Creativity
is the best original form of self-expression. There is nothing more satisfying
and fulfilling for children than to be able to express themselves openly and
without judgment. The ability to be creative, to create something from personal
feelings and experiences, can reflect and nurture children's emotional health.
The experiences children have during their first years of life can
significantly enhance the development of their creativity.
![]() |
| Fostering Creativity |
Importance of the Creative Process
All children need to be truly creative is the freedom to
commit themselves completely to the effort and make whatever activity they are
doing their own. What's important in any creative act is the process of
self-expression. Creative experiences can help children express and cope with
their feelings. A child's creative activity can help teachers to learn more
about what the child may be thinking or feeling. Creativity also fosters mental
growth in children by providing opportunities for trying out new ideas, and new
ways of thinking and problem-solving. Creative activities help acknowledge and
celebrate children's uniqueness and diversity as well as offer excellent
opportunities to personalize our teaching and focus on each child.
Opportunities for
Creativity
Children need plenty of opportunities for creative play and
creative thinking. Start by providing activities that are based on the
children's interests and ideas. This means learning how to listen intently to
what children are saying. It is very helpful to tape record and transcribe
children's conversations as well as take notes and review them with your
co-teachers.
Be sure to offer children a wide range of creative materials
and experiences. Being creative is more than drawing or painting. There's also
photography, music, field trips, working with wire, clay, paper, wood, water or
shadows. The possibilities are endless. It's important to provide children lots
of time to explore materials and pursue their ideas. This includes time to
think about how to plan, design, construct, experiment and revise project
ideas. Don't forget to build in time to talk these ideas over with other people
- both teachers and children.
A myriad ways to
measure Experience
Look for ways to provide multi-ethnic, multi-cultural and
other community experiences for children. Activities such as field trips,
celebrating holidays and activities with other ethnic groups, and encouraging
children to bring visitors to school enhance the creative process. The more
varied experiences children have in their lives, the wider the range of
creative expression. The more personal experiences children have with people
and situations outside of their own environment, the more material they can
draw on to incorporate in their play. Our challenge is to try not to be
intimidated by the variety and diversity of artistic expression in our
classroom.
Fostering the
Creative Process
Encouraging children to make their own choices is important.
Children should be permitted frequent opportunities - and lots of time - to experience
and explore expressive materials. Put your emphasis on the process of
creativity and not on the finished product. What children learn and discover
about themselves is vital to their development. Show your support for the
creative process by appreciating and offering support for children's efforts.
Independence and control are important components in the creative process. This
is especially true when working with children with disabilities.
Creative Play
One of the most important types of creative activity for
young children is creative play. Creative play is expressed when children use
familiar materials in a new or unusual way, and when children engage in
role-playing and imaginative play. Nothing reinforces the creative spirit and
nourishes a child's soul more than providing large blocks of time to engage in
spontaneous, self-directed play throughout the day. Play is the serious
business of young children and the opportunity to play freely is vital to their
healthy development.
Even as early as infancy, play fosters physical development
by promoting the development of sensory exploration and motor skills. Through
play and the repetition of basic physical skills, children perfect their
abilities and become competent at increasingly difficult physical tasks. Play
fosters mental development and new ways of thinking and problem solving.
Through block play, children are confronted with many mental challenges having
to do with measurement, equality, balance, shape, spatial relationships and physical
properties.
One of the strongest benefits of play is the way it enhances
social development. Playful social interactions begin from the moment of birth.
Dramatic play helps children experiment with and understands social roles. It
can also give them countless opportunities for acquiring social skills as they
play with others. Through dramatic play, children gradually learn to take each
other's needs into account, and appreciate different values and perspectives.
Through play, children are able to express and cope with
their feelings. Play also helps relieve stress and pressure for children. They
can just be themselves. There's no need to live up to adult standards during
play. Play offers children an opportunity to achieve mastery of their
environment. They control the experience through their imaginations, and they
exercise their powers of choice and decision-making as the play progresses.
Play helps develop each child's unique perspective and individual
style of creative expression. Play expresses the child's personal, unique
responses to the environment. Play is a self-expressive activity that draws on
the child's powers of imagination. Play is open-ended, free-form and children
have the freedom to try out new ideas as well as build on and experiment with
the old.
Play provides an excellent opportunity for integrating and
including children with disabilities in your program. The opportunities play
provides for control and independence are important issues for any child but
are especially important for these youngsters.
What are some of the ways we can encourage play in our
classrooms? As caregivers, we must be careful to avoid dominating the play
ourselves. Play should be the result of the children's ideas and not directed
by the adult. Through play, we should try to foster children's abilities to
express them. We should also try to help children base play on their own
inspirations - not ours. Our goal ought to be aimed at stimulating play - not
control it - and to encourage children's satisfaction in playing with each
other.
Pay attention to play, plan for it, and encourage it. Learn
how to extend children's play through comments and questions. Stimulate
creative ideas by encouraging children to come up with new and unusual uses of
equipment. Try to remain open to new and original ideas, and encourage children
to come up with more than one solution or answer. Be careful about
over-restricting equipment and make sure to have play materials quickly
available when children want them. Buy and use equipment in ways that encourage
the use of imagination. Avoid toys and activities that spell everything out for
the child and leave nothing to the imagination. Provide children with a good
range and balance of equipment, and keep equipment exciting by changing it
frequently or changing its location.

No comments:
Post a Comment