the two bells look the same but sound different. Then, upon returning the bells to the set, children also get to work on finding where each brown bells goes (because there are two empty spaces) by matching the tone of the brown bells to the white or black bells in the back. 

 

This may seem like quite an elaborate process for just “playing a bell or two.” However, we carefully break down each step so that even our youngest children can learn how to use this delicate instrument with precision while also beginning to hone in on the slight variations in each bell’s pitch. 


Pairing 


When we observe children’s success with this initial process, we introduce the challenge of pairing. This experience begins with the adult letting the child know in the lesson that the bells are on their boards in a particular order. We play up the brown bells and down the white bells so the child can hear the gradation and experience the impression of the C scale. Next we model how to remove four brown bells from their boards, mix them, and place them in an open space off to the side.


While showing this process, we reflect aloud how we could match the brown bells to their pairs when we had just two bells. We point out that we can use the same technique to find the matching pairs of the bells we just mixed up and moved to the side. 


We start by moving one of the brown bells to a space in front of the first empty white space (always working from left to right). We play the white (control) bell and then the brown bell. If they sound the same, we move the bell up onto the white space on the board. If they sound different, we slide the bell to the right to be in front of the next empty white space and we repeat the process until finding the brown bell’s match and location. When all the brown bells are paired, we again play up the brown bells and down the white bells to check they are in the correct order.


Once we finish modeling, we select the same four bells, mix them to the side of the workspace, and invite the child to pair the bells. We stay long enough to see successful matching of the first bell, then we fade into the background and observe. If the child is successful, we remove the same four and invite the child to do it again. If the first round was successful, we invite the child to remove all the brown bells and pair them!


Grading the Diatonic and Chromatic Scale


After children can pair all eight bells successfully, we introduce grading. This time, children learn how to put all the brown bells in order by paying attention to the degree of difference between each tone. This time, rather than using the white control bells to determine the order of the scale, children mix up and play the brown bells, using their awareness of the change in pitch to compare and reorder the bells. This requires children to have an acute awareness of each tone and how they differ. We start with just the white bells which represent the whole notes, and later introduce mixing in the black bells to make the chromatic scale (with sharps and flats).


Language Material

 

After children have successfully paired and graded the diatonic scale, we also introduce the “writing and reading” component of the bells. Children learn the symbols and names for the pitches and match the pitches with their notes.


When writing in language, we have thoughts we want to express and we can write them down. Composers have melodies in their heads and they write those melodies by using the notes of the staff. 


We use beautiful staff boards with small wooden circles so that children can learn how to place the notes on the staff and eventually even write their own music, similarly to how they write with the moveable alphabet. Like with spoken language, children first explore through writing and then reading melodies.


Musical expression is woven into our primary classrooms. Visit our classrooms and witness the enchanting impact of music in education for yourself. 


Current families are invited to schedule their classroom observation by clicking on links below. 


Adolescent Community Classroom Observation

Ms. Searcy’s Upper Elementary Classroom Observation

Mrs. Fortun’s Lower Elementary Classroom Observation

Mrs. Mayhugh’s Lower Elementary Classroom Observation

Mrs. Berdick’s Primary Classroom Observation

Ms. Carr’s Primary Classroom Observation

Ms.Chiste's Primary Classroom Observation (available for observation in November)

Mrs. Rogers’s Primary Classroom Observation

 

Prospective families are invited to schedule a tour. We look forward to welcoming you and answering any questions you may have!


