“We aim to send all young people into an ever-changing world able and qualified to play their full part in it.”

Curriculum

Fine Art (GCSE)

Subject Staff

Mrs Cooper

Exam Board

AQA

Revision

The Art Way

Our subject has a ‘Subject Way’ at the heart of it. Our Subject Way is designed to help students become young subject specialists. The Subject Way has two main purposes:

Firstly, to teach students the vital skills they need to achieve their full potential and gain the very best grades they can. Secondly, to teach students how each subject relates to the wider world, incorporating the life skills they will learn.

It is our belief that knowing how what you learn links to the wider world, brings a subject to life and therefore improves overall understanding and engagement.

Curriculum Intent

At Wickersley Partnership Trust we understand that getting the curriculum right for each and every individual student is the single most important factor in ensuring progress, encouraging positive engagement and raising aspirations.

We want all students to leave able and qualified to play their full part in an ever-changing world through an ambitious, creative and innovative curriculum, which empowers students with the skills, knowledge and attributes to allow them to succeed in their next phase of education and their working life.

We aim to engender a love of learning, self-belief and aspiration through 4 key intentions:

  • The removal of barriers to learning
  • Developing skills for learning
  • Fostering personal attributes (School Way)
  • Enriching student experiences and broadening their horizons

 

Our curriculum is not driven by performance tables. It is our belief that a strong, broad, balanced curriculum, tailored to individual needs can remove there barriers to learning and allow all students to access the curriculum appropriate to them and will therefore meet their individual needs.

We believe in a strong foundation of core subjects including English, Maths and Science. All students who are identified with deficits in literacy and numeracy are given additional curriculum support. These core fundamental skills are essential in both accessing our broad curriculum offer and the next stage of life; be it education, employment or training.

INTENTION 1 – The removal of barriers to learning

We want all our students to go out into the world, and become successful, happy, fulfilled adults who will be good citizens and make a positive contribution to society. The acquisition of basic skills is either at the heart of achieving this or a barrier to learning and prevents students from fully flourishing. Four common barriers, if left unchallenged, will limit the progress, engagement and development of students who access our curriculum.

They are:

  • Literacy
  • Numeracy
  • Oracy
  • Vocabulary

 

We see these barriers as a high priority for the school. In order to prevent them from becoming a barrier for student development and progress we implement (and closely monitor) the following strategies:

Literacy

Students annotate their work and comment on progress in the lesson on trackers. 

  • Comment in a sentence SPAG
  • Sentence starters
  • Keywords
  • Prise (predict, read, identify, summarise and enquire)
  • 5 point targeted reading

 

Numeracy

Students estimation and measurement to plan and make visual art and design works and develop their capacity to recognise and use patterns and relationships, visualise 2D shapes and 3D objects and interpret maps, diagrams, data displays and chance events.

Oracy

Students are asked to read out annotations to ensure it is fully annotated.  Peer assessment and then comment if students cannot read the writing.  Say it in a sentence pick up on poor pronunciation and students asked to explain processes.

Vocabulary

Students need to have a strong grasp of art vocabulary to discuss their own and others’ artwork and art processes. Vocabulary words, their meaning and usage, are such an important part of learning and communicating. The word wall in the classroom is used to promote a good understanding of the key vocabulary in Art and design.

INTENTION 2 – Developing skills for learning

Developing student knowledge and essential learning skills go hand in hand. Students need to remember with fluency in order to be fully established mini-subject specialists. We strive, at all times, for personal excellence by developing the 6 key skills for success:

  • Recall
  • Interpretation
  • Creativity
  • Analysis
  • Evaluation
  • Divergent thinking

 

To develop independent creative, artistic and passionate students that understand how Art is used in the world and how to develop confidence to use the skills in creating their own ideas.  Equipping them with the knowledge and skills to experiment, invent and create their own works of art, craft and design. As pupils progress, they should be able to think critically and develop a more rigorous understanding of art and design. They should also know how art and design both reflect and shape our history, and contribute to the culture, creativity and wealth of our nation.

Art and Design try to ensure all students have a broad experience of creativity that explores the formal elements in all areas of drawing, painting, sculpture and photography.  This develops into more focused study at Ks4 in Photography, Craft and Fine Art allowing for a range of creative specialism which become more diverse and focused.  These will include modern, historical and cultural creativity which will be used to  develop their understanding of Art helping them to become critical, independent artists able to create their own work.

All students will produce creative work, develop ideas and record experiences. They will:

  • Gain skills in drawing, painting and sculpture and other art, craft and design skills
  • Be able to evaluate and analyse others’ artwork using the language of art
  • Learn about great artists, styles movements and understand the historical and cultural developments
INTENTION 3 – Fostering personal attributes

Our curriculum promotes the skills and attributes our children need in order to develop the independence, responsibility, accountability and resilience they need to have a happy and successful life. We refer to this crucial aspect of our curriculum intent as The Thrybergh Way and it is embedded in everything we do.

The School Way enables us to develop well-rounded individuals ready for the next stage. It is about embedding employability skills such as resilience, collaboration, communication, aspiration, responsibility, tolerance and respect in order for them to be an active participant in the local community and beyond.

The School Way is embedded in assemblies, form periods and our extra-curricular programme. It is the language that we speak and key aspects of the School Way are as follows:

  • We are nice to people
  • We say please and thank you
  • We are equipped to learn
  • We work hard
  • We are prepared to make mistakes
  • We listen to others
  • We believe in ourselves
  • We are proud of our achievements
  • We take pride in our appearance
  • We take responsibility for our actions
  • We are ambitious
  • We take risks
INTENTION 4 – Enriching student experiences and broadening their horizons

Our intent is that all students have a full understanding of how to develop themselves as well rounded citizens, maintain healthy relationships and understand how to keep themselves safe both online and in their day-to-day life. We want all students to know what options are open to them in the future and understand the routes they have in order to progress on their life journey.

Our curriculum will include:

  • Artists and Cultural links
  • Visits or a visiting artist
  • Virtual galleries
  • Looking at the greater awareness in the world / artwork
  • After School Art clubs
  • Links to employment e.g. ceramicist, printmaker
  • Working with an artist in their own environment where appropriate
  • Learn about Historical and Contemporary Artists

Curriculum

Overview of KS4:

Students who opt to study GCSE Fine Art or Photography are divided between 60% portfolio (Component 1) and 40% Externally Set Assignment (Component 2).

In Years 10 and 11 students build upon their skills and knowledge obtained at KS3. Students are given a range of starting points and themes to consider when they begin to develop their portfolio. At the beginning of the course all students will complete a series of workshop based lessons following the theme of natural form.

Students are introduced to a variety of learning experiences that help them ‘Foster the love of Art,’ which encourage the development of skills through the use of appropriate media, processes, techniques and technologies relevant to their chosen title(s) and related area(s) of study. Students show knowledge, understanding and skills in the development of their personal work informed by first-hand experiences and appropriate secondary sources. Students are encouraged to progressively develop their own strengths and interests in the subject and, increasingly, follow their own lines of enquiry. Students develop the knowledge and understanding as specified below through sustained practical application of skills to realise personal intentions. Students learn how sources inspire the development of ideas. For example, drawing on the work and approaches of artists, craftspeople or designers from contemporary and/or historical contexts, periods, societies and cultures.

Students ideas and intentions can be communicated through visual and tactile language, using formal elements, including:

  • Colour
  • Line
  • Form
  • Shape
  • Tone
  • Texture

 

Students also study the characteristics, properties and effects of using different media, materials, techniques and processes, and the ways in which they can be used in relation to students’ own creative intentions.

Department Staff

J Wood

Director

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