Promoting Creativity in Your Child

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Promoting creativity in children requires time and patience. It requires not answering every question a child asks, but asking children what their thoughts are about the question. It requires believing in and supporting your child’s natural desire to explore and be curious. Here are some suggestions for nurturing creativity in your child:

Picture this. With young children, picture books are a great way to start. Look at the pictures together, then ask your child what he thinks is going on. Ask him to make up his own story about what he thinks is happening in the book. Show your appreciation for your child’s version of the story. Explain that there can be many different stories for the same book.

Make it safe to dream. Ask your child to imagine things he would like to do or places he would like to go. On the way to child care or school, point at the clouds and talk about what birds or astronauts might see if they were looking down from there. Do they see the clouds, or are they too far away? Everyday sights are a chance to explore the unknown: I wonder if the people who operate that pizza restaurant ever go to Italy. Do you think they serve the same kind of pizza in Italy? Maybe we can go there someday.

Encourage experimentation (the safe kind). Children love to express themselves with words, art, music and movement. Let them. Often, their satisfaction is in the process, not the product. With the emphasis on academics in schools these days, giving children the opportunity to “let themselves go” in artistic exploration can be very important in releasing the stress they may experience throughout their day. It may also play a critical part of their ability to do some of their school work. A little swing dancing can make sitting at the table and doing math problems a little more palatable.

 

This article was culled from Leap Frog

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