Starting with their own ideas
Students begin the year by turning everyday experiences into art. They sketch from memory, try out ideas in a notebook, and learn that a first try is just the start.
This is the year art starts feeling like real thinking, not just making something pretty. Students plan a piece before they begin, try out ideas, and go back to fix what isn't working. They also start talking about art with reasons, explaining what a picture means and why an artist might have made it that way. By spring, they can finish a piece of artwork and explain the choices behind it.
Students begin the year by turning everyday experiences into art. They sketch from memory, try out ideas in a notebook, and learn that a first try is just the start.
Students practice with new materials like paint, clay, and collage. They learn to plan a piece before making it and to revise as they go.
Students look at art from different cultures and eras. They notice why artists made certain choices and connect those ideas to their own work.
Students finish pieces, choose which ones to display, and explain what they were trying to show. They also learn to give honest, kind feedback on a classmate's work.
Students connect something they already know or have lived through to the art they make. A memory, a feeling, or an idea from their own life becomes part of the work.
Students look at a painting or sculpture and connect it to the time, place, or community it came from. That context helps them understand why the work looks the way it does and what the artist was trying to say.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect something they already know or have lived through to the art they make. A memory, a feeling, or an idea from their own life becomes part of the work. | VA:Cn10.3 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Students look at a painting or sculpture and connect it to the time, place, or community it came from. That context helps them understand why the work looks the way it does and what the artist was trying to say. | VA:Cn11.3 |
Students brainstorm ideas for artwork before picking up a brush or pencil. They sketch, talk through concepts, and make early decisions about what they want to create.
Students take a rough idea and turn it into finished artwork by making choices about color, shape, and composition along the way.
Students revisit a finished drawing or artwork and make deliberate changes to improve it, adjusting color, detail, or composition before calling it done.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm ideas for artwork before picking up a brush or pencil. They sketch, talk through concepts, and make early decisions about what they want to create. | VA:Cr1.3 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take a rough idea and turn it into finished artwork by making choices about color, shape, and composition along the way. | VA:Cr2.3 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students revisit a finished drawing or artwork and make deliberate changes to improve it, adjusting color, detail, or composition before calling it done. | VA:Cr3.3 |
Students look at several pieces of their own artwork and choose one to display or share, thinking about why that piece shows their best work.
Students practice and improve their artwork before sharing it, deciding what changes make the piece ready to display or present to others.
Students choose how to display their artwork and explain what they want viewers to notice or feel. The way a piece is presented is part of what it says.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students look at several pieces of their own artwork and choose one to display or share, thinking about why that piece shows their best work. | VA:Pr4.3 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students practice and improve their artwork before sharing it, deciding what changes make the piece ready to display or present to others. | VA:Pr5.3 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students choose how to display their artwork and explain what they want viewers to notice or feel. The way a piece is presented is part of what it says. | VA:Pr6.3 |
Students look closely at a piece of artwork and describe what they notice, from colors and shapes to the mood or story the artist seems to be telling.
Students look at a piece of art and explain what they think the artist meant, using details from the work to back up their thinking.
Students look at a piece of art and decide how well it works by checking it against a set of rules or questions, like whether the colors fit the mood or the shapes tell a clear story.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students look closely at a piece of artwork and describe what they notice, from colors and shapes to the mood or story the artist seems to be telling. | VA:Re7.3 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students look at a piece of art and explain what they think the artist meant, using details from the work to back up their thinking. | VA:Re8.3 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students look at a piece of art and decide how well it works by checking it against a set of rules or questions, like whether the colors fit the mood or the shapes tell a clear story. | VA:Re9.3 |
Students make art with a purpose, not just for fun. They sketch ideas, try out materials like paint, clay, and collage, and finish pieces they can talk about. They also look at art made by other people and share what they notice.
Keep paper, pencils, scissors, and glue in one spot students can reach. Ask students to tell the story behind a drawing instead of asking if it is good. Visiting a local museum, library art display, or even looking at art online together counts as real practice.
Focus on the idea, not the finished look. Ask what students were trying to show, what they tried first, and what they would change. Third graders often compare their work to cartoons or older siblings, so it helps to remind them that artists redo work all the time.
A handful of basic words helps, such as line, shape, color, texture, and pattern. Students should be able to point to these in their own work and in a picture. Drilling vocabulary lists is not the goal.
Start with idea generation and sketchbooks so students learn that art begins before the final piece. Move into longer projects that ask for planning, drafting, and revision. End the year with a small show or portfolio where students choose pieces and explain why.
Two areas tend to stall: planning before making, and revising after a first try. Many students want to jump straight to the final piece and call it done. Short warm-ups that require a thumbnail sketch and one change before finishing help build the habit.
Pair each unit with one or two real artists or art traditions and show actual images. Ask students what they notice, what it reminds them of, and what they might borrow for their own piece. The connection sticks when students use the idea in their own work.
Students can come up with an idea, plan it, make it, and talk about what they meant. They can also look at someone else's art and say what they see and what they think it means, using simple reasons. Finished pieces show care, not just speed.