Module 1 ED206
Module 1 ED206
CREATIVITY
Overview
Creativity begins very early in life. Young babies explore the sounds made by a
rattle; a toddler makes marks with mud, crayons or even food. Preschoolers take
time making images that are meaningful to them, they become absorbed in
making music and singing and moving their bodies in new and wonderful ways.
Creativity is high during the early years and children will find many ways of
expressing it. The involvement of children in sensory experiences and the
creative arts during the early years increases sensory awareness and provides a
firm base for future creativity and learning.
Research into creativity has focused on the creative process and this unit
introduces you to the four steps in the creative process developed by Wallas in
1926. You will also discuss the four components of the creative process as they
relate to young children.
Most early childhood teachers believe in providing creative activities for young
children. This course introduces you to the process approach to creative
expression. The process approach* emphasises the involvement, the movement
and the discovery involved in active hands-on doing, exploring and
experimenting with sensory activities, clarifying a problem and producing a
solution. As children become more skilled in using materials and in planning,
they may become more interested in the end product. This focus should come
from the child and not from a teacher imposing ideas on the child.
It is important for teachers to provide an environment that fosters creativity.
They must also include creative arts in their daily programme. The creative arts
include dance, drama, music, visual arts and literature. They offer an opportunity
for creative expression, for children to discover and express their own creativity.
However, they also offer opportunities for children to:
All children and adults have the potential to be creative. The process of
discovering this creative potential is on-going throughout life. The people,
places, objects and experiences we meet in life can enhance this potential and
keep the spirit of creativity alive. Alternatively, the people, places, objects and
experiences we encounter might also kill creativity. The way we express
creativity depends on the talents we are born with, the motivation to do
something or make something, having an interest in what we are doing and also
in having the opportunity to be creative.
In this unit we will focus on creativity and how it relates to you and the young
children you teach.
For the purpose of this module we will use the definition from your text.
For example, Kalina and Roy are playing in the sand and want to make a pen for
the pigs. They don’t have any blocks or pieces of wood to use. They look around
and come back with some pieces of coral and empty plastic bottles. They stack
the small pieces of coral on top of one another to make the fence and use the
bottles as rolling gates between one pen and the next. In this example, the
children have a problem with their plans and think of a way to solve it. They are
free to be flexible with the materials they have and take steps to solve the
problem by combining the junk materials in their own way.
An on-going debate exists over what is more important, is it the process how
children do something or the finished product? The process is seen as a series of
stages or steps used in clarifying a problem, working on it and producing a
solution. The creative product is what is produced- a painting, a dance, a drama
or a new weaving pattern.
The creative process has certain characteristics that make it different. Looking at
something in an original way; Kalina and Roy used plastic bottles for gates. It
involves a free flow of many ideas and thoughts - children writing a story have
many ideas that seem to bubble up freely. Another characteristic is flexibility-
looking at problems from different perspectives and coming up with something
Theoretical perspectives on
creativity and development
In this section we look at how learning and development theorists have discussed
creative thinking. We begin by looking briefly at humanist theories and the
psychologically safe environment. This will be followed by cognitive
development and the theories of Piaget (1969) and Vygotsky (1978) and the
multiple intelligence theory of Gardner (1993).
Young children need unconditional love and acceptance from important people in
their lives. This includes family members, relatives, friends and teachers
showing active interest in what children are doing, encouraging them to try new
experiences and giving children responsibility for making choices.
Young children will be creative on their own. They will find things to explore
and ways of expressing themselves. However, creative development will flourish
and children will reach higher levels of personal fulfillment and thinking when
creativity is nurtured. Creative arts offer children the chance to make something
on their own, to share the experience with others and to feel good about
themselves and what they have accomplished. This in turn motivates children to
keep trying new things.
The concrete operational child is faced with the challenge of communicating their
mental representations in academically and culturally appropriate ways - learning
to communicate through the written word. In the visual arts, children show a
strong desire to achieve accuracy. There is often a decrease in drawing activity
and an increased interest in what others think of their drawing or other artistic
endeavors (Wright, 1991). The creative arts offer ways for children to
symbolically represent their thoughts and ideas thus promoting intellectual
development.
The social constructivist theory of Vygotsky is based on the belief that learning is
embedded in the social context. Through talking, discussion, listening and
problem solving children develop new concepts and skills. The creative arts offer
children socially meaningful activities with opportunities to talk, discuss, listen
and gain new insights into their world and the thoughts and ideas of others.
Teachers who realise the importance of socially shared learning in cognitive
development will ensure children are able to work together on activities and
projects that are within their zone of proximal development.
Over their life time children become competent in using symbol systems of their
culture and of others. They learn to read and make pictures, to move and dance,
to be involved in socio dramatic play and music making. Young children use
these symbol systems to understand themselves and their world. High quality
learning experiences help to shape this development.
Existential Thinking about life and death, contemplating why we are here
and what is true.
The theory of multiple intelligences offers a wider view of intelligence and has
implications for the way we work with children.
All children are different and they come to us with different intelligences
developed - some may be verbally or mathematically inclined while others may
be musically or visually developed. We must respect their differences and
encourage children to use their individual strengths by planning experiences that
include different intelligences.
The more intelligences included in an activity, the greater the chance that children
will have success. We must also offer children choices of activities that fit with
their interests and their learning styles. As teachers try new ideas and approaches
to curriculum they will ensure that a variety of intelligences are supported
through appropriate activities.
The human brain is made up of two hemispheres, the left hemisphere and the
right hemisphere, connected by the corpus callosum*, a thick branch of nerves
that provides communication between them. These two hemispheres are
specialised and process information differently – the right specialises in spatial
relationships, shapes and patterns, singing, music and movement, art and
creativity. The left brain specialises in handwriting, language, reading, following
directions, listening and maths.
Affective development
Learning and meaning come to us through three main sources:
Cognition;
Affect (emotion); and
Physical skills and movement.
The combination of thought, feelings and action form the basis of our holistic
approach to learning and development. The creative arts in particular foster the
The creative arts offer many opportunities for children to express feelings, they
are able to look inwards and get in touch with emotions. In this way they are able
to recognise, experience and express emotions in safety– beating a drum when
you feel angry, smiling with joy as you move to music.
Children need cognitive, social, and affective skills to operate in the world. The
arts and creative experiences nurture all areas of development.
In this example, Jane and Liku are expressing their creativity in block play.
There are many ways that children express their creativity. These include play,
thinking, language, music and movement as well as the visual arts. Edwards
(2006) refers to these experiences as the “Arts”. She breaks the arts into the
following categories:
Music: sound, pitch, rhythm, singing, playing, musical games, listening, creative
movements - singing new songs, creating their own songs, following the beat,
discussing different pieces of music with children.
Visual Arts: self-expression, visual and tactile art, print and craft media, artistic
analysis and interpretation, two dimensional (drawing, painting, printing,
weaving) and three dimensional (modeling, sculpting, construction) - discussing
In the last section of the unit we looked at creative arts and brain development. It
has been found that curriculums with an integrated approach to the arts have a
profound effect on children’s engagement in learning, their motivation,
cooperative skills and the development of thinking skills.
In the next unit we will look more closely at the creative teacher and how you can
provide an interesting and challenging curriculum to support creative
development.
Gardner, H. (1993). Frames of Mind. (10th Ed.) New York: Basic Books.
Isbell, R. T. and Raines, S. C. (2007) Creativity and the Arts with Young
Children. Canada: Thomson Delmar: Learning.
Maslow, A. (1970). Motivation and Personality. New York: Harper and Row.
Piaget, J. & Inhelder, B. (1969). The Psychology of the Child. New York: Basic
Books.
Schirrmacher, R. (2006). Art and Creative Development for Young Children 5th.
New York: Thomson Delmar Learning.
Sousa, D.A. (2006). “ How the Arts Develop the Young Brain”, The School
Administrator, December 2006.