This marksheet allows for each task to be marked to three assessment objectives (like GCSE 1-3, but renamed acronym A R T, for Analysis, research and techniques). Students are marked on this sheet to 5 age expectations, but you can no doubt adjust them to suit. This marksheet fits with all my schemes of work for the entire Year 7. I also have Year 8 and 9 and available, but their marksheets are much more detailed. The other sheets are generated from the marksheets to be stickers to go into the students books. The comments are already added but fit with my current schemes of work, so you may wish to adjust them. You can just mail merge the doc from the A2L page of the marksheet every time you need to give feedback. Easy!
This is a resource I have made from activities I have collected and created in order to strengthen Art skills. Every Art activity a student does is marked according to three assessment objectives: A- Analyse and Record, R- Research and Develop, and T- Try and Text Techniques. When work is returned to the student, they can improve on their weakest area (in DIT time) by doing an activity from the document and marking off which one they have completed on their colour chart.
There is an excel markbook to go with this resource, which helps you track student progress to the assessment objectives.
Teach your students (or print the sheet and let them learn by themselves) how to edit one of their drawings in Photoshop to look like Andy Warhol’s work from the Mick Jagger series. This sheet will help students learn how to use tools, layers, and experiment with filters.
There are a total of 11 topics, each with tasks, that feed into the Assessment Objectives and allow students to work independently and discover ideas and themes to progress their learning to the Personal Investigation stage. There are also a series of Sway links so that you can add links to emails or your school webpage, allowing students to access resources from their phones/tablets.
Students can assess their own personal skills and what they feel they need to work at. This can help them to track what they might need to do to progress to the next level.
You can print these as posters or as postcards, just by adjusting the settings on the print page from whole page to multiple.
The Challenge cards work really well with Year 11 when they are struggling to put into words why a piece of work by another artist has inspired them. They can choose their own level of challenge.