Art promotes young children's ability to explore concepts, emotions and perspectives. It supports fine motor skills, hand-eye coordination and complex decision making. Art is an identity, emergent self-regulation and sensory processing (McArdle & Boldt, 2018). For inclusive students who may have less verbal expression or neurodivergent learning styles, art is often their voices. Art nurtures multiple correct responses and a growth mindset. When children create what they know, they inadvertently experience math patterns and scientific explorations,investigations, and narrative inquiries (Church, 2020).
Theories and Perspectives
Vygotsky's sociocultural theory dictates that art is symbolic cognition (adult scaffolding in artistic achievement helps) (Zhou et al., 2019). The Reggio Emilia philosophy relies on one of "the hundred languages of children" being artistic (Rinaldi, 2018). Children are not born creative according to McArdle (2020); they need time, space and materials to discover and become creative. Piaget posited constructivist classrooms wherein children create mental schemas learned through drawing, painting and sculpting gleaned through sensory explorations.
Resources and Technologies
An ideal creative art area would have an excess of open-ended natural resources: paint, recycled goods, clay, pastels, textiles, in addition to light tables and nature-inspired materials for sensory experiences. Procreate, Tayasui Sketches, and Book Creator aid in multimodal creations. Seesaw serves as a digital documentation tool through which children may showcase their artistic endeavors. Technology should be purposefully used to supplement—not usurp—hands-on activities (Woods, 2023). Materials should be rotated to encourage varying ways of thinking while inquiry and reflection should be ongoing.