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High School Photography 2 Curriculum Essentials Document Boulder Valley School District Department of Curriculum and Instruction August 2011

Introduction The Boulder Valley Elementary Visual Arts Curriculum provides the foundation for quality, standards-based visual arts instruction for elementary students and represents the core program for which all schools are accountable. This curriculum has three goals: To clearly articulate what every student should know, understand, and be able to do in visual arts at each grade level To align with the current Colorado Content Standards for Visual Arts To clarify visual arts content at each grade level so that concepts can be explored in greater depth and with fidelity Standards are the topical organization of an academic content area. The four standards of visual arts are: 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend Use the visual arts to express, communicate, and make meaning. To perceive art involves studying art; scrutinizing and examining art; recognizing, noticing, and seeing art; distinguishing art forms and subtleties; identifying and detecting art; becoming skilled in and gaining knowledge of art; grasping and realizing art; figuring out art; and sensing and feeling art. 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect Articulate and implement critical thinking in the visual arts by synthesizing, evaluating, and analyzing visual information. To value art involves visualizing, articulating, and conveying art; thinking about, pondering, and contemplating art; wondering about, assessing, and questioning art concepts and contexts; expressing art; defining the relevance, significance of, and importance of art; and experiencing, interpreting, and justifying the aesthetics of art. 3. Invent and Discover to Create Generate works of arts that employ unique ideas, feelings, and values using different media, technologies, styles, and forms of expression. To make art involves creating, inventing, conceiving, formulating, and imagining art; communicating, ascertaining, and learning about art; building, crafting, and generating art; assembling and manufacturing art; discovering, fashioning, and producing art; and causing art to exist. 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer: Recognize, articulate, and validate the value of the visual arts to lifelong learning and the human experience. To respond to art involves relating to art; connecting to art; personally linking to art; associating with art; bonding to art; moving toward art sensibilities; shifting to art orientations; thinking about art; attaching meaning to art; replying to art; reacting to art; internalizing art; personalizing art; and relating art to diverse cultures. The visual arts program serves the entire student population, kindergarten through the twelfth grade. Students are taught by teachers who are specifically trained and certified as visual arts educators. The visual arts curriculum provides a substantive framework to guide teacher instruction. The curriculum also communicates to parents and the community what skills and concepts are emphasized at each grade level. 2

Photography 2 Overview Course Description PHOTOGRAPHY 2 Level: 10-12 Course Length: 1 semester, 5 credits Prerequisites: A71 Photography 1 This second level course will build upon experiences of level 1. This course deals with improving the student s ability to see, take and create a photographic image. Students may be given opportunities to work with sepia toning, hand coloring, multiple images, special films, digital images, and other photo techniques and processes. Masters of photography may be studied. Special emphasis is placed on the critique. Topics at a Glance Printing in different sizes Contrast Filtering Multiple image making Specialty films Composition Introduce digital imagery Art shows Explore alternative tech Sepia toning photos Elements of Art & Principles of Design Assessments Producing many high quality photographic images to be assessed. Art shows and contests Written themes and photographing series to that theme Oral and written critiques. Student questions & comments Performance tasks (idea, plan, in progress, final) Artist statements & reflections District Art Assessment History of Art & Photography through lecture media presentation, artist experience. Useful Information Art History: Students will exhibit knowledge of major artists, photographers & digital artists as well as photographic & artistic history. Students will effectively research and articulate artistic and cultural influences in their digital works of art. Literacy: Students will be asked to write a report or create a written power point about a photographic style indentifying an exemplary photographer not already taught. Students will be asked to include vocabulary from Level 2 digital art Glossary. 21 st Century Graduate: Level 2 s will be challenged with more advanced photographic assignments. Develop their critical thinking skills through self analysis of their own work as well as the critiquing of others art. Students will be encouraged to use their Creativity and Inventiveness on their assignments. The students will learn important computer art issues about copyright use and ethics in web images and manipulation. Students will be introduced to the computer art process using digital cameras, scanners and mouse drawing or drawing tablets to create and manipulate their images in a variety of ways. Students will have multiple opportunities to create art around the recurring themes of fine art, graphic design and commercial art. 3

