Drawing Development in Children
Drawing Development in Children
Drawing Development in Children
19/06/10 9:23 AM
Perspectives
2 years
Scribbling stage
First disordered scribbles are simply records of enjoyable kinesthetic activity, not attempts at portraying the visual world. After six months of scribbling, marks are more orderly as children become more engrossed. Soon they begin to name scribbles, an important milestone in development.
3 years
4 years
6 years
The schematic stage
The child arrives at a "schema," a definite way of portraying an object, although it will be modified when he needs to portray something important. The schema represents the child's active knowledge of the subject. At this stage, there is definite order in space relationships: everything sits on the base line.
8 years
10 years
12 years
The pseudo- naturalistic stage
This stage marks the end of art as spontaneous activity as children are increasingly critical of their drawings. The focus is now on the end product as they strive to create "adult-like" naturalistic drawings. Light and shadow, folds, and motion are observed with mixed success, translated to paper. Space is depicted as threedimensional by diminishing the size of objects that are further away.
14 years
16 years
The Landscape
By five or six, children develop a set of symbols to create a landscape that eventually becomes a single variation repeated endlessly. A blue line and sun at the top of the page and a green line at the bottom become symbolic representations of the sky and ground. Landscapes are compose carefully, giving the impression that removing any single form would throw off the balance of the whole picture.
After weeks of scribbling, Random scribbles begin children make the discovery of at age oneart: a drawn and-a-half, symbol can but quite stand for a real quickly take thing in the on definite environment. shapes. Circular form Circular becomes a movement is universal symbol first because for almost it is most anything. Later natural anatomically. symbols become more complex, reflecting child's observations on the world around him.
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19/06/10 9:23 AM
Copyright 1985 and 1987 Susan K. Donley, All Rights Reserved Adapted from teacher inservice training materials for early childhood, art education, and special education workshops.
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