Why do adults are so involved in children’s drawings?

Toddlers and young children learn the world in their bodies by enjoying and propensity sensory, emotions, imagination, and balance. The signs they leave in the food that is smeared, in the sand of the sea, a line on the house wall, or on paper are manifestations of natural and curious learning. The toddler experiences cause and effect, creativity, and joy of discovering primary form structures and materials. The brain and bodywork mutually and learn. Thus random signs gradually and naturally become increasingly directed scribbles, shapes, and complex drawings. Toddlers and young children all over the world explore lines and points, shapes, and movements. And they will create compositions on paper, and thus, they study the world and express themselves cognitively and emotionally.
Four years old scribbling
Victor Lowenfeld, Rhoda Kellogg, Sylvia Fein, and others researched the developing stages of scribbles and drawing from toddlers’ first reactions to adolescents. They discovered the natural characterizations and stages of this brain-physical process. It evolves through gameplay and accumulating experience. The scribble stages are very important because the toddler begins to express and understand the cognitive, human, and universal forms during this time.
There’s no need to teach it, and it’s even harmful. It happens on its own similar to the way we learn to sit and walk. Children who naturally go through the process will develop independence and a sense of value.
The drawing of a four-year-old boy and the 3500-year rock carvings from Switzerland is based on the same mandala archetype we have all owned since the beginning of humanity. The process of any child is based on this rich heritage. Upon that, each child will develop their personal dictionary, which I title The Spiritual Blueprint.
It is a profoundly astonishing phenomenon that all children of the world in all cultures undergo the same natural and universal process in its stages: from leaving random signs to creating intentional lines, points, spirals, and compositions. Moreover, they will also discover and invent the three basic forms present in all human civilizations! Every girl and boy will discover and produce in their own time, naturally – a circle, square, and triangle.
There are fundamental differences between a toddler creating than an adult. The need to scribble in toddlers and children is related to physical pleasure and discoveries since they create a world.
And unlike us adults – children know nothing yet about art history and do not mean to create conscious dialogues and artistic connections. They are still in the discovery phase.
Nor do they necessarily try to communicate with others through scribbles. A child may look at a friend’s painting next to him at the table and imitate it, or he will draw something for his mother to make her happy – but that is not the main meaning of this activity. The main function is to learn the world at their own pace according to their personality, experimenting intimately with materials and working with other substances.
And they will build a dictionary of universal and personal shapes, forms, and choices that will grow and emerge. It is a deep process that is most necessary emotionally, cognitively, and technically.
What do children need?
A child needs permission to be himself. Our reactions to scribbles and drawings should be similar in engagement and quantity as we respond to the Lego game or the dolls. It is enough for the mother or kindergarten teacher to smile and say: I see you concentrate and enjoy what you do.
Tali Soffer, 2.4
Over-involvement of adults in the scribble stages
My impression over the years is that there are too many interventions in kindergartens and homes – around scribbles and paintings. Adults are much more involved in drawing and scribbling tables than in block building or doll games, where we usually let them play as they please. We may observe relationships and other matters, but this is not like the intense preoccupation around scribbling and painting. Too often, next to a scribbling child, an adult is seen demonstrating, talking, and asking, for example: What is this? What did you draw? Name the painting. Or he is praising some graphic form reminiscent of an image. And if he says it to the child, he might please others by creating another human figure or a cat instead of exploring his process.
For some reason, we become restless next to papers, colors, and pencils.
Several reasons for interventions in children’s drawings
1. Cultural conditioning: We are fascinated by marks on paper that represent images or something in reality
Many adults do not acknowledge the meaning of scribbles and therefore see them as coincidental or unintentional. They might think it’s preparation for something else and not a thing in itself. As mentioned above, we are fascinated by marks on paper that represent images, and therefore as adults, we aspire to create and understand images.
The moment a toddler points to several lines and says: “Dad!” – is an exciting family moment. This baby, in a word, made it clear to us that he connected a scribble to an image and even named it.
Creating an image and verbal meaning in a competitive Western society is perceived as high cognition.
The cultural conditioning that image and wording are important – creates the urge to expedite the children to get “there.”
That is what motivates us to rush a kid who started to close a shape to draw “a man,” even if he didn’t mean it yet.
From this impulse, we accelerate by demonstrations, too many praises, and suggestions.