1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend Use the visual arts to express, communicate, and make meaning. To perceive art involves studying art; scrutinizing and examining art; recognizing, noticing, and seeing art; distinguishing art forms and subtleties; identifying and detecting art; becoming skilled in and gaining knowledge of art; grasping and realizing art; figuring out art; and sensing and feeling art. Prepared Graduate Competencies The preschool through twelfth-grade concepts and skills that all students who complete the Colorado education system must master to ensure their success in a postsecondary and workforce setting. Prepared Graduate Competencies in the Observe and Learn to Comprehend Standard are: Recognize, articulate, and debate that the visual arts are a means for expression Make informed critical evaluations of visual and material culture, information, and technologies Analyze, interpret, and make meaning of art and design critically using oral and written discourse Explain, demonstrate, and interpret a range of purposes of art and design, recognizing that the making and study of art and design can be approached from a variety of viewpoints, intelligences, and perspectives 4

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard 1: Observe and Learn to Comprehend Prepared Graduates: Make informed critical evaluations of visual and material culture, information, and technologies GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 1. Visual art has inherent characteristics and expressive features Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Investigate and articulate the value of the characteristics and expressive features of art and design in diverse and disparate works of art 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. What are the ways to analyze and discuss works of art? 2. What other ways are there to analyze and discuss works of art beyond the characteristics and expressive features of art and design? Relevance and Application: 1. Visual arts provide opportunities for making informed choices about material culture by employing visual literacy in society while recognizing urban, suburban, historical, and environmental influences. 2. Rituals in creating cultural art solidify the foundational understanding of the identity and purpose of various cultures within society. 3. New technologies and media allow for innovative ways to create new rituals with evolutionary characteristics. Nature of the Discipline: 1. Artists use close observation to understand objective reality. 5

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard 1: Observe and Learn to Comprehend Prepared Graduates: Explain, demonstrate, and interpret a range of purposes of art and design, recognizing that the making and study of art and design can be approached from a variety of viewpoints, intelligences, and perspectives GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 2. Historical and cultural context are found in visual art Evidence Outcomes 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Students can: a. Discern the complexity of art and historical paradigms in cultural context b. Research and document community art and architecture c. Discuss art history using an expanded art vocabulary. Inquiry Questions: 1. What is considered art? 2. How does context affect works of art? 3. Why would context matter when interpreting art? 4. What is a culturally sensitive issue, and how does it impact works of art? Relevance and Application: 1. Interpreting visual art provides an ability to place contemporary art culture in a broader, historical context. 2. Technology creates new interdisciplinary art forms that build on historical art forms. 3. Innovators of the past were not highly valued, and it is only recently that society is recognizing their importance. Nature of the Discipline: 1. The new media of today creates the future of art. 2. Respect for the art of cultures informs our diversity. 6

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard 1: Observe and Learn to Comprehend Prepared Graduates: Recognize, articulate, and debate that the visual arts are a means for expression Analyze, interpret, and make meaning of art and design critically using oral and written discourse GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 3. Art and design have purpose and function Evidence Outcomes 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Students can: a. Investigate and articulate the aims of disparate art practices and traditions b. Investigate and articulate symbols and function in meaning and purpose of art works. c. Recognize possible careers in Art Inquiry Questions: 1. What is the purpose of art? 2. How do different cultures manifest the purposes of art? 3. How can art make important contributions to society? Relevance and Application: 1. Visual arts provide an ability to discern the underlying intended and unintended purposes of art. 2. Visual arts provide for the ability to discern multiple solutions to visual and spatial problems. 3. Contemporary technologies have enabled the purpose of art to expand. Nature of the Discipline: 1. Investigating art ideas provides for alternative viewpoints and encourages divergent thinking about the reasons for the existence of art. 7

2. Envision and Critique to Reflect Articulate and implement critical thinking in the visual arts by synthesizing, evaluating, and analyzing visual information. To value art involves visualizing, articulating, and conveying art; thinking about, pondering, and contemplating art; wondering about, assessing, and questioning art concepts and contexts; expressing art; defining the relevance, significance of, and importance of art; and experiencing, interpreting, and justifying the aesthetics of art. Prepared Graduate Competencies The preschool through twelfth-grade concepts and skills that all students who complete the Colorado education system must master to ensure their success in a postsecondary and workforce setting. Prepared Graduate Competencies in the Envision and Critique to Reflect Standard are: Recognize, demonstrate, and debate philosophic arguments about the nature of art and beauty (aesthetics) Recognize, demonstrate, and debate the place of art and design in history and culture Use specific criteria to discuss and evaluate works of art Critique personal work and the work of others with informed criteria Recognize, articulate, and implement critical thinking in the visual arts by synthesizing, evaluating, and analyzing visual information 8

