Maria Montessori observed that children who misbehave socially usually do so not because they are unkind, but because they have not yet been shown what to do. A child who pushes past another child in the doorway is not rude; they have simply not yet learned, in a real, practiced way, how to navigate shared physical space. Grace and courtesy lessons address this directly: they show the child exactly what graceful, courteous behavior looks and feels like, and they provide enough practice that the behavior becomes available when the real moment arrives.
Why explicit teaching matters
Adults often assume that children absorb social norms simply by being around well-mannered adults. Montessori challenges this assumption. Observation and absorption are not the same as practice and encoding. A child who has watched their parents say "excuse me" a hundred times has witnessed the behavior. A child who has practiced saying "excuse me" in a low-stakes, playful lesson has encoded it as something they themselves can do.
The distinction matters most in the moments when social skills are hardest to access: when the child is excited, frustrated, tired, or in a new situation. Under those conditions, deeply practiced responses are available. Passively observed behaviors are not. Grace and courtesy lessons do the encoding that passive observation leaves undone.
The format of a grace and courtesy lesson
Grace and courtesy lessons are typically given to small groups (two to four children) in a calm, unhurried moment. They are not given during or immediately after a social incident; they are proactive, not reactive. The format:
- The teacher names what they are going to show: "I'd like to show you how we walk past someone who is working on the floor."
- The teacher demonstrates, slowly and clearly, with another adult or an older child if possible: walking carefully around the seated person, making eye contact, saying "excuse me" if needed.
- The teacher invites the children to try: "Who would like to practice?" Each child who wants to try does so.
- The lesson ends briefly and without evaluation. There is no "great job!" or scoring. The practice itself is the point.
The lesson is then reinforced in the real environment. When a child is about to push past a seated classmate, the teacher does not correct or lecture. They quietly come close and say, softly: "Remember how we practiced walking around someone? Let's try that now." The lesson and the real moment connect.
What grace and courtesy lessons cover
The range of topics addressed through grace and courtesy lessons is wide. A well-prepared Montessori classroom will have introduced most of these by the end of the three-year primary cycle:
| Category | Specific lessons |
|---|---|
| Greetings | How to say hello and goodbye; how to shake hands; how to introduce yourself; how to welcome a visitor to the classroom |
| Physical navigation | How to walk past someone working on the floor; how to carry a chair without scraping it; how to move through a crowd; how to hold a door |
| Interrupting | How to interrupt politely (placing a hand on the adult's arm and waiting to be acknowledged); how to wait when someone is speaking |
| Sneezing and coughing | How to sneeze into the elbow; how to excuse yourself; how to blow your nose and dispose of the tissue |
| Conflict resolution | How to express frustration with words; how to negotiate use of a material; how to ask for help from a teacher when a conflict cannot be resolved |
| Care for others | How to comfort someone who is sad; how to ask if someone needs help; how to offer to share |
| Table manners | How to set a table; how to serve food to others; how to wait before eating; how to excuse yourself from the table |
| Care for the environment | How to clean up a spill; how to return a material to the shelf exactly as found; how to care for the classroom plants or animals |
Grace and courtesy and the prepared environment
Grace and courtesy lessons are inseparable from the prepared environment. A Montessori classroom functions as a self-regulating community in part because the social norms of that community have been explicitly established and practiced. Children who know how to navigate shared space, how to wait, how to ask, and how to offer help, create an environment where uninterrupted work is possible for everyone. The social curriculum is not separate from the academic curriculum. It is what makes the academic curriculum possible.
At home
You do not need a classroom to give grace and courtesy lessons. At home, the same principle applies: brief, explicit, practiced demonstrations of social behavior, given before the real situation arises rather than during it.
- Before a family gathering: "I want to show you how we say hello to Grandma when she arrives. Let's practice." Do a short role-play. The real greeting will be better for it.
- Before going to a restaurant: "Let's practice how we call the waiter over." Practice the gesture and the polite phrasing, without the pressure of the real situation.
- Before a friend comes to visit: "Your friend might want to play with some of your toys. Let's talk about what that might feel like and what we can do."
- Modeling, with narration: "I'm going to walk past your brother who's working on the floor. Watch how I walk around him." Naming your own behavior when you do it transfers the lesson without making it a lecture.
The key distinction between grace and courtesy at home and simply correcting your child's behavior is timing and tone. Corrections happen after the fact, during the charged moment, and often feel like criticism. Grace and courtesy happen before, in a spirit of preparation, and feel like a game.
The Montessori logic
Montessori believed that children want to behave well. Not perfectly, and not always, but the underlying drive is toward competence and belonging, toward being someone who can participate well in their community. Grace and courtesy lessons assume this goodwill and give it something to work with. Rather than punishing the child who does not know what to do, they show the child what to do and practice it until it is genuinely available. This is the Montessori approach to behavior: build the skill, and the need for correction diminishes.