SCHOOL ASSESSMENT
ASSESSMENT TYPE 2: Practical (30%)
Students produce one practical.
This assessment provides an opportunity for you to complete practical art work that has been resolved from the visual thinking and learning you have documented in your folio.
There are two parts to this assessment:
Design Practical Work
This requires you to produce two practicals, both of which must be resolved works.
You may maintain a theme throughout your work or you may diversify.
Your design practical may take any of the following forms: film, animation, installation, assemblage, digital imaging, painting, drawing, mixed media, printmaking, photography, wood, plastic, or metal fabrication, sculpture, ceramics, and/or textiles.
The Practitioner’s Statement
This part requires you to prepare a written practitioner’s statement for each of the two resolved practicals.
Your practitioner’s statement for design practical work should include:
- a summary of the design brief
- a description of the starting points and influences
- an evaluation of how well the design resolution meets the parameters of the design brief
- your evaluation of your own practical work(s) and connections with other practitioners’ work
- the communication of beliefs, values, or a philosophy about a personal design aesthetic.
Each practitioner’s statement should be a maximum of 250 words.
ASSESSMENT TYPE 2: Practical (30%)
Students produce one practical.
This assessment provides an opportunity for you to complete practical art work that has been resolved from the visual thinking and learning you have documented in your folio.
There are two parts to this assessment:
Design Practical Work
This requires you to produce two practicals, both of which must be resolved works.
You may maintain a theme throughout your work or you may diversify.
Your design practical may take any of the following forms: film, animation, installation, assemblage, digital imaging, painting, drawing, mixed media, printmaking, photography, wood, plastic, or metal fabrication, sculpture, ceramics, and/or textiles.
The Practitioner’s Statement
This part requires you to prepare a written practitioner’s statement for each of the two resolved practicals.
Your practitioner’s statement for design practical work should include:
- a summary of the design brief
- a description of the starting points and influences
- an evaluation of how well the design resolution meets the parameters of the design brief
- your evaluation of your own practical work(s) and connections with other practitioners’ work
- the communication of beliefs, values, or a philosophy about a personal design aesthetic.
Each practitioner’s statement should be a maximum of 250 words.