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard: Standard: 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect Prepared Graduates: Critique personal work and the work of others with informed criteria Use specific criteria to discuss and evaluate works of art GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 1. Reflective strategies are used to understand the creative process Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Communicate and defend reasons for opinions about the intentions (successful or not) of a work of art b. Make informed judgments about the relative merits of works of art using observation, description, analysis, interpretation, evaluation and established critique models (e.g., Feldman, Broudy, Barrett). 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. When is art criticism vital, and when is it beside the point? 2. To what extent does a work of art depend on the artist s point of view? 3. To what extent does a work of art depend on the viewer s point of view? Relevance and Application: 1. The critical process leads to informed judgments regarding the relative merits of works of art. 2. The critical process developed through the arts also is found in all other disciplines such as scientific inquiry, mathematical problem-solving, and music and literary critique. 3. Fluency in the critical process in art develops an innate ability to investigate and persevere. 4. Artists may work independently or collaboratively in a variety of virtual or concrete environments. Nature of the Discipline: 1. Comprehending the intentions of art leads to understanding how meaning is made 9

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard 2: Envision and Critique to Reflect Prepared Graduates: Recognize, articulate, and implement critical thinking in the visual arts by synthesizing, evaluating, and analyzing visual information GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 2. A personal philosophy of art is accomplished through use of sophisticated language and studio art processes Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Document and apply investigations into a range of traditional and nontraditional studio practices to personal expression 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. What is old, and what is new in any work of art? 2. How and why is art used as a vehicle for communication? 3. What is an effective critique? Relevance and Application: 1. Breaking accepted norms often gives rise to new forms of artistic expression. 2. Using current technology for personal expression opens new opportunities for varied modes of communication. 3. Articulating a personal philosophy creates individual identification in one s own works of art. 4. Interpreting the world through art, artists seek to represent concepts through a range of styles and approaches. Nature of the Discipline: 1. Culture affects self-expression, whether we realize it. 10

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard: Standard: 2 Envision and Critique to Reflect Prepared Graduates: Recognize, demonstrate, and debate philosophic arguments about the nature of art and beauty (aesthetics) GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 3. Interpretation is a means for understanding and evaluating works of art Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Demonstrate fluency in using critique vocabulary to assess personal works of art and the others works of art both written and orally 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. How do underlying structures unconsciously guide the creation of art works? 2. Using aesthetic criteria, is all art beautiful in some way? Relevance and Application: 1. Art reflects the history and culture in which it is created. 2. Innovation and critical reasoning results from utilizing known structures and identifying ways to stretch boundaries. 3. Using current technologies to research diverse approaches from around the globe and applying them to new artistic styles creates a merging of ideas. Nature of the Discipline: 1. Every artist has a style, just as every artistic period has a style. 11

3. Invent and Discover to Create Generate works of arts that employ unique ideas, feelings, and values using different media, technologies, styles, and forms of expression. To make art involves creating, inventing, conceiving, formulating, and imagining art; communicating, ascertaining, and learning about art; building, crafting, and generating art; assembling and manufacturing art; discovering, fashioning, and producing art; and causing art to exist. Prepared Graduate Competencies The preschool through twelfth-grade concepts and skills that all students who complete the Colorado education system must master to ensure their success in a postsecondary and workforce setting. Prepared Graduate Competencies in the Invent and Discover to Create Standard are: Recognize, interpret, and validate that the creative process builds on the development of ideas through a process of inquiry, discovery, and research Develop and build appropriate mastery in art-making skills using traditional and new technologies and an understanding of the characteristics and expressive features of art and design Create works of art that articulate more sophisticated ideas, feelings, emotions, and points of view about art and design through an expanded use of media and technologies Recognize, compare, and affirm that the making and study of art and design can be approached from a variety of viewpoints, intelligences, and perspectives 12

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard: Standard: 3. Invent and Discover to Create Prepared Graduates: Develop and build appropriate mastery in art-making skills using traditional and new technologies and an understanding of the characteristics and expressive features of art and design Recognize, interpret, and validate that the creative process builds on the development of ideas through a process of inquiry, discovery, and research GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 1. Demonstrate competency in traditional and new art media, and apply appropriate and available technology to express ideas Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Articulate ideas that can be expressed in traditional, advanced, and evolving media b. Create works of art representing personal narratives that use traditional and new media c. Adhere to ethical procedures that represent originality, personal expression and craftsmanship in producing works of art. 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. How can information be shared artistically? 2. How does creating art differ from viewing art? 3. Using the elements of art and the principles of design, what differentiates art-making technologies? 4. How do art-making skills express personal narratives successfully? Relevance and Application: 1. Skills in art and design are employed to create three-dimensional animation, film, gaming, and environmental graphic design. 2. The identification of personal narratives in art and the translation of their meaning using new media allows for the development of the personal, self-direction skills necessary to be an artist. 3. The translation of media allows for the development of skills to work within the commercial art environment. 4. Through new technologies, studio skills have evolved beyond the traditional skills, and yet can still rely on the foundational structures to create new skills. Nature of the Discipline: 1. Though the artist s imagination and intuition drive the work, great art and design require skills and discipline to turn notions into a quality product. 13

