Encouraging Creativity
Unlike standard intelligence, creative thinking is the ability to not just find
the correct answer but to find new and unique solutions as well. A child with
strong creative thinking skills can think independently and is excellent at
working through difficult problems. Creativity is not limited to artistic ability.
It is a process of thinking that allows children and adults to openly explore
various outcomes and scenarios.
Creative children are typically eager to learn new things. It is important
to encourage creative thinking, especially in children under eight years old,
with a variety of stimulating toys and activities. Provide your child with
choices whenever possible and allow him to explore the many ways he can play
with a particular toy.
Help your child continue to develop their thinking process by asking open
ended questions. Expose him to various cultures and different people. Help
him to understand that there are usually numerous ways to solve a single problem.
As you and your child explore new outcomes, be sure to emphasis the thinking
process your child uses to arrive at an answer over the actual answer itself.
Children are always asking questions and attempting to understand things in
their world. Promote creative thinking by asking questions as well. Ask questions
that will cause your child think in new ways. Discuss what you would do if
it was always dark. Ponder the many different uses of a simple object like
a paperclip. Think about how everyday objects could be changed to make them
better. These types of questions make a child think more openly, helping him
to discover new ideas.
Reading books and telling stories also promote creativity. Read books with
characters that solve their problems in a unique way and discuss other ways
the issue could have been resolved. Have your child create a different ending
to a book by asking what if questions. Use puppet theaters to act out real
life scenarios, exploring the different ways various people may feel in a particular
situation.
Open ended art activities are wonderful ways to encourage creativity
in children. Provide your child with a wide selection of materials in various
textures, yarns, markers, and glue. Allow him to use things in whatever way
he would like and watch the outcome. Use sticks, clay, and wood scraps to
explore various ways of building.
Imaginative
play promotes creativity by allowing a child to express various
feelings that may result from a single action. Children can pretend to be an
animal and express how an animal would act if he was hungry. Building a make-believe
fort with blankets and chairs will help develop problem solving skills as a
child explores the various ways of placing the blankets to make the best fort.
Creativity is fostered through a child's ability to see that there is more
than one way to do something the right way. Encourage your child to ask questions
and to explore new possibilities. A creative thinker is much more adaptable
to change during the teenage and adult years. Creativity inspires humans to
test new ideas and further develop our society.
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