Contribution of Systematic Exploration of Artworks in Raising Children’s Critical Thinking and Empathy about Friendship and Difference through Early Years
Abstract
This paper presents a study aimed at investigating 3- to 4-year old children’s perceptions of
friendship and difference and the effects of the systematic use of art on these issues. There is
a considerable number of scholars suggesting that art-based experience, as a form of
expressive way of knowing, can contribute to the development of creative and critical
thinking. The Project Zero research program from Harvard Graduate School of Education and
the Philosophy for Children (P4C) pedagogical movement highlight the importance of
promoting from the preschool age a critical way of thinking which exceeds mere
argumentation and identifies with critical re-evaluation of the way we conceive reality and act.
Our intervention was applied to 83 children from five preschool settings. Children were
supported to systematically explore artworks of aesthetic value according to Τransformative
Learning Through Aesthetic Experience (TLTAE) method aiming to raise participants’
creativity and critical reflection upon stereotypical assumptions. The principles of Philosophy
for Children (P4C) movement were further exploited in order to enhance reflective dialogue
based on emerging meanings from narrative artworks and creative activities. A questionnaire
with images was applied to all children before and after the intervention. The findings
suggest that post-intervention children had a more enhanced understanding of friendship and
difference, an increased level of mutual acceptance, a better appreciation of socializing
positively with peers. Further integration of art and art-related methods in the learning
process is needed in order to examine long term results.