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard: Standard: 3. Invent and Discover to Create Prepared Graduates: Develop and build appropriate mastery in art-making skills using traditional and new technologies and an understanding of the characteristics and expressive features of art and design Recognize, interpret, and validate that the creative process builds on the development of ideas through a process of inquiry, discovery, and research GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 2. Assess and produce art with various materials and methods Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Skillfully use an expanded variety of techniques, media and tools to create works of art b. Discern and articulate the quality of personal works of art using a variety of reflective processes c. Skillfully create and exhibit one s own works of art d. Expand use of a sketchbook/journal by adding preliminary and finished drawings, critical writings, and class notes. 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. How are the characteristics and expressive features of art and design used to create art? 2. How can an artist create works of art through combining, expanding, and sequencing? 3. What problem-solving and experimental skills are employed in making works of art? Relevance and Application: 1. The use of current technology as an adjunct to creating art opens the door to creating new works, and discovering lost works of art. 2. Visual arts rely on reflective processes to create new and evolved works of art through introspection, collaboration, global connection, experimentation, and research. Nature of the Discipline: 1. The visual arts serve multiple functions such as enlightenment, education, therapy, and entertainment. 14

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard: 3. Invent and Discover to Create Prepared Graduates: Recognize, compare, and affirm that the making and study of art and design can be approached from a variety of viewpoints, intelligences, and perspectives GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 3. Make judgments from visual messages Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Compare and contrast the analytical processes used to interpret works of art and images of mass media 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. Why is one type of visual image or object considered to be more important than another? 2. How is value assigned to art? 3. How does visual imagery used in mass media correlate with art? Relevance and Application: 1. Understanding the use of branding in marketing helps to use art to make purchase decisions. 2. Interpreting visual messages in advertisements, news, and entertainment helps to make informed decisions. 3. Recognizing stereotyping in visual media helps to change norms. 4. Recognizing that current technology plays a role in understanding visual culture clears the way to new thinking in art-making. Nature of the Discipline: 1. The artistic process can lead to unforeseen or unpredictable outcomes. 15

4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Recognize, articulate, and validate the value of the visual arts to lifelong learning and the human experience. To respond to art involves relating to art; connecting to art; personally linking to art; associating with art; bonding to art; moving toward art sensibilities; shifting to art orientations; thinking about art; attaching meaning to art; replying to art; reacting to art; internalizing art; personalizing art; and relating art to culture and diversity. Prepared Graduate Competencies The preschool through twelfth-grade concepts and skills that all students who complete the Colorado education system must master to ensure their success in a postsecondary and workforce setting. Prepared Graduate Competencies in the Relate and Connect to Transfer Standard are: Identify, compare, and interpret works of art derived from historical and cultural settings, time periods, and cultural contexts Identify, compare and justify that the visual arts are a way to acknowledge, exhibit and learn about the diversity of peoples, cultures and ideas Transfer the value of visual arts to lifelong learning and the human experience Explain, compare and justify that the visual arts are connected to other disciplines, the other art forms, social activities, mass media, and careers in art and non-art related arenas 16

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard: Standard: 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Prepared Graduates: Identify, compare and justify that the visual arts are a way to acknowledge, exhibit and learn about the diversity of peoples, cultures and ideas GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 1. The work of art scholars impacts how art is viewed today Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Discern the value of works of art based on historical significance, craftsmanship, cultural context, and originality using appropriate, domainspecific terminology that honors sensitive traditions b. Describe, refine and organize personal ideas about aesthetic qualities of a work of art. 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. What constitutes art? According to whom? 2. Why create? 3. How does aesthetics and beauty influence the quality of life? Relevance and Application: 1. Manipulating and analyzing various criticisms from existing and historical art scholars allows students to identify how art can elicit varying opinions. 2. Providing knowledge and relevance of artistic and cultural history can help to bring about alternative views of previous and contemporary societies. 3. Giving context and new thinking to works of art, scholars hold the knowledge of the past and present. Nature of the Discipline: 1. Informed opinions about art are debated, but not necessarily resolved. 2. Investigating diverse cultures and their viewpoints leads to a more knowledgeable society. 17

