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Creative and Imaginative Ideas for Children

By L.C. Edwards
Pearson Allyn Bacon Prentice Hall

The ideas in this article provide children the opportunity for a variety of experiences and imaginative expression through three-dimensional art. Each child’s own creative effort must be accepted regardless of how meager a product may appear. Your role is primarily that of encourager, facilitator, and resource.

Clay

An Imaginary Lump of Clay

To help get your children’s attention, before starting this activity, read one of the books listed in the Children’s Literature and Three-Dimensional Art box.

Procedure

1.Read a story about clay to your children.

2.Talk to your children about what it might feel like to be clay. Discussion can center on how clay feels, what you can do with clay, what makes clay get hard and dry, and what happens when you add water to clay. Encourage your children to add their own ideas and comments about the properties and uses of clay.

3.Tell your children that they are going to pretend to be little lumps of clay and to imagine that they can roll themselves into a big ball. The following script is a guide to this process:

You are all wet, lumpy balls of clay. Imagine what shape you would like to become, and then move your bodies in ways that help you make yourself into your own special shape. When you have created just the shape you want, try to be real still for just a few minutes so you can pretend to let your clay start to dry and get a little harder. Now, look around the room at all the shapes we have. In just a minute it will be time to be lumps of clay again. Pretend that someone is pouring imaginary water on you so that you will become nice and soft again.


4.Follow up the activity with conversations about what it felt like to pretend to be clay. Were there any shapes that could have had names? Was it hard to be still long enough to dry? If the “shapes” could have been placed somewhere in the room for others to see, where would they like to have been placed?

Clay Impressions

For this activity, you and your children will need a variety of objects for making impressions in soft, malleable clay. Some objects you will want to collect include

  • old keys of different sizes and shapes
  • toothbrushes, combs, clothespins, and objects from nature, such as pinecones, shells, rocks, and sticks
  • blocks of different shapes, forks and spoons, and other “found” objects that the children think hold possibilities for making clay impressions

Procedure
Encourage your children to select different objects and experiment with what happens when they press the object into the clay. Have a variety of objects available for the children to create designs of their choice in their own lump of clay. Point out to your children that they can change the shape of their clay to fit their ideas of different ways of making impressions.

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