Creativity and the Arts

Early Learning to Last a Lifetime

By Dr. Sue Snyder

We adults have so many pressures on our daily decisions about young children, and our choices will impact our children’s entire lives. Should the arts be part of your daily plans? Why?

Research tells us that when children have different, novel experiences, their brains grow, and that sound, movement, images, and words stimulate different parts of the brain. When we provide experiences in music, movement, visual art, and expressive language, we help children build brains that are ready to learn. Creativity combines skills that include problem solving and making new patterns out of known elements. When we provide open-ended arts experiences that offer the opportunities to combine elements and solve problems, the arts become a lab for learning how to learn.

You will find that the most important activities are simple and fun. With young children, you may need to model behaviors, and they will imitate. But they become the leaders quickly, and you'll be amazed at how you grow together! Because there are no right answers… but only possibilities… the arts provide their own novelty and intrinsic reward. Remember: the process is more important than the product.

Here are a few ideas to get you started:

Sound/Music experiences:

Image/art experiences:

Movement experiences:

Word experiences:

When you encourage these open-ended types of activities in which there are no right answers, you help build the child's ability to cre patterns. The brain seeks pattern to learn. So developing creativity through the arts is not an option; it is essential. The arts open the door to learning for a lifetime.