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard: Standard: 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Prepared Graduates: Transfer the value of visual arts to lifelong learning and the human experience Explain, compare and justify that the visual arts are connected to other disciplines, the other art forms, social activities, mass media, and careers in art and non-art related arenas GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 2. Communication through advanced visual methods is a necessary skill in everyday life Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Use sketches, plans, and models to create and/or design a functioning work of art b. Explain the personal influences which shape the creation of functioning art 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. Why do artists produce preliminary plans? 2. How does material culture influence artistic decisions? 3. What informs the look of our material culture? Relevance and Application: 1. Understanding the cultural influences in functional design such as architecture and furniture creates comprehension of trends and patterns in society. 2. Knowing the role of artists and designers in creating our built environment and material culture identifies the contemporary societal role that artists possess. 3. Shaping our understanding of new media gives us insight to the understanding of material culture. Nature of the Discipline: 1. Artists and designers are important creators of our material culture. 2. Cultural traditions influence the creation of material culture. 18

Content Area: Visual Arts Standard: Standard: 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Prepared Graduates: Transfer the value of visual arts to lifelong learning and the human experience Explain, compare and justify that the visual arts are connected to other disciplines, the other art forms, social activities, mass media, and careers in art and non-art related arenas GRADE LEVEL EXPECTATION: High School Photography, Level 2 Concepts and skills students master: 3. Art is a lifelong endeavor Evidence Outcomes Students can: a. Compare and contrast the roles of artists and designers in historical and contemporary context b. Demonstrate and understanding of an art-related career 21 st Century Skills and Readiness Competencies Inquiry Questions: 1. How and why is art used as a vehicle for communication? 2. To what extent does good design integrate form with function? 3. How is art used in everyday life? 4. What careers are in visual art? Relevance and Application: 1. Integrating and connecting knowledge and skills in art to other fields of study gives a broader understanding of the roles that artists play in society. 2. Using job placement technology to research the range of careers available for personal career development provide insight into the many levels of visual art skills that are valued in today s workforce such as graphic design and software design skills in marketing, forensics, medicine, and video game design. Nature of the Discipline: 1. Artists and designers make important contributions to society. 19

Prepared Graduate Competencies in Visual Arts The preschool through twelfth-grade concepts and skills that all students who complete the Colorado education system must master to ensure their success in a postsecondary and workforce setting. Prepared graduates: Recognize, articulate, and debate that the visual arts are a means for expression Make informed critical evaluations of visual and material culture, information, and technologies Analyze, interpret, and make meaning of art and design critically using oral and written discourse Explain, demonstrate, and interpret a range of purposes of art and design, recognizing that the making and study of art and design can be approached from a variety of viewpoints, intelligences, and perspectives Identify, compare, and interpret works of art derived from historical and cultural settings, time periods, and cultural contexts Identify, compare and justify that the visual arts are a way to acknowledge, exhibit and learn about the diversity of peoples, cultures and ideas Transfer the value of visual arts to lifelong learning and the human experience Explain, compare and justify that the visual arts are connected to other disciplines, the other art forms, social activities, mass media, and careers in art and non-art related arenas Recognize, interpret, and validate that the creative process builds on the development of ideas through a process of inquiry, discovery, and research Develop and build appropriate mastery in art-making skills, using traditional and new technologies and an understanding of the characteristics and expressive features of art and design Create works of art that articulate more sophisticated ideas, feelings, emotions, and points of view about art and design through an expanded use of media and technologies Recognize, compare, and affirm that the making and study of art and design can be approached from a variety of viewpoints, intelligences, and perspectives Recognize, demonstrate, and debate philosophic arguments about the nature of art and beauty (aesthetics) Recognize, demonstrate, and debate the place of art and design in history and culture Use specific criteria to discuss and evaluate works of art Critique personal work and the work of others with informed criteria Recognize, articulate, and implement critical thinking in the visual arts by synthesizing, evaluating, and analyzing visual information 20

