Monday, September 25, 2017

SEPT: Imaginative Arts Inspirements


IMAGINATIVE ARTS
Diligence Leads to True Happiness

Week 4:
KNOWLEDGE: choose one of the following
-read the articles below about the power of Arts 
-watch Mom's presentation about the benefit of the Arts

UNDERSTANDING: “Do”: do each of the following:
*Find one of each of the following that captures what you learned about "diligence" this month.  Come prepared to share them with the class:
-song
-poem
-piece of art
*Be Diligent! Make sure your tome is complete with artwork for the different sections, artwork that captures how you feel about the different lenses.  Artwork that inspires you!

BECOME: “Be”
*Make a collage that captures who you are using pictures from magazines or online...be creative!

************************
ARTICLES:



The Importance of Art in Child Development

Toddler cutting paperIn recent years, school curricula in the United States have shifted heavily toward common core subjects of reading and math, but what about the arts? Although some may regard art education as a luxury, simple creative activities are some of the building blocks of child development. Learning to create and appreciate visual aesthetics may be more important than ever to the development of the next generation of children as they grow up.
Developmental Benefits of Art
Motor Skills: Many of the motions involved in making art, such as holding a paintbrush or scribbling with a crayon, are essential to the growth of fine motor skills in young children. According to the National Institutes of Health, developmental milestones around age three should include drawing a circle and beginning to use safety scissors. Around age four, children may be able to draw a square and begin cutting straight lines with scissors. Many preschool programs emphasize the use of scissors because it develops the dexterity children will need for writing.
Language Development: For very young children, making art—or just talking about it—provides opportunities to learn words for colors, shapes and actions. When toddlers are as young as a year old, parents can do simple activities such as crumpling up paper and calling it a “ball.” By elementary school, students can use descriptive words to discuss their own creations or to talk about what feelings are elicited when they see different styles of artwork.
Decision Making: According to a report by Americans for the Arts, art education strengthens problem-solving and critical-thinking skills. The experience of making decisions and choices in the course of creating art carries over into other parts of life. “If they are exploring and thinking and experimenting and trying new ideas, then creativity has a chance to blossom,” says MaryAnn Kohl, an arts educator and author of numerous books about children’s art education.
Visual Learning: Drawing, sculpting with clay and threading beads on a string all develop visual-spatial skills, which are more important than ever. Even toddlers know how to operate a smart phone or tablet, which means that even before they can read, kids are taking in visual information. This information consists of cues that we get from pictures or three-dimensional objects from digital media, books and television.
“Parents need to be aware that children learn a lot more from graphic sources now than in the past,” says Dr. Kerry Freedman, Head of Art and Design Education at Northern Illinois University. “Children need to know more about the world than just what they can learn through text and numbers. Art education teaches students how to interpret, criticize, and use visual information, and how to make choices based on it.” Knowledge about the visual arts, such as graphic symbolism, is especially important in helping kids become smart consumers and navigate a world filled with marketing logos.
Inventiveness: When kids are encouraged to express themselves and take risks in creating art, they develop a sense of innovation that will be important in their adult lives. “The kind of people society needs to make it move forward are thinking, inventive people who seek new ways and improvements, not people who can only follow directions,” says Kohl. “Art is a way to encourage the process and the experience of thinking and making things better!”
Cultural Awareness: As we live in an increasingly diverse society, the images of different groups in the media may also present mixed messages. “If a child is playing with a toy that suggests a racist or sexist meaning, part of that meaning develops because of the aesthetics of the toy—the color, shape, texture of the hair,” says Freedman. Teaching children to recognize the choices an artist or designer makes in portraying a subject helps kids understand the concept that what they see may be someone’s interpretation of reality.
Improved Academic Performance: Studies show that there is a correlation between art and other achievement. A report by Americans for the Arts states that young people who participate regularly in the arts (three hours a day on three days each week through one full year) are four times more likely to be recognized for academic achievement, to participate in a math and science fair or to win an award for writing an essay or poem than children who do not participate.
******************************************************
The New York Center for Arts Education lists benefits of exposing children to art:
  • Your kid learns to think creatively, with an open mind
  • Your kid learns to observe and describe, analyze and interpret
  • Your kid learns to express feelings, with or without words.
  • Your kid practices problem-solving skills, critical-thinking skills, dance, music, theater and art-making skills, language and vocabulary of the arts
  • Your kid discovers that there is more than one right answer, multiple points of view
  • School can be fun – playing can be learning
  • Your kid learns to collaborate with other children and with adults
  • Arts introduce children to cultures from around the world
  • Your kid can blossom and excel in the arts.  Even with physical, emotional or learning challenges, can experience success in the arts.
  • Arts build confidence.  Because there is not just one right way to make art, every child can feel pride in his or her original artistic creations.
  • Arts build community.  Schools with a variety of differences can celebrate the arts as one community.
According to Kimberly Sheridan, Ed.D., coauthor of Studio Thinking: The Real Benefits of Visual Arts Education, “”It’s not as easy to test the skills that children learn from the arts, but that doesn’t make them any less important”. She noted though that participating in a school arts program increases a child’s ability to:
  • Observe the world carefully and discard preconceptions in order to envision something and then create it
  • Go beyond just learning a skill to express a personal voice
  • Problem-solve and persist despite frustration and setbacks
  • Reflect on the results and ask what could improve them
Girl looking at art
Researchers from the Michigan State University have found a very strong correlation between childhood engagement in the creative arts and measurable success later in life. Children who were exposed to a wide variety of arts and crafts were more likely to create unique inventions that is worthy of patents, come up with ideas good enough to start a new company, or publish provocative papers on science and technology. The researchers suggest that children exposed to arts and crafts are able to think “out of the box” since a lot of working with hands involve figuring out how to solve problems creatively. After studying many scientists Co-authors Robert and Michele Root-Bernstein reached this conclusion: “The most eminent and innovative among them are significantly more likely to engage in arts and crafts avocations” than the average Joe.
Arts education and appreciation were also found to have benefits on young people’s brains. In a study by researchers from University of Kansas, students who were selected to visit a museum shows stronger critical thinking skills, displayed higher levels of social tolerance, exhibited greater historical empathy and developed a taste for art museums and cultural institutions.

