Montessori Mom

Lesson of the Day 60: Bead Chains — Skip Counting and the Power of Numbers

Published on: May 05, 2026

Lesson of the Day 60: Bead Chains — Skip Counting and the Power of Numbers

"The hands are the instruments of man's intelligence." — Maria Montessori

Bead Chains are one of the most beautiful and powerful materials in the Montessori math curriculum. These colorful chains of beads help children discover skip counting, multiplication, squaring, and cubing — all through hands-on exploration. When a child counts every bead on the hundred-chain and places a numbered arrow at each ten, they're building a concrete understanding of our number system that no worksheet could ever match.

Materials Needed

Age Range

4½ – 7 years (introduced after the child is comfortable counting to at least 20 and has worked with the Spindle Boxes)

Presentation: The Short Bead Chain of 5

We recommend starting with the five-chain because the pattern of fives is intuitive and connects naturally to how children already count on their fingers.

  1. Invite the child: "Today I'd like to show you something special — the bead chain of five." Carry the chain and the five-square to the mat together.
  2. Lay the chain straight: Gently stretch the chain out on the mat in a long line. Count each bead together: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5… 6, 7, 8, 9, 10… all the way to 25.
  3. Fold at the turns: Show the child how the chain folds back at each bar of 5. "See? Five, then five more, then five more…" Fold the chain into a square shape — five bars of five. "Look — it makes a square! Five times five is twenty-five."
  4. Place the arrows: Unfold the chain again. Place the arrow marked "5" at the fifth bead, "10" at the tenth, "15" at the fifteenth, and so on through "25." Read the arrows together: 5, 10, 15, 20, 25.
  5. Skip count together: Touch each arrow and count by fives. "You just counted by fives — that's called skip counting!"

Extending the Work

Once the child is comfortable with short chains, they naturally want to tackle longer ones:

  • The Hundred Chain: Ten bars of ten beads, stretching across the room. The child places arrows at every ten (10, 20, 30…100) and discovers that 10 × 10 = 100. This is often a landmark "wow" moment.
  • The Thousand Chain: The ultimate bead chain challenge — 1,000 beads long! Children work on this over multiple days, placing arrows and discovering that 10 × 10 × 10 = 1,000. The physical length of this chain makes large numbers real.
  • Connect to squaring and cubing: Show how the short chain of 5 (25 beads) matches the five-square, and the long chain of 5 (125 beads) matches the five-cube. This plants early seeds of algebraic thinking.

Why Bead Chains Work

Bead chains succeed because they make abstract number relationships physical. A child who has counted every bead on the thousand-chain understands the magnitude of 1,000 in a way that a child who has only seen the numeral never can. The color-coding (matching the Hundred Board and other Montessori math materials) creates consistency across the entire curriculum.

Bead chains also build perseverance — counting to 1,000 is a genuine accomplishment that children take deep pride in. Watch for the moment a child finishes their first thousand-chain and calls everyone over to see!

Connecting the Montessori Math Sequence

Bead chains fit into the broader math curriculum alongside several other materials your child may already know:

Tips for Parents

  • Space matters: Bead chains need room. Clear a long stretch of floor — the hundred chain is about 6 feet long, and the thousand chain needs a hallway!
  • Don't rush: Let the child count at their own pace. Even if it takes 30 minutes to count the hundred chain, the concentration practice is as valuable as the math.
  • Make arrows together: If you don't have printed arrows, make your own with our math printouts — writing the numbers is an additional learning opportunity.
  • Celebrate the milestones: When your child finishes a long chain, take a photo of them next to it. These are memories worth keeping.

Bead chains show children that mathematics isn't something to be feared — it's something to be explored, one bead at a time. 🐕

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