Standard High School 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Eighth Grade 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Visual Arts Grade Level Expectations at a Glance Grade Level Expectation 1. Visual art has inherent characteristics and expressive features 2. Historical and cultural context are found in visual art 3. Art and design have purpose and function 1. Reflective strategies are used to understand the creative process 2. A personal philosophy of art is accomplished through use of sophisticated language and studio art processes 3. Interpretation is a means for understanding and evaluating works of art 1. Demonstrate competency in traditional and new art media, and apply appropriate and available technology for the expression of ideas 2. Assess and produce art with various materials and methods 3. Make judgments from visual messages 1. The work of art scholars impacts how art is viewed today 2. Communication through advanced visual methods is a necessary skill in everyday life 3. Art is a lifelong endeavor 1. Conceptual art theories explain how works of art are created 2. The history of art, world cultures, and artistic styles influence contemporary art concerns 3. Art criticism strategies are used to analyze, interpret, and make informed judgments about works of art 1. Visual literacy skills help to establish personal meaning and artistic intent in works of art 2. Key concepts, issues, and themes in the visual arts can solve problems using real-world applications 1. Achieve artistic purpose to communicate intent 2. Demonstrate technical proficiency and craftsmanship when planning 3. Utilize current and available technology to refine an idea, and create original and imaginative works of art 1. Visual arts are valuable for a variety of art and non-art related lifelong endeavors 2. Cultural traditions and events impact visual arts within a community 3. Visual arts provide an opportunity to explore sustainable environments, design and architecture 21

Standard Seventh Grade 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Sixth Grade 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Visual Arts Grade Level Expectations at a Glance Grade Level Expectation 1. The characteristics and expressive features of art and design are used in analyzing and synthesizing the meaning in works of art 2. Understanding works of art involves knowledge of historical and cultural styles, genre, and artists over time 3. Knowledge of art vocabulary is important when critically analyzing works of arts 1. Visual literacy skills are used to create meaning from a variety of information 2. Concepts, issues, and themes in the visual arts can be used to communicate ideas in various other disciplines 1. Achieve the ability to plan, anticipate outcomes, and demonstrate craftsmanship in creating a work of art 2. Restructure and apply the technical skills and processes required to achieve desired results in producing works of art 3. Use of various media, materials, and tools to express specific meaning in works of art 4. Utilize current, available technology as a primary medium to create original works of art 1. Critical thinking in the arts transfers to multiple uses in life 2. The visual arts community messages its cultural traditions and events 3. Art and design strategies can solve environmental problems 1. The characteristics and expressive features of art and design are used in unique ways to respond to two- and three-dimensional art 2. Art created across time and cultures can exhibit stylistic differences and commonalities 3. Specific art vocabulary is used to describe, analyze, and interpret works of art 1. Visual symbols and metaphors can be used to create visual expression 2. Key concepts, issues, and themes connect the visual arts to other disciplines such as the humanities, sciences, mathematics, social studies, and technology 1. Plan the creation of a work of art 2. Explore various media, materials, and techniques used to create works of art 3. Utilize current, available technology to refine ideas in works of art 1. Critical thinking in the arts transfers to multiple lifelong endeavors 2. Visual arts impact community, cultural traditions, and events 3. Eco-art is a contemporary response to environmental issues 22

Standard Fifth Grade 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Fourth Grade 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Visual Arts Grade Level Expectations at a Glance Grade Level Expectation 1. Visual arts connect multiple characteristics of art 2. Visual arts communicate the human experience 3. Visual arts learning involves analyzing the formal and sensory qualities of art 1. Evaluative criteria is used when responding to works of art 2. Specific methods of planning support the development of intended meaning 1. Use artistic media and expression to communicate personal and objective points of view 2. Create art using technological media 3. Apply an understanding of art processes and creative thinking to plan and create art 1. Artists, viewers, and patrons assign intended meaning to works of art 2. Artists, viewers, and patrons respond to art from familiar and unfamiliar cultures 1. Artists and viewers determine artistic intent by comparing and contrasting the characteristics and expressive features of art and design 2. Works of art articulate and express different points of view 3. Artists, viewers and patrons respond to works of art using inference and empathy 1. The critique process informs judgments about artistic and aesthetic merits in works of art 2. The processes and philosophies of art and design inform interpretations in works of art 1. Use media to express and communicate ideas about an issue of personal interest 2. Materials and processes can be used in traditional, unique, and inventive ways 1. Viewers and patrons make personal meaning and infer artistic intent 2. Historical time periods and cultural settings are interpreted in works of art 23

