Art
The 3 I's Art & Design at Fawbert and Barnard's
Intent:
At Fawbert & Barnard’s Primary School, we believe that high-quality Art lessons will inspire children to think innovatively and develop creative procedural understanding.
Our Art curriculum provides children with opportunities to develop their skills using a range of media and materials. Children learn the skills of drawing, painting, printing, collage, 3D work and are given the opportunity to explore and evaluate different creative ideas. Children will be introduced to a range of works and develop knowledge of the styles and vocabulary used by famous artists. The skills they acquire are applied to their cross-curricular topics, allowing children to use their art skills to reflect on and explore topics in greater depth; for example, by sketching historical artefacts in detail, researching geographical locations to support their work on landscape painting or using art as a medium to express emotion and thought to enhance their personal, social and emotional development. Many areas of art link with mathematical ideas of shape and space; for example when printing repeating patterns and designs and thinking about 3D shapes to support structures. It is paramount that art work be purposeful; be this as a means of expression or to explore the styles of other artists that inspire our own work. Pupils should be clear what the intended outcomes are and have a means to measure their own work against this.
In Art, children are expected to be reflective and evaluate their work, thinking about how they can make changes and keep improving. This should be meaningful and continuous throughout the process, with evidence of age-related verbal and written refection. Children are encouraged to take risks and experiment and then reflect on why some ideas and techniques are successful or not for a particular project.
Implementation:
Teachers are to provide planning based on one artistic focus at a time:
- A cycle of lessons for each subject, which carefully plans for progression and depth;
- Not all art focuses will occur in every year group to stop the overlap and repeat of teaching of skills to provide a wider range of knowledge.
- A comparative assessment at the end of a sequence of lessons which will build skill to show progress after a series of focussed lessons.
- Challenge questions for pupils to apply their learning in a philosophical/open manner;
- Trips and visiting experts who will enhance the learning experience;
- A means to display and celebrate the pupils’ artwork in their class.
- There will be specific art weeks and sculpture focus across the school
Impact:
Our Art Curriculum is high quality, well thought out and is planned to demonstrate progression. If children are keeping up with the curriculum, they are deemed to be making good or better progress. In addition, we measure the impact of our curriculum through the following methods:
- A reflection on standards achieved against the planned outcomes;
- Assessment through a comparative assessment system linked to the skills progression grids.
- A celebration of learning for each class which demonstrates progression across the school – mainly through displays as well as co-ordinated work;
- Pupil discussions about their learning; which includes discussion of their thoughts, ideas, processing and evaluations of work.
- We aim to show that the learning and progress from our Art teaching can garner us an up to date Artsmark for Fawbert and Barnard’s.
Updated 23.2.23