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Showing posts with label Inspiring creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inspiring creativity. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Nurturing Your Child's Creativity
“Preempt the time spent on television and organized activities and have them spend it instead on claiming their imaginations. For in the end, that is all we have. If a thing cannot be imagined first -- a cake, a relationship, a cure for AIDS-- it cannot be. Life is bound by what we can envision.
I cannot plant imagination into my children. I can, however, provide an environment where their creativity is not just another mess to clean up but welcome evidence of grappling successfully with boredom. It is possible for boredom to deliver us to our best selves, the ones that long for risk and illumination and unspeakable beauty.
If we sit still long enough, we may hear the call behind boredom. With practice, we may have the imagination to rise up from the emptiness and answer.”-- Nancy H. Blakey
Creativity might be defined as putting things together in novel ways, or seeing the world, or a given problem, with fresh eyes. All of us need access to creativity to solve the problems of daily life, and I believe that everyone is creative, although some people are born with talent in certain mediums: an artist’s eye, for instance, or perfect pitch, or a writer’s way with words.
We can’t give people talent, but we can train the eye and the ear and the mind, and we can help our children gain access to a creative way of seeing. We can also help them gain the concentration, competence, perseverance, and optimism necessary to succeed in creative pursuits.
Recent studies examining creativity have surprised researchers. The researchers began with the assumption that the kids recommended by their art teachers as most creative would be the “artist types” -- offbeat, disorganized kids who performed more poorly in other classes at school. They were wrong.
High School art teachers named as most creative the same kids who excelled at getting their work done in other classes. These kids exhibited concentration during demonstrations of technique, the competence to plan their projects, the optimism to take the risk of a more difficult or original idea, and the perseverance to put in the extra time required to do a thorough job completing the project. While this does not speak to talent, it highlights the point that putting creativity to use in the world requires the same qualities of competence addressed elsewhere on this site. It also implies that the same parenting that helps kids become emotionally healthy encourages creativity.
So how do you help your child develop his creativity?
1. Neatness is over-rated. Whether it’s because they’re afraid to get their hands dirty, or because they can’t leave their art supplies visible and easily accessible, or because they live by too many rules and don’t think outside the box, kids who live in households with a focus on neatness are rated as less creative. As Ms. Frizzle of the Magic Schoolbus says, “Take Chances! Get Messy!”
2. Children who experience frequent limits train themselves to think inside the box. Babies should learn NO about safety issues, like the stove. But otherwise, you want her to see the world as full of possibilities. Why NOTlet your baby empty the bookcase, or the kitchen cabinet? Why shouldn’t she “paint” the patio with a paintbrush and a pail of water?
3. Focus on play and process, not productivity. When kids do art to solicit positive comments from adults, sometimes they can’t wait to finish another picture. Obviously, it isn’t how many pictures they produce, it’s how engaged they are in the process. If you affirm how hard they’re working on that picture, they don’t have to rush through it to the next one for your approval.
4. Give your child permission to be different. Inventive, original kids are often seen as different by other kids. A little wacky, perhaps, or just plain odd. Make it okay for your child to be out of step with the norms of her peer group, to be unique, to see the world through her own glasses. To develop her individuality, she needs your support against the pressures of popular culture.
You’ll probably have to start by confronting your own fears about her not being “popular.” Don’t worry, at the high school reunion, it’s commonplace to find that the nerd has become a self-made millionaire, and that odd, silent girl is now a famous novelist.
5. Let toddlers experiment with manageable messes that they help clean up. Examples: water on the kitchen floor, bubbles on the porch, watercolors or chalk on the sidewalk (just get out the hose), food coloring in an unbreakable bowl with almost anything (snow, whipped cream, cornstarch or water). My daughter at age four loved breaking eggs to see what was inside; we occasionally let her smash them into a bowl.
6. Establish a place for art supplies early on, that is both easily accessible and neat. It should include drawers or bins for washable markers, paper, clay, and anything else you feel comfortable adding as your children get older (beads, collage materials, stamps and inkpads, etc.) I don’t suppose I need to say this, but coloring books don’t exactly foster creativity, plain paper is infinitely better. Blocks, with their infinite possibilities, generally offer more creative play opportunities than more sophisticated building materials. Many four year olds can build with blocks for hours every day; it helps develop mathematical, spatial and problem-solving abilities.
7. Make creative art play easy. If your child can initiate art activities without your help, he’s more likely to create art when the spirit moves him. The best gift we ever received was a small plastic tray for children to put their paper in as they work, but a designated cookie sheet with a rim works just as well. (You’ll need one for each kid, and to wash them after messy projects.) Kids can do art with no worry, since crayon marks, glitter, play dough, etc all have a contained space. You still need rules (“Playdough stays on the tray”, “Mom has to supervise pouring the glitter” “We always put newspaper down when we paint”) but creative arts become more a part of your child's everyday life, as they become "his."
