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Lydney Church of England Community School (VC)

Lydney Church of England Community School (VC)

A caring Christian community where every child achieves a love of life and of learning

Luke 10:25-37

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Design is not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works.” Steve Jobs.

 

 

Intent

At Lydney C of E Primary School we follow the Kapow scheme of work for our Design and Technology. The Design and technology scheme of work aims to inspire pupils to be innovative and creative thinkers who have an appreciation for the product design cycle through ideation, creation, and evaluation. We want pupils to develop the confidence to take risks, through drafting design concepts, modelling, and testing and to be reflective learners who evaluate their work and the work of others. Through our scheme of work, we aim to build an awareness of the impact of design and technology on our lives and encourage pupils to become resourceful, enterprising citizens who will have the skills to contribute to future design advancements. Our Design and technology scheme of work enables pupils to meet the end of key stage attainment targets in the National curriculum and the aims also align with those in the National curriculum. EYFS (Reception) units provide opportunities for pupils’ to work towards the Development matters statements and the Early Learning Goals.

 

The lessons we teach have an intention of providing a high-quality, coherent and progressive experience of the subject, with scope for cross-curricular learning.

 

Implementation

The Kapow Art scheme of work is designed with four strands that run throughout.

 These are:

• Generating ideas

• Using sketchbooks

• Makings skills, including formal elements (line, shape, tone, texture, pattern, colour)

• Knowledge of artists

• Evaluating and analysing

 

Units of lessons are sequential, allowing children to build their skills and knowledge, applying them to a range of outcomes. The formal elements, a key part of the national curriculum, are also woven throughout units. Key skills are revisited again and again with increasing complexity in a spiral curriculum model. This allows pupils to revise and build on their previous learning. Units in each year group are organised into four core areas:

Drawing

Painting and mixed-media

Sculpture and 3D

Craft and design

 

Our progression document shows how skills and knowledge are taught within each year group and how these skills develop to ensure that attainment targets are securely met by the end of each key stage.  Each unit fully scaffolds and supports age appropriate sequenced learning, and cross-curricular links have been made where possible. Creativity and independent outcomes are robustly embedded into our units, supporting students in learning how to make their own creative choices and decisions, so that their art outcomes, whilst still being knowledge-rich, are unique to the pupils. Three lessons are always practical in nature and encourage experimental and exploratory learning with pupils using sketchbooks to document their ideas. Lessons can be accessed and enjoyed by all pupils and opportunities through support and.  Knowledge organisers for each unit support pupils by providing a highly visual record of the key knowledge and techniques learned, encouraging recall of skills processes, key facts and vocabulary.

 

Impact

Our Art and Design curriculum is designed in such a way that children are involved in the evaluation, dialogue and decision making about the quality of their outcomes and the improvements they need to make. By taking part in regular discussions and decision-making processes, children will not only know facts and key information about art, but they will be able to talk confidently about their own learning journey, have higher metacognitive skills and have a growing understanding of how to improve.

 

The impact can be constantly monitored through both formative and summative assessment opportunities. Each lesson includes guidance to support teachers in assessing pupils against the learning objectives.

 

After the implementation of Kapow Primary Art and Design, pupils should leave Lydney C of E equipped with a range of skills to enable them to succeed in their secondary education.

 

The expected impact of following the Kapow Primary Art and design scheme of work is that children will:

  • Produce creative work, exploring and recording their ideas and experiences.
  •  Be proficient in drawing, painting, sculpture and other art, craft and design techniques.
  •  Evaluate and analyse creative works using subject-specific language.
  •  Know about great artists and the historical and cultural development of their art.
  •  Meet the end of key stage expectations outlined in the national curriculum for Art and design.

 

Teachers will record end of unit judgements on our school tracking system Insight.