The Government’s Curriculum and Assessment review launched in July, and the Call for Evidence is open between 25 September and 22 November 2024. This a huge opportunity to have your say in the education system in England after 14 years of a stark decline in expressive arts subjects in schools. You can access the review form here and you can save the sections as you go along.
- Introduction
- General points to consider as you make your submission
- Subject specific guidance
- Section-by-section guidance
- Evidence bank
Introduction
CLA evidence can be extremely helpful for submissions:
- Setting out the problem – In setting out the problem (the decline in arts education over the past 15 years): use the 2024 Report Card
- The equity point – In making the social justice point about equitable access: use the enrichment gap section in the 2024 Report Card (see pages 33-36)
- The value point – In saying why this is a problem – i.e. the evidenced benefits of an arts-rich education: use our new draft Capabilities Framework (see below) and our 2017 Key Research Findings
- The solutions – In making suggestions for improvement: use our Blueprint for an arts-rich education
The Arts in Schools report is also full of rich data, evidence and solutions for you to use. And our Briefing Papers provide further supporting evidence. We have also put together a summary evidence bank.
Our Capabilities Framework has been developed by our Evidence and Value Narrative Working Group over the past year, and is still in draft form, but we are sharing a simplified version here as we are finding it helpful in describing why embedding expressive arts education in England’s schooling (across curriculum, assessment, qualifications pathways and accountability measures, at all phases) is important. We are in the process of connecting each capability to the related evidence.
Expressive arts subjects teach children to work, alone and together with others, to investigate, develop, interpret and communicate their ideas and understanding. We know that expressive arts subjects support young people to thrive and to belong – in their schools and in their communities – and that the value of the experiences, skills and knowledge that they acquire through expressive arts subjects can be described through three pillars; these in turn encompass seven capabilities that have personal benefits for the child, which in turn lead to societal benefits: agency, wellbeing, communication, empathy, collaboration, creativity and interpretation. These seven capabilities are described – within their three distinct pillars – below. Each of them is important in supporting children and young people to achieve and to thrive.
Capabilities Framework
BEING, BECOMING & BELONGING
1. Agency – confidence | identity | autonomy
2. Wellbeing – self-worth | resilience | pleasure
RELATING
3. Communication – self-expression (including oracy) | listeningskills | relationship building
4. Empathy – compassion | understanding and appreciation of difference/s | open-mindedness
5. Collaboration – co-operation | participation | connectedness
CREATIVE & CRITICAL THINKING:
6. Creativity – imagination | curiosity | originality
7. Interpretation – independent critical thinking | reflective judgement | meaning-making
We hope to have a more detailed draft Framework up on our website soon. You may want to focus on selected capabilities, but we see all seven as being important for children’s outcomes. Some capabilities lend themselves to particular review questions (e.g. Qu. 24 is largely about empathy and communication, i.e. capabilities 3 and 4 in our Framework).
GENERAL POINTS TO CONSIDER AS YOU MAKE YOUR SUBMISSION
General practical points about the review and your responses:
- Overarching purpose: To consider the broad ambition for what every young person should be expected to achieve by age 18 and review the existing curriculum and assessment mechanisms to determine the best means of achieving this.
- Evolution, Not Revolution: Building on existing strengths and successes without unnecessary changes.
- Anyone can respond – young people, parents, teachers, governors, education professionals, experts, and stakeholders – do encourage as many people as possible to have their say.
- Other voices: Encourage and support the chairs/chairs of governors of your organisations to respond – it is helpful for the review to hear from figures outside of arts and education who might also be employers.
- Pick your questions: You do not have to answer all of the questions (10-54), there are plenty that may/will not be relevant for you, including the section on English and Maths (Qus.16-21) which we will largely not address.
- Repetition is fine: It is better to repeat information than not to answer a question.
- Evidence and data are important: Decisions will be based on solid evidence.
- Aware of trade-offs: We are being told to consider practical implementation and avoiding extra workload for teachers and school leaders.
- Focused on key issues: There is a desire to address significant curriculum and assessment issues without destabilising the system.
- High-quality curriculum: They are committing to a comprehensive curriculum for all students up to age 16.
- Removing Barriers: They want to ensure access to quality education and pathways for all students.
- Engaging with education professionals, experts, parents, students, and stakeholders.
- Not in scope: EYFS; extra-curricular activities such as careers advice, enrichment activities and work experience (but the Review may link to other work/thinking on this); core schools funding; workforce supply issues.
Some broad content points (in addition to our section-by-section guidance):
- For us it’s not just about the arts: Many of the points we make and the problems we identify are as much about the wider context in which learning takes place as about the specific challenges for the expressive arts in schools. Our suggestions for improvement across changes to curriculum, accountability and assessment align with widespread calls for education system change.
