What Oklahoma’s Oklahoma ELG says about creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development
Oklahoma’s early learning framework, the Oklahoma Early Learning Guidelines, is the official standards document used by licensed childcare and development programs across the state. Administered by the Oklahoma Human Services (OKDHS), the Oklahoma ELG defines what healthy development looks like for children from birth through kindergarten entry — and creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development is a core domain of that framework.
The Oklahoma ELG addresses creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development through a set of standards and indicators that capture children’s developmental progress from infancy through kindergarten entry. These indicators are organized to help educators observe, document, and support children’s growth in creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development through intentional, play-based curriculum experiences.
Oklahoma requires licensed childcare programs to use a curriculum aligned to the Oklahoma ELG and to document children’s developmental progress across all domains. This documentation informs individualized curriculum planning and is evaluated as part of the Oklahoma’s Reaching for the Stars quality rating system.
Research from Harvard’s Project Zero and the Dana Foundation’s arts and cognition studies confirms that sustained engagement in creative arts in early childhood develops transferable thinking skills — including divergent thinking, symbolic representation, observation, and self-expression — that predict success across academic domains.
Developmental milestones
Creative Arts milestones by age group
Understanding where children are developmentally helps educators plan meaningful activities and document progress accurately. These milestones align with Oklahoma’s Oklahoma ELG indicators and nationally recognized frameworks including NAEYC’s Developmentally Appropriate Practice and the CDC’s Milestone Moments.
| Age group | Key Oklahoma ELG milestones | What educators can do |
|---|---|---|
| Infants Birth–18 months | Responding to music with movement and attention; beginning to explore mark-making materials; imitating facial expressions and vocalizations; sensory exploration of art materials | Sing and play music during routines; offer safe sensory art materials (finger paint, stamps); respond to infant vocalizations musically; provide musical toys and instruments |
| Toddlers 18–36 months | Scribbling and mark-making with increasing intentionality; beginning to name marks and creations; imitating movements in music; exploring dramatic play scenarios; experimenting with color mixing | Process-art invitations daily; simple instruments and movement music; dramatic play dress-up and props; celebrate the process, not the product |
| Preschool 3–5 years | Drawing recognizable figures and scenes; explaining artwork with narrative; cooperative dramatic play with complex scenarios; moving expressively to music; creating songs and chants; using art to tell stories | Open-ended art studio with varied media; author/illustrator studies; dramatic play scenarios with complex props; music and movement daily; art displayed with children’s descriptions |
Curriculum alignment
How Experience Curriculum supports Oklahoma’s Oklahoma ELG Creative Arts standards
Experience Curriculum builds creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development into every monthly theme through intentional, play-based activities aligned to the Oklahoma ELG. Rather than treating creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development as a separate subject, the curriculum embeds relevant skills into daily activities across every age band — so children are developing across all Oklahoma ELG indicators throughout the day.
Every Experience Curriculum kit ships with a verified alignment to state early learning standards. The downloadable Experience Curriculum Alignment PDF maps each curriculum activity and skill to the specific standard indicator and developmental level it targets — saving teachers significant documentation time.
Creative Arts skills covered
- Visual arts and process-art exploration
- Music appreciation and music-making
- Creative movement and dance
- Dramatic play and role-play
- Symbolic representation and mark-making
- Creative problem-solving and divergent thinking
How it’s delivered
- Monthly kits with process-art materials and invitations included
- Music and movement cards with teacher guides
- Dramatic play scenario guides and prop suggestions
- Open-ended creative exploration prompts
- Brightwheel digital documentation tied to state creative development indicators
- Family creative arts take-homes for home expression
Experience Curriculum’s approach to creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development is grounded in peer-reviewed early childhood research and aligns to NAEYC’s Developmentally Appropriate Practice guidelines and the Head Start Early Learning Outcomes Framework. An independent psychometric evaluation found the linked Experience Assessment exceeds standards for validity and reliability across all eight developmental domains.
Skills spotlight
Key creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development skills in the Experience Curriculum framework
Experience Curriculum’s 35-skill framework maps directly to state standard domains. Here are four skills that feature prominently in every age-band kit and align directly to Oklahoma’s Oklahoma ELG indicators.
Visual Arts
Exploring and creating with varied media — paint, clay, collage, drawing tools. Developed through open-ended process-art invitations that prioritize exploration over predetermined outcomes.
Music & Movement
Responding to and creating with sound, rhythm, and movement. Built through daily music and movement activities, instrument exploration, and expressive dance embedded in every theme.
Dramatic Play
Using imagination to create roles, scenarios, and symbolic worlds. Developed through rich dramatic play environments, prop kits, and scenario invitations that deepen with each monthly theme.
Creative Expression
Communicating ideas, feelings, and experiences through multiple art forms. Nurtured through an arts-rich environment, adult encouragement of artistic risk-taking, and celebration of diverse creative approaches.
Implementation guidance
Practical tips for embedding creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development into your Oklahoma program
1. Prioritize process over product in art
State creative development standards assess the creative process — how children manipulate materials, make intentional choices, and represent ideas — not whether the finished product looks like a model. Remove coloring sheets and model art in favor of open-ended invitations where children make their own decisions.
2. Make music and movement daily
Music is not just an enrichment activity — it develops phonological awareness, mathematical patterning, and physical coordination simultaneously while also supporting creative expression. Experience Curriculum includes music and movement activities in every daily schedule.
3. Create a permanent art studio space
A dedicated art studio — or even a well-stocked art table with rotating materials — gives children the autonomy to engage in creative work on their own schedule. When art materials are always accessible, children use them to process ideas and experiences naturally.
4. Document with the child as narrator
The richest creative arts documentation captures not just what a child made, but what they said about it. Ask “Tell me about your painting” and record the child’s words alongside a photo. This practice documents language, symbolic thinking, and creative expression in a single observation.
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about Oklahoma’s Oklahoma ELG and creative arts, expression, and aesthetic development curriculum
Related resources
Oklahoma Social-Emotional standards
Oklahoma’s Oklahoma ELG Social-emotional domain alignment
Oklahoma Approaches to Learning standards
Oklahoma’s Oklahoma ELG Approaches to learning domain alignment
Oklahoma early learning standards
Overview of Oklahoma’s Oklahoma ELG framework and all 8 domain alignments
Oklahoma Oklahoma ELG resource guide
Official Oklahoma ELG resources from the Oklahoma Human Services (OKDHS)
Experience Curriculum overview
Research-based, state-aligned curriculum delivered to your door every month