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The Arts – A Creative Solution For Curiosity

How Getting Crafty With Parenting Benefits Young Minds

CULTURE
LEARNING

3 MINS READ

Virtual Reality Experience

DATE

MARCH 20, 2025

AUTHOR

World of Us

The World of Us Info editorial team comprises a global network of creative minds, makers, writers and industry experts. The team strives to research with enquiry and openness at its core, while constantly searching for opportunities to exchange knowledge and expand as a community.

IMAGE

Artist: Lorenzo Mattotti

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We love gaming at World of Us, but our work would be nothing if it wasn’t for the arts. But how soon is too soon to introduce this world of colour, music and craft to your kids? 

As the tech around us continues to grow and unlocks new creative solutions, we sometimes lose sight of the very accessible—and playful—creative opportunities young kids can benefit from offline. Whether through music, painting, drama, dance, or storytelling—can shape their cognitive, emotional, and social growth in large and unexpected ways. In fact, incorporating the arts into a child’s early life is not just beneficial but essential for their overall development.

When young minds can’t explore their curiosities, they can’t bloom into their full potential. When children are encouraged to express themselves creatively, they not only have fun but also strengthen their cognitive abilities. When it comes to the more science-y side of childhood development, it’s important to know that creative activities like drawing, singing, or acting stimulate both hemispheres of the brain—so problem-solving, critical thinking, and decision-making can come to life.

Through open creative expression, children learn to think outside the box. A young child painting can’t perfectly recreate what they see around them each day. Instead, young children interpret what they see and know with their own—often bold—lens of colours, shapes, and patterns. By exploring this from a young age they can develop stronger awareness skills, and better understand how things interact around them. 

Often, children may not have the vocabulary to articulate their feelings, but through painting, music, or storytelling, they can express emotions like joy, fear, frustration, or excitement. With an outlet for communicating these feelings, they can release pent up feelings and adults can look in to better understand how little ones may be feeling. Beyond painting and drawing as expression, the arts also ...