Monday, September 18, 2017

SEPT: Eureka Vanguard Inspirements

I decided to use this blog for the weekly Inspirements for my Vanguard kids at home so these will be posted pretty regularly on this blog...

EUREKA!!
Diligence Leads to True Happiness

Week 3:
KNOWLEDGE: Consider the role of "diligence" as you study the following:
-Find a cool article on Astronomy in one of our books! (The Math Book, etc.)  Come prepared to share it.
-Find a "It's Okay To Be Smart" or similar short clip about Astronomy/Space and come prepared to share it.
-Read Chapter 2 of "Story of Science: Newton at the Center" by Hakim
-Watch this:
-Read Abraham Ch. 3

UNDERSTANDING: “Do”:
-Make a model or draw a picture of something you learned about this week
-Teach a class to younger kids about a concept you learned about using a prezi, visuals or activities
-Pretend that you are in the Middle Ages: which discovery would you want to have made and why?  Create a poem, prezi, song, skit or paper that shares your "experience of discovery" with us.
-Make a song or poem about something else that struck you in your studies this week
-Write a report on something you learned about and take your writing to a new level!  Ask mom how you can do this :D!

BECOME: “Be”
-Based upon what you learned this week, re-evaluate your goals and think of a way that you can commit to being more diligent.



Wednesday, September 6, 2017

"A Safe Place to Fail"

I posted this on my Lazarus blog, but felt impressed to share it here...

I often like to articulate what my purpose is in my different roles.  To write it down or say it out loud makes me clarify my thoughts amid the muddle that seems to keep me anxious about what my goals are when they are unclear and overwhelming.

Image result for image of shepherd pastureThis morning, I realized that one of my goals as a mother is to create an environment where my children can fail safely.  Where they can make mistakes, experience trials, grow and learn and experiment with different ideas that they feel they must pursue to become who they are.  For so long my goal has just been a safe place. Unfortunately, I have equated that with being safe from their own mistakes and the mistakes of others.  This is unrealistic and unhealthy.

Now, there are boundaries that I feel I must make to keep the environment as free from addictions as possible and that will change with the time and season, age and maturity, personality and needs of the child or children.  But I tend to take ownership for "mistakes" I see my children making. It struck me this morning that they need to make those mistakes and figure out how to overcome them internally...or at least develop a personal desire to overcome them from within and then they can turn to me or others for help.

My job is to be a cheerleader, have faith in them, express love and realistic expectations for them and correct them if their behavior is endangering themselves or others.  "Correct" doesn't have to equate "punish" as I have so often done.  I have been impressed recently in our "reading" (book on cd) of the "Little House on the Prairie" series.  This is my first time really reading them.  Their mother is quiet yet firm and I find myself guided by her more and more.  She is repetitive and firm in her expectations, but her statements are voiced in a quiet and loving way.  I tend to lace my voice with disappointment, scorn, frustration or even anger when I correct.  She simply stated it lovingly, firmly and quietly.

Image result for image of buildings walls of a citadel
Doing so seems to allow the words to penetrate deeper, without causing a defensive "throwing up" of defensive walls in response to the negative emotions I so often use in my communication with my children.  I have seen a difference in my children's response and behavior in the short while I have been trying this different approach to "reproving betimes (immediately) with sharpness (specificity)."  I am grateful that God gives me space to make mistakes, experience trials, grow and learn and experiment with different ideas that I come across.  It is only just that I should do it for my own children.

Interestingly, this concept was tested this morning. One of my older children awoke at 2:30 am and, unable to sleep, was reading still when I came in their room this morning at 6:30 am.  From personal experience, I know that this can lead to further insomnia.  However, I didn't feel the usual "put out the fire!!!!" response--to curb the behavior in the making--but simply shared my personal experience in a loving way, expressed empathy for the situation and walked away with love...trusting that the light of Christ within them would motivate change far better than any force I created.

Not an hour later, as I mused on the beauty of "a safe environment" and how important it would be for the healthy emotional development of my children, Spooner (4) came dashing into the bathroom to use the toilet.  Several minutes earlier, I had told him he should try to go, since he was dancing.  Well, he didn't.  As he made this mad dash in, he pulled up the lid to the toilet and said, "Uh-oh." I looked over to see him emptying his very full bladder along the side of the toilet, completely missing the bowl.

I lost it.

"That is so stupid!" I exclaimed and plopped him into the bathtub.  "You will wait there until I have time to clean up your mess!!!" Continuing to vent my frustration aloud, I finished braiding Hava's hair and then turned to the yellow pool.  When I took a breath and actually was quiet, a still, small voice whispered, "What was that you were saying about creating a safe environment to fail? Is this what it looks like?"

Pause.  Gulp.
I guess it should start from their first moments in the home.  Sigh.

I apologized to my little boy as I sopped up the mess, although my heart wasn't completely where it should have been.  But it was a step in the right direction.  I guess I am still failing at and learning this new concept :).  Thank goodness my kids are so forgiving.  Time to be more like a child, I guess.