HEALTHY KIDS
Creative Kids How to Nurture Imagination
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by Ronica OâHara
Young children are naturally curious and inventive, yet research shows that their creative thinking skills peak at around age 6 and start to decline once they start formal schoolingâa trend thatâs accelerating in recent years with kidsâ heavy digital use. This doesnât bode well for their future on our rapidly changing planet. âOur world continues to evolve at an unprecedented rate. Itâs estimated that many of the jobs we will need in 10 or 20 or 30 years havenât yet been invented,â says childrenâs education psychologist Charlotte Reznick, Ph.D., author of The Power of Your Childâs Imagination. âKids of today need to stretch their creative juices to come up with these new jobs and prepare for an ever-challenging and changing world.â Parents are integral in nourishing creativity, but according to research from the Lifelong Kindergarten Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab, the role of parents is less about âteachingâ creativity and more about creating a fertile environment in which creativity will take root, grow and flourish. Establishing that rich forum involves some simple strategies. 32
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Encourage their curiosity. âAn attitude of curiosity connected to wonder, acceptance, flexibility and openness can bring out innovation and novelty,â says Reznick. That means not only being responsive to kidsâ questions like, âWhy do strawberries have seeds on the outside?â but also engaging their imagination to explore the world and to solve everyday problems. âAsk them, âWhat would it take to finish this project?â Make it fun, brainstorm and mind-map, rather than make linear lists,â she suggests. âAsk open-ended questions, perhaps a bit out of the norm. âHow did you feel when you were
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