Three children engage in reading activities in a classroom, with text below reading,
By Suzanna Mayhugh, Lower Elementary Teacher April 13, 2026
Without fail, most of my Parent-Teacher Conferences end with a parent asking, “What can we be doing at home?” And without fail, I respond, “Read. Read with them, to them, next to them, near them. Even if they read themselves. Keep them reading.” Reading is a skill that must be practiced, over and over again. Enjoying a book is not a skill that we’re born with in Kingdom Animalia. It’s a skill we learn by watching those around us, modeling reading as young children, trying over and over to find the book that hooks us for life. But what if your child doesn’t love reading? What if it’s a battle at home? Here are a few tips that I’ve learned from my fellow teachers, from my time as a parent, and from observing students in the classroom. Start early! Read to them as soon as you get them home for the first time! Not only does reading at a very early age have language comprehension, memory, and narrative skills implications for later in life, it also helps create a bond and habit early on. Feeling late to the party? Start now! Let them pick books they like. Are they choosing the same book again and again? Great! They’re reading! Are they reading the 8453rd installment of Rainbow Magic Fairies? Good! They’re reading! Diary of a Wimpy Kid? Great! The graphic novel of the comic based on the novel they already read? GREAT! Is your pre-reader paging through Goodnight Moon for the 54th time today? Wonderful. There is so much research showing repeated exposure to the same book supports fluency, automaticity, narrative expression, comprehension, and confidence at all levels of reading. Have books in every room. Like all new skills, without access to the needed tools and equipment, those new skills don’t get practiced. Stock your bedrooms, bathrooms, kitchens, and cars with books. (My family has rules about the dining room table during dinner, but that rule can bend quite quickly when someone is “at a good part.” Assess what they are filling their time with instead of reading. Do they actually have time to read? Is there ever a “down” moment that they would even be able to fill with reading? Often, lack of time is one of the biggest obstacles. If your child wants to be in every after-school class, on the travel teams, or you’re just always coming-and-going, keep books in the car. Load your playlist with audiobooks (yes, they “count” as reading). And here’s where I lose some of you: Is what they are doing instead of reading something your family values? Are they watching videos of other kids playing Minecraft? Are they doom-scrolling at the age of 7? Are they on YouTube Shorts for hours? If so, the chances of them picking up a book, which takes mental work, isn’t high. If you want to help your child love reading, you have to assess what they’re doing instead of reading. Still with me? Make reading a moment for connection. Your children idolize you. They want your attention. They want to feel close to you. Build on that desire. Read to them for as long as they will allow. I promise, your teenager wants these moments. Your three-year-old craves these moments. Make the effort to build it into your routine to read together and guard that moment with all that you have. Let them put down books they don’t like. Do you remember being forced to finish a book in school, just so that you could be quizzed on it? To tell the adult asking you to read it that yes, you’d indeed finished it against your own judgment and free will? Don’t be the one that does that to their reading enjoyment. If they don’t like a book, let them move on to the next one. Is the book they detest your childhood favorite? I see you, I feel you, I’ve been you. It stings when your daughter does NOT feel the same way about Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle as you did in second grade. Even worse when it’s From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankwieler. Just let them move on. It’s not worth the heartache of trying to convince them. Trust me, I know. Give them variety - and don’t talk down about their favorites. Allow them to read across a wide menu of options: graphic novels, comics, short stories, mysteries, picture books at an older age, a series that makes you want to roll your eyes. Not a fan of graphic novels or comics? Please don’t require “serious reading” before they get to something “fun.” That implies that some reading is automatically a drudgery - which will lead to avoidance altogether. Don’t overlook comics and graphic novels. Leaf through some at the library and see how they’ve evolved over the last decade. Comics are also shown to increase vocabulary, strengthen sequencing skills, and provide art education. Even better, comics and graphic novels can be a bridge for students with dyslexia, autism, and attention challenges. Don’t overlook them as a very helpful, brightly-colored tool in your reader’s toolbox! Remember - the goal is to get them reading to begin with and let them find what they love through the process. When I was a Wheaton Montessori School parent with young primary children, well before I took the AMI Elementary training, their teachers, Ms. Chiste and Mrs. Fortun, recommended “The Rights of the Reader” by Daniel Pennac during several of their parent workshops. I’d like to pass along the recommendation, as it has served my family - and teaching - for years now. Learning to love reading is a skill, just as reading itself is. Research is showing that we’re headed in the wrong direction, with just 1-in-3 public school fourth graders in Illinois reading proficiently, and college students at top universities being unable to follow or complete full books. Your chances and opportunities for “raising readers” are at-hand, so be off with you to the library! https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2024/11/the-elite-college-students-who-cant-read-books/679945/ https://www.illinoispolicy.org/literacy-epidemic-hits-illinois-as-fewer-than-1-in-3-students-read-well/
An adult guides a young child during a Montessori vocabulary lesson at a table with small baskets and materials.
By Rebecca Lingo April 6, 2026
Explore the Montessori three-period lesson and how its quiet simplicity unites words and meaning during a child’s sensitive period for language.