Unit 1A Year 5-6

Visual Arts (Drawing)

Unit Description

In this unit, students will learn how accurate observation is essential for creating meaningful drawings through techniques like contour line drawing. They will take charge of their creative processes while exploring contour lines, shading, and negative space. The unit will culminate in a detailed contour drawing of people in motion and a final drawing exhibition.

Overview

Unit 1A: Drawing Years 5 and 6 is a Visual Arts unit for Years 5 and 6 students. It aligns with the Australian Curriculum content descriptions:

  • Explore ideas and practices used by artists, including practices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artists, to represent different views, beliefs and opinions (ACAVAM114). 
  • Develop and apply techniques and processes when making their artworks (ACAVAM115).
  • Plan the display of artworks to enhance their meaning for an audience (ACAVAM116). 
  • Explain how visual arts conventions communicate meaning by comparing artworks from different social, cultural and historical contexts, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artworks (ACAVAR117).

Success Criteria

  • Develop an understanding of how edges and spaces make up a drawing (Week 1–2).
  • Apply drawing skills to produce a contour line drawing. (Weeks 9).
  • Identify and compare the practices, ideas and meaning behind artworks from different cultural contexts (Weeks 1–8).
  • Demonstrate an understanding of artworks studied in the creation of a response artwork (Weeks 1–8).
  • Identify, evaluate, and compare the creative process and decision-making behind developing their artworks (Weeks 1–8).

Learning objectives

In Weeks 1–8, students learn:

  • to identify and apply their understanding of contour lines and edges
  • to identify and draw spaces and forms using both positive and negative space
  • how artists communicate their ideas using specific practices in the development of their artworks
  • how to compare and respond to different artworks from a range of cultural contexts, including Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples
  • to document and refine their creative process in their Process Journals.

Resources

Teaching resources

  • Lessons
  • Teaching Guide
  • Student Workbook
  • Final Assessment
  • Process Journal


Extra resources

Picture Plane View Finder 

Assessment

Continuous assessments

Continuous assessments are used to ascertain whether the knowledge recently taught has been understood by the student. These include oral tasks administered to individual students or written tasks administered to the whole class for an entire lesson. Written tasks are completed in the Student Workbook.


Final assessment

The final assessment occurs at the end of the unit in Week 9 and consists of a negative space sports drawing, a revised Process Journal with annotated drawing exercises and art analysis tasks, and a final reflection task and art display.

Course Content

Expand All

About Instructor

Mahmoud Diaa

31 Courses

+29 enrolled
Not Enrolled

Course Includes

  • 4 Lessons
  • 12 Topics

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *