|
|||||||||||||||
| : About Us : Contact Info : Login : Products : Register : Resources : Site Map : Sample Workshops : | |||||||||||||||
| < Home < Sample Workshops < Expressive Arts Workshop Sample | |||||||||||||||
Overview of ArtExpress and Young Children*Please Note- This page is a SAMPLE page of what the Software Evaluation Workshop has to offer. To view the rest of the workshop, you will need to register and log in. Art, music, dance, and dramatics (the expressive arts) not only provide important content, but they also serve as a vehicle for serious learning for children of all ages and abilities. The expressive arts offer important opportunities for:
Expressive arts contribute to healthy development and learning. Children exhibit cognitive changes due to participation in expressive arts activities. Moreover, the expressive arts aid both written and spoken communication and enhance social development. The arts are far more than just something for children to do to keep busy, or something to keep children quiet and occupied while adults do other things, or a way for children to learn to follow directions.
|
|||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
Producing art requires that children think of an experience, idea, or feeling and then create symbols to express it. Being able to think about something not present and then express it visually is a major cognitive accomplishment for young children (Golomb, C. (1992). The Child's Creation of a Pictorial World. Berkeley: University of California Press). As children create art, they must organize their thoughts and actions into patterns and symbols. As children create art they:
Children also develop perceptual sensitivity to their world, and perceive likenesses, differences, shapes, sizes, textures, and colors as they create art. When the product is complete, it communicates to others, just as oral language does. Childrens thoughts, feelings, and experiences are now shared visually with others.
![]() |
![]() |
| Children's Artwork- Examples of Differing Interpretations of a Ladybug | |
![]() |
|
Eisner (Eisner, E. (1979). The contribution of painting to childrens cognitive development. Journal of Education, 164, 227-237) identified nine cognitive changes that take place through painting activities. Many of these changes center around symbol development and also take place in other expressive arts activities.
Children learn about patterning and sequencing through the arts. Beats and rhythms have patterns children can clap or tap. Sequencing, an important literacy skill, is learned through hands-on activities. For example, a child can discover that in order to make play dough, certain things must happen in a certain order.
Dry ingredients must be measured and mixed. Measured wet ingredients are added to the dry ingredients and mixed. A transformation takes place. The dough must then be kneaded to get the proper consistency.
The natural order of events leads to a knowledge of sequences for children to observe and point out to others.
Children with cognitive disabilities feel successful in the arts when activities are appropriate for their developmental age. Some young children progress through developmental stages more slowly than their same-age peers. They may require more time and adult support to be successful using materials. Repeating the same activity often is one of many helpful strategies. A flexible schedule, free choice activity times, and an emphasis on concrete learning will encourage:
| Communication |