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Fostering Academic Creativity in Gifted Students (page 3)

By Kathy Goff|Paul Torrance
Educational Resource Information Center (U.S. Department of Education)

What can Parents do?

It is natural for young children to learn creatively by dancing, singing, storytelling, playing make-believe, and so forth. One of the first challenges to creativity may be formal schooling. By this time parents, as well as teachers, appreciate conforming behaviors such as being courteous and obedient, following rules, and being like others. While these are desirable traits to some extent, they may also destroy a child's creative potential. 

The following are some positive ways parents can foster and nurture the growth of creativity: 

  • Encourage curiosity, exploration, experimentation, fantasy, questioning, testing, and the development of creative talents. 
  • Provide opportunities for creative expression, creative problem-solving, and constructive response to change and stress. 
  • Prepare children for new experiences, and help develop creative ways of coping with them. 
  • Find ways of changing destructive behavior into constructive, productive behavior rather than relying on punitive methods of control. 
  • Find creative ways of resolving conflicts between individual family members' needs and the needs of the other family members. 
  • Make sure that every member of the family receives individual attention and respect and is given opportunities to make significant, creative contributions to the welfare of the family as a whole. 
  • Use what the school provides imaginatively, and supplement the school's efforts. 
  • Give the family purpose, commitment, and courage. (Torrance, 1969, p. 59) 

How Adults "Kill" Creativity:

  • Insisting that children do things the "right way." Teaching a child to think that there is just one right way to do things kills the urge to try new ways. 
  • Pressuring children to be realistic, to stop imagining. When we label a child's flights of fantasy as "silly," we bring the child down to earth with a thud, causing the inventive urge to curl up and die. 
  • Making comparisons with other children. This is a subtle pressure on a child to conform; yet the essence of creativity is freedom to conform or not to conform. 
  • Discouraging children's curiosity. One of the surest indicators of creativity is curiosity; yet we often brush questions aside because we are too busy for "silly" questions. Children's questions deserve respect. 
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