Abstract :
The new AS level modular examinations for year
12 students in England were introduced as part
of the government’s Curriculum 2000 reforms
designed to bring greater breadth to year 12 and
13 experience. A uniform structure of two
modules followed by a synoptic timed test has
been imposed on all subjects by the Qualifications
and Curriculum Authority [QCA]. In AS Level Art
the expressive study module requires evidence of
a broad engagement with different generic art
forms and visual language skills. The Thematic
Study requires convergence towards specific
outcomes in at least two media and the Timed
Test of eight hours duration requires work towards
a single theme with a preparatory period of six
weeks. The paper arrives in January so the two
coursework modules need to be completed in a
little more than a term.
The four assessment objectives are as follows:
1 To record observations, experiences, ideas,
information and insights in visual and other
forms, appropriate to intentions.
2 To analyse and evaluate critically sources
such as images, objects, artifacts and texts,
showing understanding of purposes,
meanings and contexts.
3 To develop ideas through sustained investigations
and exploration, selecting and using
materials, processes and resources,
identifying and interpreting relationships
and analysing methods and outcomes.
4 To present a personal coherent and informed
response, realising intentions and articulating
and explaining connnections with the work
of others.
All four objectives need to be met in each module.
Although some subjects have welcomed the
change, it seems that fears raised by those
concerned with the teaching of art during the
consultation process have been born out by the
experience of the last year. Previously art teachers
were free to address skills and concepts in
their own way and with regard to the different
aptitudes, interests and learning styles of their
students. The final submission, including the
exam project, was marked as a whole relying on
the professional experience of the teacher and
moderators to balance the requirements of the
syllabus with the transcendent, the ‘wow factor’.
This paper questions the value of a tiered course
that is at once superficial in its expectations,
draconian in content, unrealistic in its timescale
and discourages work of substance.