A young toddler engaged in a Montessori transferring activity

Between 12 and 24 months, children are in a sensitive period for movement, for language, and for small objects simultaneously. They move constantly, absorb vocabulary at a remarkable rate, and are fascinated by anything small enough to pick up, move, and put somewhere else. Good Montessori activities at this age work with all three of these drives at once.

Transferring activities

Transferring, moving objects or liquids from one container to another, is one of the most developmentally rich activities you can offer a toddler. It develops the pincer grip, hand-eye coordination, concentration, and the capacity to complete a purposeful sequence from beginning to middle to end.

Progressions to try:

Present each new activity slowly, showing the complete movement without narrating it. Then invite the child to try. Step back. Resist the urge to correct or help unless asked.

Simple puzzle work

Knob puzzles, single-piece, large-knob puzzles with realistic images (a fish, a car, an apple), are excellent for this age. The knob develops the three-finger grip. The matching of shape to space develops spatial reasoning. The realistic image connects the activity to the real world.

Progress to multi-piece puzzles only when the single-piece work is completely mastered and no longer interesting. Pushing too soon creates frustration; offering too late produces boredom. Watch the child, they will tell you when they're ready for more.

Practical life: real tools, real work

One-year-olds are deeply interested in what adults do, and intensely motivated to participate in it. Channeling this motivation into practical life work is one of Montessori's most effective and inexpensive interventions.

Language activities

The language sensitive period is at full intensity between 12 and 24 months. The rate of vocabulary acquisition is extraordinary. The Montessori approach is not to drill or quiz, but to name things correctly and precisely in context.

Gross motor: purposeful movement

Toddlers need to move. The Montessori approach is not to contain this movement but to give it purpose: carrying things from one place to another, pushing and pulling carts, climbing low structures, or simply walking on a defined path (a line taped to the floor, walked with concentration and balance).

Line walking, following a line on the floor, eventually while carrying an object like a cup of water or a bell, is a classic Montessori gross motor activity that combines balance, concentration, and purposeful movement in a simple, endlessly repeatable format.