2. The artistic medium, by nature, contains a physical product that remains after the play process has finished.
Block-building, playing with dolls once the imaginary game is over leave no physical outcome.
However, the scribbling actions leave a physical product that is a new object in the world. Somehow, this immediately creates a judgmental comparison of abilities and cognition of one child to all other children’s drawings in his kindergarten or his siblings. Ther is a secret graph of progress and comparison in our minds.
Doll playing does not evoke such harsh reactions from us.
Moreover, sometimes a child will be complemented by comparison to an artist: “He is a Picasso!”
Perhaps because it is an object of the same type, we compare a child to an artist, even though their starting point is completely different?
As a result, unconsciously, adults will try to expedite his work towards a more understandable figurative painting in terms of content.
3. Dormant anxiety that a child will not be ready for first grade and life.
Our toddlers are born into competitive capitalistic societies in which writing and reading are very important. Therefore, we perceive it as an important achievement if a toddler reads or writes letters as early as possible. Thus, in many kindergartens and homes, alongside scribble and drawing pages, there is a tendency to encourage reading and writing that is not in tune with natural development. They are asked to fill shapes with crayons, copy images, etc.
It’s an expression of the anxiety that creates the wish that a child will come with an advantage and be more prepared for their first-graders and life itself.
4. For us adults, pencil maintenance has been reduced to writing alone.
When I see parents in kindergarten, grandparents, members of an extended family, I notice how a pencil is immediately attributed to a named image or writing. Is it possible that it reminds us of only writing when a toddler holds a pencil and scribbles?
Perhaps it is because we forgot the free movement experience on paper?
And if we look at little children and even imitate them, can we reclaim forgotten magical experiences?
So what is recommended and what should we do?
First, we’ll calm down. We all inherited from our ancestors in the caves the human ability to create signs. According to education and learning studies, most children will learn almost by themselves to read and write easily and naturally around six. At this age, the brain is ready for it.
Therefore, our concern is unnecessary. From human DNA, every girl and boy will emanate lines, dots, spirals, snails, and the three basic forms, circle, square, and triangle, as will writing and reading come naturally in their time. There is no need to rush them to get there – but to allow them to discover the magic for themselves.
5.9 years old: “I am writing.”
Scribbles and drawings are the ancestors of writing and are also necessary there as such.
Early childhood is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity of happiness and creativity around scribbling in the paradise of being. Therefore, it is essential to permit them to discover this wonder for themselves.
For them, it will be a thrilling independent discovery of a whole new world, and for us, we can also experience a second childhood – if we can give them that permission.
Written as a part of the #GrammerOfDrawing project.
Italian translation Roberta Pucci
English and Swedish – Suzanne Axelsson.
Thank you for allowing me to share this vital information and clear and precise explanation of the importance of allowing children to develop drawing and mark making skills naturally.
I do have a question for you, I work in a kindergarten in Australia. The children I work alongside are aged 4-6. They are all at different stages in their development of drawing and mark making. Some of the children have asked to study images of various things and then like to reproduce the image. The images they look at vary from characters to chameleons. Some of the children put themselves under such pressure to get it right ( in their minds). We support by suggesting that it is important to see that this is “their’ drawing, it doesn’t and will not look the same as anyone else’s. By supporting the children’s choice to look at various images, are we putting them under unnecessary pressure?
Thank you in advance
Kylie
This is a very good question as it expresses how children are already in the game o doing the “right” thing according to the adult world.
When my daughters were young [today in their 40ies], from time to time, they asked: Draw me a bird, a car….
I would make a sign on their paper, a short line, a squiggle, and say, this is my bird today – how will your birds look?
Can you make more kinds of birds?
Can you fly around the room like a bird?
Now you can draw.
It is not that this always went smoothly, but I was persistent not to show how I do it. [I am an artist, so it is even more complicated]
Such questions will often convey the idea that the variety and my solution – an unrecognized image -scribble – calmed them down, and they came with rich ideas.
I would do the same in your case: let them move like a chameleon, a bird, and then draw. Transitions between modalities have a strong effect on playfulness and creativity!
Your task is to emphasize the variety of drawings and approaches and how many kinds of chameleons are here in the world
If it does not work, you can say that a Kamilion is a long roundish shape with legs, without showing on paper. Perhaps using your hands in wide movements