Standard Third Grade 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Second Grade 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer First Grade 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Visual Arts Grade Level Expectations at a Glance Grade Level Expectation 1. The identification of characteristics and expressive features in works of art and design help to determine artistic intent 2. Art has intent and purpose 1. Artists, viewers, and patrons use the language of art to respond to their own art and the art of others 2. Artists, viewers, and patrons make connections among the characteristics, expressive features, and purposes of art and design 1. Use basic media to express ideas through the art-making process 2. Demonstrate basic studio skills 1. Works of art connect individual ideas to make meaning 2. Historical and cultural ideas are evident in works of art 1. Artists make choices that communicate ideas in works of art 2. Characteristics and expressive features of art and design are used to identify and discuss works of art 1. Visual arts use various literacies to convey intended meaning 1. Use familiar symbols to identify and demonstrate characteristics and expressive features of art and design 1. Visual arts respond to human experience by relating art to the community 1. Works of art express feelings 2. Art represents and renders the stories of people, places, or things 1. Visual arts provide opportunities to respond to personal works of art and the art of others 1. Create art to communicate ideas, feelings, or emotions 1. Visual arts relate experiences to self, family, and friends 24

Standard Kindergarten 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Preschool 1. Observe and Learn to Comprehend 2. Envision and Critique to Reflect 3. Invent and Discover to Create 4. Relate and Connect to Transfer Visual Arts Grade Level Expectations at a Glance Grade Level Expectation 1. Artists and viewers recognize characteristics and expressive features within works of art 2. Personal feelings are described in and through works of art 1. Identify that art represents and tells the stories of people, places, or things 2. Artists interpret connections to the stories told in and by works of art 1. Create two- and three-dimensional work of art based on person relevance 1. Artists and viewers contribute and connect to their communities 1. Artists and viewers identify art in daily life 1. Works of art can represent people, places, and things 1. Create works of art based on personal relevance 1. Artists have an important role in communities 25

Glossary of Terms Abstraction Work in which the artist uses a recognizable subject but portrays it in an unrealisticmanner. Aesthetic Inquiry Asking questions about works of art, describing and evaluating the media, processes, and meanings of works of art and making comparative judgments. Aesthetics A discipline in the visual arts and a branch of philosophy focused on the nature and value of art; pertaining to how we see things and what they mean. Aesthetic theories generally include mimetic, formalist, expressive, instrumental, institutional and postmodern. Analogous Architecture and Environmental Arts Artifact Background A color scheme which uses colors that are next to one another on the color wheel and share a hue. Urban, interior and landscape design. Any simple object showing human workmanship and aesthetic modification. The most distant layer of implied planes in the picture space of a two-dimensional work of art Balance A principle of design that describes the arrangement of the elements of an artwork. An artwork that is balanced seems to have equal visual weight or interest in all areas. Collage The use of various materials (e.g., cardboard, metal, plastic, paper) adhered to a surface to create an image. Color An element of art that refers to what the eyes see when light is reflected off an object. Hue is another word for color. Color Scheme Color Wheel A plan for selecting or organizing colors. A circular chart of colors of the visible spectrum. It is commonly used to remember color relationships when working with pigments. 26

Complementary Colors that are directly opposite each other on the color wheel. When mixed together they make a neutral brown or gray. When they are used next to each other in a work of art they create strong contrasts. Composition Contrast To create, form or design an image by arranging separate parts to create a whole. The principles of design are used to organize the elements of art in a composition. A large difference between two things, for example, rough and smooth, light and shadow or complementary colors. Contrasts usually add excitement, drama and interest to artworks. Cool Colors Blue, green and violet colors which make us think of cool places, things or feelings; can be used as a color scheme Critical Analysis A higher level thinking strategy, such as Feldman's model for description, analysis, interpretation and judgment. Critique The process and/or the result of careful reviewing works of art based on standards or criteria. A critique can be written or verbal. Culture/Cultural A style of social and artistic expression unique to a particular community of people; the ideas, beliefs and living customs of a people. Defend Appropriate Judgments For example: Picasso was the greatest painter of the 20 th century because he invented new ways of seeing. Design and Communication Arts Film, television, graphics, illustration, photography, product design and electronic imagery. Dominance Part of the artwork that is most important, powerful or has the most influence on the viewer. Elements of Art Emphasis The components of visual arts: line, shape, space, form, color, value, texture. A principle of design which refers to a distinguished feature or area of a work of art that captures the viewer s attention 27

