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Are You Feeding Your Child's Inner Artist?
| Source: Jason Dobkin
LOS ANGELES, CA--(Marketwire - February 20, 2009) - When children start pre-school, they bring
art work home nearly every day and we proudly plaster it across the
refrigerator.
But once they start elementary school, the flow of masterpieces slows to a
trickle. Thanks to shrinking budgets, many school systems have drastically
reduced art instruction. So, if your child isn't taking art in school, how
can you be sure their inner artist doesn't waste away?
According to Americans for the Arts, students who participate in three
hours of arts, three days a week for at least one year are four times more
likely to be recognized for academic achievement.
Jason Dobkin and Erika Gragg, co-creators of the new children's book
"Snobbles the Great: A Snooze Patch Story," (Grabkin Creatives, LLC
www.snobbles.com) credit their love of art as their inspiration behind the
book. Snobbles is a fruit-eating snake who is ridiculed by the other snakes
in the Snooze Patch where they all live.
"I was making little clay animals and Erika would place them in plants or
other settings and photograph them," says Dobkin. "That's how Snobbles came
to life. We wanted to create a fantastical new world for kids so we
combined the normal aspects of children's books with painting, sculpture,
photography, stage design, lighting, and cinematography to make a
hyper-real experience."
Dobkin and Gragg hope parents will find ways to incorporate creativity into
daily activities.
"If kids don't have the opportunity to be creative when they're young, it's
not going to dawn on them to start thinking in new ways when they're
older," says Gragg. "Put children who don't do well academically in a dance
class or give them a paint brush and they connect with it. Suddenly,
everything clicks. They start understanding math or English better because
their brain interprets those subjects in new ways."
Better grades, problem-solving skills and confidence are very strong
incentives to make sure you encourage your child's inner artist to come out
and play on a very frequent basis.
About Jason Dobkin
Dobkin studied music at Wesleyan University. His musical abilities came in
handy when Snobbles co-creator Erika Gragg was penning the lyrical,
sing-song quality of the book's storyline. Dobkin is a guitarist and is
currently working on a new album with his band "Jason and the Rockernauts."
www.snobbles.com