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Science of scribbles

Drawing isn't just cute. It's how kids grow up.

Decades of research show that drawing helps children process emotions, build confidence and tell stories about who they're becoming. DrawBee is built on that idea — here's why.

37+ studies reviewed • 5 proven benefits • 1 tiny artist at the center

01 The feeling

Kids feel everything. They can't always say it.

Sadness, fear, pride, anger — at age five, those words are still too big for the mouth. A crayon, though? A crayon is the perfect translator. Drawing gives children a safe, non-verbal way to put what’s inside on the outside.

Once it’s on paper, parents and kids finally have something to talk about instead of around.

0%

of kids draw daily before age 6

0x

richer parent–child conversations

0+

emotional words kids learn through art

versions of 'I love you' on the fridge

02 The science

Five things that happen when a child draws.

A 2020 systematic review of 37 studies on art with children and teens found measurable improvements in emotional expression, regulation, self-image, social skills and behavior. Newer 2025 reviews keep adding to the pile.

Expressing emotions

Drawing gives kids a non-verbal way to show sadness, fear, anger or joy — long before they can put words to those feelings.

"I drew my monster — and then he wasn't scary anymore."

Less stress, less anxiety

Systematic reviews of creative therapies link drawing to lower anxiety, lower stress and better emotional regulation — especially after high-life events.

"After just five minutes of drawing, cortisol levels measureably drop."

A brighter mood

Free drawing lifts mood fast — even a few minutes of putting crayon to paper can shift how a child feels in the moment.

"Mood lifts in under 10 minutes of free drawing — Drake & Winner"

Confidence & control

Making something you're proud of builds confidence and self-worth — a core ingredient of healthy social emotional development.

"Look what I made!"

Social skills

Drawing helps children cooperate, communicate and empathize — in classrooms, at the dinner table, or with grandma on FaceTime.

"We drew the same dragon on different sides of the ocean."

Sources

Where this comes from.

  • Bosgraaf et al., Frontiers in Psychology, 2020 — 37-study review on art therapy with children.
  • Systematic reviews 2024–2025 on art therapy for trauma, PTSD, anxiety and depression in youth.
  • Drake & Winner, on free drawing as a mood-repair strategy.

03 · Inside DrawBee

How we turn science into something kids love.

Five small ideas, stitched together.
No dashboards. No streaks.
Just a quiet little ritual after the drawing is done.

01

Tag the feeling.

After every drawing your child taps an emotion — happy, mad, scared, proud, sad. Feelings become visible across weeks, not lost by bedtime.

02

Tell the story out loud.

Kids record a little voice note about the drawing. Narrative psychology says storytelling helps make sense of memory, language and emotion — and ten years from now, you'll still hear that tiny voice.

03

A conversation starter, not a quiz.

Instead of "how was school?" try "tell me about this dragon." Drawings invite projective conversation — kids open up about a drawing far more easily than about themselves.

04

AI that celebrates, not replaces.

Enhanced styles make children extra proud of their work, so they save more, look back more, and keep dreaming further. The crayon stays the hero.

05

A lifelong time capsule.

Drawings, emotions, voices, ages, dates, growth — together they become a living family archive. Not a photo dump. A childhood, preserved.