Expressive Features Fine Arts Folk Arts Foreground Components of works of art, which effect the emotions, such as anger, sadness, and joy. Traditional art forms, such as drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture, ceramics, fibers, jewelry and photography. This term is often used to refer collectively, to dance, music, theater and the visual arts. Art that expresses a cultural connection between ethnic forms and traditions and contemporary life experiences. The closest layer of implied planes in the picture space of a twodimensional work of art. Form An element of art that refers to a three-dimensional object. Also a general term that means the structure or design of a work. Harmony Historical Hue Intermediate Color A principle of design concerned with blending elements to create a more calm, restful appearance. Refers to what is concerned with history; having importance or influence on history. Another name for a color. A color made by mixing a secondary color with a primary color. Interpretation To find meaning and understanding in a particular way. Judgment Landscape Line Materials Media Middle Ground The ability to form an opinion about a work or art using established criteria such as craftsmanship, design quality, expressiveness, personal response and originality. Artwork that depicts natural scenery An element of art that refers to the path of a moving point through space. A line can vary in length, width, direction, curvature and color. Resources used in the creation and study of visual art, such as paint, clay, paper, canvas, film, videotape, watercolors, wood and plastic. Broad categories for grouping works of visual art according to the art materials used, for example, the painting media are watercolor, oil, tempera, acrylic, etc. The middle layer of implied planes in the picture space of a twodimensional work of art. Mixed Media Description of any work of art employing more that one medium. 28

Monochromatic Movement Color scheme using different values (tints and shades) of a single hue. A principle of design used to create the look and feeling of action and to guide a viewer's eye throughout the work. Multi Media Multiple Solutions for Visual Arts Problems Neutral Colors Pattern Using or encompassing several media, including photography, television, video and film. Such as designing three different kinds of containers using paper, clay and/or cardboard. Refers to colors not associated with a hue such as white, gray or black; also considered a color scheme. Repeated use of the elements of art in a purposeful way. Perspective Portrait A method of representing the illusion of volume in threedimensional objects and depth of space on a two-dimensional surface. A work of art based on a person or animal, especially the face. Primary Colors Principles of Design Printmaking The three colors that can not be made by mixing together other colors (red, blue and yellow). Artistic guidelines that help artists organize images in a composition: balance, rhythm, emphasis, unity, variety, contrast, proportion, pattern, movement. A technique in which an inked image from a prepared surface or block is transferred onto another surface. Process A sequential operation involving a number of methods or techniques, such as the carving process in sculpture, the etching process in printmaking, or the casting process in making jewelry. Proportion Realism Rhythm Secondary Color A principle of design based on the relationship of one part to another and to the whole. A style of art in which everyday scenes and events are painted as they actually look. A principle of design created through the repetition of an element to make a work seem active or to suggest vibration. A color made by mixing equal amounts of two primary colors. 29

Sensory Features Components of works of art that affect the five physical senses. Shade Dark values of pure colors usually created by adding black. Shape Space Specific Criteria Split-Complementary Still Life An element of art that refers to a flat area created when a line meets to surround a space. Shapes can be divided into two types: geometric (square, triangle, circle, etc.) and organic (irregular in outline). An element of art that refers to the distance between, around, above, below and within things. A means by which judgments can be made, such as analyzing a work of art by assigning it an artistic style (Realism, Abstraction, Cubism, etc.) A color scheme based on one color and the colors on either side of its complement on the color wheel. A representation of inanimate objects in a work of art, often included as symbols for concepts or ideas. Style Symbol Artistic character of art movements during specific periods of history or an individual artist's use of media, which gives the work an individual character. Something that stands for or suggests something else by reason of relationship, association, convention or accidental resemblance Synthesis Techniques Technology Texture Tint Tools The combination of separate parts or elements to form something new. Specific methods or processes used in making art, such as carving wood, developing film, or weaving yarn. A method or methodology that applies technical knowledge or tools to solve new conceptual problems. An element of art that refers to the way a thing feels, or looks as though it might feel if touched, the quality or appearance of a surface. Light values of pure colors usually created by adding white. Instruments and equipment used by students to create and learn about art, such as brushes, scissors, cameras, digital technology, etc. 30

Triad A color scheme based on three colors that are equal distant apart on the color wheel such as primary colors or secondary colors. Unity Value Variety Visual Art Visual Image Visual Literacy Warm Colors A principle of design achieved when all aspects of a work of art are organized to create a feeling of completeness, wholeness or harmony. An element of art that means the darkness or lightness of a surface. A principle of design focused on the use of different elements of art to create visual interest. Creation, expression, or communication based on visual form. A representation of the form and features of someone or something. The ability to perceive and respond to visual symbols and images, for example: recognizing and understanding the international signs for no smoking or highway rest stops. Red, orange and yellow colors which make us think of warm places, things or feelings; can be used as a color scheme. 31