Art and Design
As artists at St Andrew's we...
At St Andrew's, Art is taught as a discrete subject in order that the development of knowledge and skills is taught meaningfully and explicitly. Naturally, links are made to other areas of the curriculum but this does not dilute the quality and entitlement of high quality Art teaching.
The school’s long term plan for Art and Design sets out the content of teaching within in each year group. This is supported by the school’s Art progression document which demonstrates learning outcomes within each strand of development within an Art unit. Short term planning details how this content is developed over a series of lessons within the unit of work. The organisation of the Art and Design curriculum provides structured opportunities for pupils to:
record responses, including observations of the natural and made environment;
gather resources and materials, using them to stimulate and develop ideas;
explore and use two and three-dimensional media, working on a variety of scales;
review and modify their work as it progresses;
develop understanding of the work of artists, craftspeople and designers from a range of times and cultures, applying knowledge to their own work;
respond to and evaluate art and craft including their own and others’ work;
show development in their ability to create images;
understand and apply the basic principles of art and craft to include: Line, tone, texture, shape, form, space, pattern, colour, contrast, composition, proportion and perspective;
realise their ideas and sustain a level of working from start to the completion of a project or a piece of work.
At St Andrew's, we value the development of technical vocabulary and strive to ensure our children understand terminology so they can articulate their thoughts with competence and confidence in different contexts.