Art and Design

A Level Eduqas

Why study Art and Design?

The main purpose of any course in Art and Design is to develop your ability to appreciate the visual world, and respond in a personal and creative way. We want to encourage self-expression and creativity and build confidence as well as a sense of individual identity. The creative industries are now Britain’s greatest export; studying Art and Design can help with developing skills and ways of working that will benefit you in the future in whatever career you choose. Employers value people who can think creatively and innovatively; studying Art facilitates this as well as improving your time management skills.  Studying the arts teaches determination and resilience – qualities useful to any career. The Art Department is committed to providing a diverse, rigorous and exciting course which will provide a rewarding and exciting element to your A Level choices. You will develop:

We run a number of visits to galleries in London and a residential visit to Amsterdam or another destination to develop this understanding.  This course is suitable for students who:

Destinations for AHS students who studied this subject are on display outside the subject classrooms

AHS students can use Unifrog to explore how this subject might be used in life after A Levels

Entry Requirements

The individual creative developments which appear at GCSE form the basis for A Level study. It is therefore essential that a potential A Level Art student should have a genuine interest in the subject, and have achieved at least a grade 6 for Art or Textiles GCSE.

If you have an aptitude for the subject, if you are creative and are prepared to work hard at developing your abilities, you will have the skills to succeed. Above all, you should have an interest in creating and understanding art and want to develop that interest through a range of art and design disciplines showing expressive, individual and risk taking work.

Special features of the course

The opportunity for you to develop your own particular strength, style and way of working is what makes this course unique.  In Year 12 you have the opportunity to explore, expand and consolidate your technical skills and grasp of the assessment objectives by using the whole of the first year as an exploratory and investigative year, learning and honing skills, and gradually developing a sense of your own strengths in the subject. In Year 13 you are able to use the time to fully consolidate your expertise and hone in on selected skills and disciplines, taking risks and developing your work on your area of focus for the Contextual Study and produce work relating to that theme. 

How is the course organised?

Autumn Term Year 12: eg People and Place - you will start A Level with a foundation project working initially on loose sheets developing your skills.  

Spring Term Year 12: You will start your first self-directed component. This could be further developed from your first project or a new one. You could use a past exam theme to generate your ideas.

Summer Term Year 12 and Autumn Term Year 13: Independent coursework assignment practical and continued piece of writing 

Spring Term Year 13: ESA set by the exam board.

Assessment

The A Level is made up of 2 units over 2 years:

Coursework 60%           Externally Set Assignment 40%