#1 An 11 Year Old Kid Drew This In My Class. I Found It To Be Quite Creative

#3 11 Year Old Daughter Drew This Out Of The Blue. Looks Like She's Got The Future Work-Week Figured Out

Drawing is one of the first ways kids start to express themselves. Some children might even start drawing before they start talking. Experts estimate that kids start doodling at around 12 to 18 months. Since they don't have fully developed motor skills yet, kids usually move their whole arms to draw, requiring large sheets of paper and sizable crayons, markers, and pens.
Early kids' drawings don't make much sense. When they're two or three years old, they might draw circles, lines, zigzags, and so on. Colors become interesting, too; toddlers feel especially proud of deciding which color to use. Given that, kids of this age can try to draw something familiar or things that remind them of something. However, most times, as you'll see from this list, they're rarely successful.
#4 While Cleaning The Basement, I Found An Old Drawing My Sister Drew When She Was Little Of Her Sacrificing Me To The Alien Gods

#5 My Daughter Drew This In Kindergarten. Title: "Moms Chatting After School"

As they get older, kids start drawing figures, especially humans. A circle with two sticks usually represents a person, and kids aged three to four start depicting that in their drawings. At this age, children also start trying to name what they're drawing, often including letters in their pieces, even if they can't read and write yet.
By the age of four to five, kids begin to tell stories with their drawings. When sketching their family, kids will make the most important person to them the biggest; for example, Mom. A new style might emerge for some kids, which experts call "X-ray style." An example of that would be a house that we can see inside of from the outside.
#8 My Friend's Daughter Drew Him A "Giraffe" In School Today. What Do You Guys Think?

#9 My 5 Year Old Daughter's Self-Portrait. She's A Very Good Artist, But This Will Haunt My Dreams

Drawing helps kids refine their motor and develop their cognitive skills. But that's an unlikely reason why they like it so much. Kids would much rather draw something than, say, learn or do another kind of strenuous mental or physical activity. That might be because it makes them feel happy (duh!) and helps them regulate their emotions.
A 2021 study showed that drawing distracts children from being in a sad mood. It didn't matter what they were drawing, whether imaginary or real scenes; all that mattered was the process of drawing itself.
#12 Little Girl Drew A Picture Of Her Mom At Work. The Mother Is Actually Selling A Snow Shovel At Home Depot

When kids draw a person with some extra legs, that doesn't mean they don't know what a human looks like. Researchers have found that kids sometimes add silly things to their drawings simply because they think it's funny. Even if sometimes their drawings aren't accurate, the drawings reflect what they know about the world.
For example, researchers in 2024 found that even when a kid draws a tiger that doesn't really look like a tiger, it still seems like a sort of animal. That indicates that the toddler or child understands what a tiger is and simply doesn't have the artistic ability to depict it accurately.
#13 Grading One Of My 3rd Grade Student's Homework Tonight And Came Across This Beauty. Trying To Decide If I Should Give Bonus Points

At the same time, kids don't draw what they don't know or haven't seen and encountered yet. Children's developmental specialist Dr. Melodie de Jager explains that if a child is not aware of a windmill, they will not draw a windmill. Interestingly, that extends to the child when they draw a self-portrait.
#16 My 3 Year Old Loves Drawing. Here Is His Picture Of A Cat He Did. I May Have A Future Artist On My Hands

#18 My 5 Year Old Daughter Made A Ghost For Class And I Can’t Stop Laughing At It

"If they are not aware that they are standing on solid ground, they do not draw a grounding line underneath their self-portrait," de Jager writes. "If they are not aware of their ears, they do not draw them nor use them to listen the first time. If they do not spontaneously draw a neck, it is a sure way of telling that the child is not ready to read or write yet."
#20 My 7 Year Old Kid Drew This Out Of The Blue At Breakfast The Other Day. I Found It After He Left For School














