Within Art at Airedale Infant School, it is our aim that all children have the opportunity to explore their own creativity and individuality. We aim to provide a high-quality art education, which will engage, inspire and challenge pupils, equipping them with the knowledge and skills to experiment, invent and create their own works of art, crafts and design.
The Primary Objectives of teaching Art at Airedale Infant School are:
- To provide a broad and balanced range of art activities.
- To raise standards in art so that every child makes best progress.
- To show children’s progress of art skills through the work produced.
- To expose children to a wide range of artists from different cultures, valuing and celebrating diversity and awareness of cultural influences.
- To raise and develop children’s self-esteem through class and group activities and individual work.
- To give children the freedom to explore and create their own work, celebrating their individuality.
- To ensure equal opportunity – all children are provided with equal access to the Art curriculum.
The Airedale Art Curriculum
Our curriculum is skills and knowledge based, including full coverage of the National Curriculum which meets the needs of all Airedale Infants and Junior pupils. This takes into consideration the school setting, local, national and international developments.
Our pupils are offered a very wide range of experiences within the curriculum to extend their understanding of themselves and the world in which they live. The children develop skills, attitudes, and values to enable them to become lifelong learners and equip them for the future. The ability to learn is underpinned by the teaching of basic skills, concepts, and values. There should be no limits to curiosity, and we instil a thirst for new experiences and knowledge.
We actively promote British Values and Social, Moral, Spiritual and Cultural differences. We also provide opportunities for our pupils to learn about the contribution of Britons to innovation, excellence and changes in the world.
The Curriculum has been organised into topics which are a vehicle to promote our school values and curriculum drivers, and allow for the development of skills and understanding within and across the subjects. Our curriculum topics allow the teaching of threshold concepts that are the fundamental ‘learning elements’. These concepts are built upon and developed within the year, across the year and over the course of the school experience.
Adaptive teaching (aka agile teaching) recognises: individual needs; the need for varied and additional resources; when, where and how additional support can be facilitated; and how children learn best. Teachers must plan lessons so that all pupils can study every national curriculum subject and experience success against age-appropriate expectations and/or their own bespoke personal targets.