- Terminology: We use the term expressive arts in our submission. We do think it is important to embed ‘expressive arts’ and an area of learning experience/curriculum area. By this we mean art & design, dance, drama, music – and film and digital media. We would argue for the inclusion of film and digital media within this curriculum area, as in Wales, due to its importance in young people’s lives and in the world of work.
- Creativity: Creative thinking is not unique to the arts and there is general agreement that the terms creativity and the arts are not interchangeable. They are two separate things. Creativity is an approach to learning (that can also be applied in the real world), rather than being a subject in itself, and is not particular to the arts. Nor is all arts education creative per se. Many aspects of the arts require things other than creativity: for example, the practice and rehearsal for a play or orchestral performance are often repetitive and restricted in the extent of improvisation or interpretation. Creativity and creative learning approaches are important, but this is distinct from learning through expressive arts subjects. In our Capabilities Framework (above) we describe creativity as one the seven capabilities that arts subjects and experiences provide, under the umbrella of creative and critical thinking.
- Putting children first: We put the needs of children and young people at the centre of response to the review and want to see a love of learning brought back into the classroom, for teachers and learners. The next generation deserve a better and more meaningful educational experience than has been on offer since 2010.
- Teacher agency and confidence: There should be more space in the curriculum for the development of a rich pedagogy and to craft meaningful learning experiences for pupils – teachers need more agency and more support to develop and maintain a high-level of subject knowledge.
- Learner agency: There should be more agency for children and young people built into the schooling system. Learning should be more meaningful and engaging and there should be more argentic learning opportunities. The arts curriculum deliberately builds independent thinking and acting – so that young people are working on big, ambitious projects by the time they get to A-Level. Having the arts as integral to the curriculum means that learners, as they progress, get an opportunity to develop agency, self-regulation, independent working etc. These aspects of the agency capability (see Capabilities Framework above) aren’t accidental but are structured into arts curriculum sequencing and into the pedagogy.
- Assessment: In questions around assessment, we have long endorsed the approach of Rethinking Assessment and we would direct the review to their recommendations.
- Progression through primary to secondary: If young people are to take advantage of a secondary arts offer, they need a firm foundation in the primary years. If children in primary schools have opportunities to explore the widest range of arts activities, it is possible for them as young people to explore and benefit from the arts subjects for which they have developed an affinity, and which can enable them to flourish and thrive.
- Secondary: For young people to engage with the arts in such a meaningful way, secondary schools need the full complement of arts specialists, and primary schools need arts-confident teachers. They also require the full range of arts practices to be available at GCSE and A-Level and across vocational qualifications.
- Cultural organisation partnerships: The school/teacher/cultural organisation ecology is valuable in supporting supported young people to be cultural citizens – active cultural producers and critical appreciative audiences in the present – as well preparing them for an active cultural future (Thomson & Hall, 2023)
- Civic engagement: Large-scale studies point strongly to the arts, and arts subjects, supporting active civic engagement. See our 2017 Key Research Findings.
- Don’t dichotomise: It is worth stating that the arts should never be seen in opposition to any other subject areas, such as the sciences or humanities. They are of equal value, each helping the others to build a narrative of human development, and dichotomising them in any way is an outdated and unhelpful approach. We also reject attempts to dichotomise knowledge and skills.
- An education of the head, body and heart: We value Big Education’s description of an education of the head, heart (character, wellbeing, identity, belonging) and hand, but would extend the ‘hand’ point to ‘body’ – given the importance of embodied learning within expressive arts subjects.
- Arts pathways: Expressive arts subjects offer a pathway through school to further education and employment. The arts pathway is integral to creating a more expansive, inclusive and equitable school system, in that all children with interests and talents in the arts can pursue them through to graduation. This pathway requires an expanded qualification framework. The arts BTECs are important, particularly for disadvantaged young people and those in alternative provision settings: these qualifications help them to maintain or to acquire life options.
SUBJECT-SPECIFIC GUIDANCE
We would suggest that in addition to making the case for a broad and balanced education with the arts as an equal subject area, it will be important to make the case for specific arts subjects. Our colleagues at the relevant subject associations have prepared really valuable guidance for this, so do take a look at this as you prepare your submissions. At the time of writing guidance is available on some of these sites, but not all, so do keep a look out for it.
- Art & Design: Guidance from the National Society for Education in Art & Design
- Dance: Guidance from One Dance UK
- Drama: Guidance from National Drama
- Music: Guidance from ISM and Music Mark
We know that art and design GCSE take up has not fallen in the dramatic way that it has for all other arts subjects, but we know there are specific reasons for this, relating to a significant and corresponding decline Design & Technology, which mask a hidden decline. This is addressed on page 14 of our Report Card.
OUR SECTION-BY-SECTION GUIDANCE
We have set out our guidance section by section below. You can access the review form here and you can save the sections as you go along.
EVIDENCE BANK
We have prepared a list of evidence we have used in addition to our own in considering our submission to the Government’s Curriculum and Assessment Review.