HOW TO #2: Plant coriander seeds at an allotment with seven small children aged eight months to four years old.

WHAT
Today Adrian, Suzie and I (Rachel) took the children in the buggies to do a Montessori-inspired planting activity at the allotment on Mudchute Farm. You can tell it's a Montessori activity by the lesson I give to the children first as their Montessori Teacher (Diploma), and by the practical nature of the activity (everyone at any age having a go with their own hands) as well as the teaching of/isolation of the specific physical hand gestures.
FIRST
First, Adrian, Suzie and I invited the children to sit around the big picnic table on our family allotment - Plot 62- at Mudchute Allotments. We have baby chairs attached to the table so all the adults and children can be seated together and everyone is safe and comfy.
I introduced the idea of growing coriander from seeds; how coriander is a herb, and can be used for cooking, the seeds can also be eaten raw (the children then selected some of the raw seeds for nibbling- which is fine as they are all edible).
Then I demonstrated the steps involved in planting the coriander seeds- fill up the plant pot nearly to the top with soil using two hands (one hand pinching of soil, the other hand holding the pot). The younger children are mostly sat at the table playing with bits of soil and empty plant pots at this stage. 🙂
MEANWHILE
The older children focussed on practising their pinching and sprinkling hand movements in the air -without the soil and seeds. Then, after everyone had the hand movements right, everyone filled their plant pots up with the soil and pinched up the seeds and sprinkled them into the plant pots. Meanwhile the eight month old and the one year old children filled/unfilled their plant pots repeatedly but that's fine.
I then showed the children how to do a two-handed pour with a little watering can in order to water their coriander seeds. The older children are familiar with practising a two handed dry pour in our Practical Life activities back at the classroom. Some children opted for little water sprayers, but they were quite tricky to use with little hands. So anyone under the age of 4 years old used the mini watering cans.
After watering the seeds, then everyone was done sitting down and we left the table for a bit of a dig in the general digging patch and found some worms. We found some puddled rain water and the older children enjoyed washing some worms. 🙂
After we had finished, we all tidied up the trowels, plant pots, diggers and watering cans into the allotment shed then left to go back to Jellybeans HQ for some lunch.
The children were excited to take their coriander plant pots home and to begin doing their daily watering routine.
CURRICULUM
One of the key features of the Cultural Area in a Montessori classroom is nature; giving children the opportunity to experience and love nature, to tend plants in the prepared environment. In doing so, Dr Montessori hoped the child would learn about growth, natural life cycles, caring for plants and be able to have a practical impact on the world they see around them. So too, Montessori’s post war aim - her Cosmic Plan - was that young children themselves were the hope for the future: through education the children would carefully tend their world, grow new opportunities and live harmoniously and sustainably together, become gardeners of the future. As such, the British allotment is the perfect place for a Montessori lesson, and for the furthering of Dr Montessori’s cultural Cosmic Plan. 🙂
