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Core Curriculum

Common Essential Learnings The Adaptive Dimension Locally-determined Options
Core Curriculum: Plans for Implementation defines the Core Curriculum as including seven Required Areas of Study, the Common Essential Learnings, the Adaptive Dimension and Locally-Determined Options. Arts Education is one of the seven Required Areas of Study.

Common Essential Learnings

Understanding the Common Essential Learnings: A Handbook for Teachers is a foundation document. It defines the Common Essential Learnings and provides an explanation of each category. Teachers should refer to this document for more complete information on the Common Essential Learnings.

Arts Education offers many opportunities for incorporating the Common Essential Learnings into instruction. The purpose of this incorporation is to help students to understand the subject matter better and to prepare them for future learning, both within and outside of the kindergarten to grade 12 education system. The decision to focus on a particular Common Essential Learning within a lesson is guided by the needs and abilities of individual students and by the particular demands of the subject area. Throughout a unit, it is intended that each Common Essential Learning be developed to the extent possible.

It is important to incorporate the Common Essential Learnings in an authentic manner. Although all subject areas offer many opportunities for incorporation, the development of a particular Common Essential Learning may be limited by the nature of the subject.

The Common Essential Learnings are intended to be developed and evaluated within subject areas. Throughout the four strands of the Arts Education program, the three components (creative/productive, cultural/historical and critical/responsive) reflect an emphasis on the development of the Common Essential Learnings through their content and processes. Therefore, the inherent structure of the curriculum promotes the integration of Common Essential Learnings into instruction. Foundational objectives for the Common Essential Learnings are included in the unit overview charts for all four strands.

Incorporating the Common Essential Learnings into instruction has implications for the assessment of student learning. A unit that has focused on developing Communication and Critical and Creative Thinking should also reflect this focus during assessment. Assessment strategies should allow students to demonstrate their understanding of the important concepts in the unit and how these concepts are related to each other and to previous learning. Questions can be structured so that evidence or reasons must accompany student explanations. If students are encouraged to think critically and creatively throughout a unit, then the assessment strategies for the unit should also require students to think critically and creatively.

Throughout this curriculum guide, the following symbols are used to refer to the Common Essential Learnings:

C Communication
CCT Critical and Creative Thinking
IL Independent Learning
N Numeracy
PSVSPersonal and Social Values and Skills
TL Technological Literacy

Communication

In Arts Education, the teacher can further students' knowledge, skills, attitudes and abilities related to Communication by:

Numeracy

In Arts Education, the teacher can foster Numeracy by:

Critical and Creative Thinking

In Arts Education, the teacher can foster Critical and Creative Thinking by:

Technological Literacy

In Arts Education, the teacher can foster the development of Technological Literacy by:

Personal and Social Values and Skills

In Arts Education, the teacher can foster the development of Personal and Social Values and Skills by:

Independent Learning

In Arts Education, the teacher can foster Independent Learning by:

  • guiding students in the development of their own dance compositions, dramas, musical expressions and art works
  • encouraging use of resources both inside and outside the school (for example, by inviting artists to the classroom, collecting newspaper clippings, using magazine articles, visiting museums and galleries, viewing relevant television shows or news reports, etc.)
  • planning experiences that lead to independent exploration or require students to go beyond what the class lesson provides
  • encouraging students to talk about arts expressions experienced outside of school in order to discover the relationship between these expressions and their class work
  • providing time for students to share in class what they have discovered at home about a particular concept that was introduced in the Arts Education program.

    The Adaptive Dimension

    Special Needs Students

    The Adaptive Dimension is an essential part of all educational programs. Like the Common Essential Learnings, the Adaptive Dimension is a component of Core Curriculum and permeates all curriculum and instruction. For more complete information, refer to the Saskatchewan Education document The Adaptive Dimension in Core Curriculum, 1992. The Adaptive Dimension is defined in this document as:

    ...the concept of making adjustments in approved educational programs to accommodate diversity in student learning needs. It includes those practices the teacher undertakes to make curriculum, instruction, and the learning environment meaningful and appropriate for each student. (p. 1)
    A wide range of diversity can be accommodated by using some general guidelines for adaptation:

    The Adaptive Dimension includes all practices the teacher employs to make learning meaningful and appropriate for each student in the class. Because the Adaptive Dimension permeates all teaching practice, sound professional judgment becomes the critical factor in decision-making. The Arts Education curriculum allows for such flexibility and decision-making.

    Special Needs Students In Arts Education Classes

    When there are students with special needs or a designated disability in the Arts Education classroom, teachers may need to seek professional advice and other forms of support. Consultative services regarding special needs students may be obtained through local school systems, community resources and Saskatchewan Education, Training and Employment's Special Education Unit. The Education Act defines students with designated disabilities as those persons who are visually impaired, hearing impaired, trainable mentally retarded, severely learning disabled, orthopedically disabled, chronically health impaired, or socially, emotionally or behaviourally disabled.

    In Arts Education, as in other subjects, there are adaptive techniques and other technical aids that can assist teachers in meeting the needs of students who face special challenges. Some students may require modified visual art tools or materials, a brailler, a voice synthesizer, a personal amplification system, or computer assisted instruction to derive maximum benefit from Arts Education.

    Of particular concern in dance or music might be a student with a chronic physical disability or hearing impairment. These students may achieve the foundational objectives related to the cultural/historical and critical/responsive components of the program with few adaptations or with the same adaptations that are required in other subjects. However, to help the student achieve the foundational objectives related to the creative/productive component, the teacher may require further support. For example, through consultation with a resource person, the teacher could find ways to encourage the student who is physically challenged to create expressive movements to the best of his or her ability. The teacher might discover new ways to encourage a student with a severe hearing impairment to create music with computers and to use different vibration sources such as the voice, homemade and traditional instruments, or found objects to create unique sound compositions.

    An adaptation for a student with a visual impairment in the creative/productive component of visual art, for example, may be the use of three-dimensional materials such as clay or wood rather than two-dimensional materials. When learning to respond to visual art that has been created by others, this student might require electronic assistance or braille resource books. The student may rely on interviews, research and the sense of touch when discussing art works.

    Arts Education is an exciting and unique way of discovering and knowing about the world and human experience. With innovative adaptations and strong support, every Saskatchewan student can realize the tremendous benefits of an Arts Education.

    Locally-determined Options

    Core Curriculum policy states that the time allotment for Arts Education at the Elementary and Middle Levels is 200 minutes per week. It also states that time allotted to any Required Area of Study may be reduced by 20% to provide time for locally-determined options. In Arts Education, this means that time could be reduced by 20% in each of the four strands. Students are required to study all four strands of this curriculum, so this percentage could not be taken from one strand only. For more complete information on locally-determined options refer to the Saskatchewan Education document Core Curriculum: Plans for Implementation, 1987.

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