8. Help your budding artist stay centered. From Vincent van Gogh to Sylvia Plath, the stereotype of artists being mentally imbalanced pervades western culture. It's possible that these examples of talent paired with emotional disturbance are simply coincidence. It's also possible that the agony of a painful childhood expresses itself best through art. It's possible that people who break with society to follow their own drummer are more likely to come unmoored. And it may even be possible, as some spiritual adepts say, that people who open themselves fully to the creative energy of the universe, without the emotional and spiritual maturity to handle it and without the guidance of a spiritual teacher, can be driven crazy.
Regardless, it can be argued that creative people may well need extra help to learn how to stay centered. You can protect your budding artist by helping her develop structures that support her.
Some ideas: Help her regulate her body clock so she doesn’t stay up all night painting. Teach her to meditate. Be sure she gets enough physical exercise to stay grounded. Promote a balanced diet sans caffeine. Introduce her to artists who have healthy, balanced lives, whether through biographies or movies or in the flesh. Make sure you’re there when she wants to talk.
And most important, introduce your child to the time-honored idea that creativity comes THROUGH us, not FROM us. The idea of the muse, of spirit looking for an artist to record that snatch of beauty to share with humanity, removes much of the stress of performance that otherwise dogs creative people. It also moderates the highs (which lead to arrogance) and lows (fear, shame, self-doubt) that pervade the creative life.
9. Don’t be afraid of boredom. Parents often respond to kids’ boredom by providing structured activities or technological entertainment. But unstructured time challenges kids to engage with themselves and the world, to imagine and invent and create. Kids need practice with unstructured time, or they will never learn to manage it.
Even more important, children need empty time to explore their inner and outer worlds, which is the beginning of creativity. So how to respond when kids complain that they’re bored? Help them brainstorm about possible activities, but make it clear that it’s their job to figure out how to enjoy their own time.
A crucial tip: It helps enormously to prevent kids from depending on TV or computer to entertain them. Kids who regularly use the TV or computer are more likely to feel bored than other kids, and even after eliminating the habit it can take months for them to find other activities about which they are passionate.
"The artist is not a special kind of person; rather each person is a special kind of artist." -- Ananda Coomaraswamy
Friday, October 28, 2011
Toys- a place to express thoughts and feelings for kids
Toys are familiar little joy, a treasure, desire, pride … of virtually every child in the world. Children need places, need a place to express thoughts and feelings. And toys world is a perfect source. They are easily get along with, playing together, or even thrown away indiscriminately.
If most of the toys are considered “learning tools” early in the first life, then children become familiar with the world, learn to behave, to receive and process information. Research has prove that all development is enhanced through a child’s play behavior, from the first months of life until he went to school. And each game, each toy, has different implications.
Development capacity awareness
Have the toy looks very simple but can make you forced to think and form links. Depending on your age and sex of the child that it may be dolls, soft toys, cars, sets and models … Playing with a set of such shapes, they will be gradually to learn their own conclusions as the circle can rolled and square can’t, or from some of dolls and toy children, baby could play buy goods, playing teacher … Thus, the toy plays a very important role in the development of children intellectual capacity, preparation for later life.
Inspiring creativity
Besides the development of cognitive skills for children, toys also create intellectual challenge – even though these challenges did not initially seem to help much for baby, but you will see its impact on the this, when I started school. You just try to observe children playing with Lego pieces, such as: first, the only known place them overlap, but then she will be able to create many different shapes. Imagination and creativity of the children were very differently.
Motor development
The physical development of children depends on us moving. Games such as puzzle, model or simply like playing modeling clay will help balance the development and awareness campaigns. In mind when creating the different models, the hands and feet – or rather the ability for motor of children – will also be trained to develop more. There are other games such as soccer, running, jumping rope … it is necessary to exercise the ability to mobilize crude.
Skills development
Providing the right kind of toys for children in the right age will help to provide both hard and soft skills – the first seed, but can say is most important for the mental development of children. These are language skills, emotional expression, social work skills … While children communicate with you, we will develop these skills, and then, higher, we will learn how to admit defeat, victory celebration, accepted the challenge … things essential for life in the future.
Playtime is fun time
Besides the benefits listed above, the toys and games help kids be themselves and enjoy the pleasures of childhood. That is the most important thing! Limited right to play and playing time will cause serious consequences on the development of children, as well as children’s behavior as adults.
Experts in child development frequently expressed concern that children today do not spend enough time to play in different age groups, or spend too much time to play the interactive games (like games electronics) than creative play, movement necessary. This situation can occur for many different reasons, both subjective and objective as there is no space, no time, parents are too busy doing, child was too busy learning …
But remember that only a simple block of wood can also be one of the best toys for children – it can help children develop their thinking, the ability to hand-eye coordination, creativity and many more. So, make a little more attention, spend time with his family to play together and encourage your kids use their imagination.
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