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Exploring Visual Form

Art and Design • Year 13 • 15 • 9 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

Art and Design
3Year 13
15
9 students
1 April 2025

Teaching Instructions

lesson plan to teach calligraphy using one style (naskh) as I’m teaching people calligraphy first time so don’t want to overwhelm the learners.

Exploring Visual Form


Overview

Subject: Art and Design
Key Stage: KS5 – Year 13
Length: 15 minutes
Class size: 9 students
Curriculum Reference: AQA GCE A-Level Art and Design (Fine Art / Graphic Communication), Component 1 – Personal Investigation
Core Focus: Exploring elements of other cultures and traditions through practical media processes, linking to AO2: Refine work by exploring ideas, selecting and experimenting with appropriate media, materials, techniques and processes.


Learning Intentions

By the end of this 15-minute micro-lesson, students will:

  • Understand the cultural and historical origins of Naskh script within Islamic visual tradition.
  • Use the basic tools and strokes required to begin writing in Naskh calligraphy.
  • Develop awareness of line, rhythm, form, and proportion through structured calligraphic practice.

Success Criteria

Students will be successful if they can:

  • Demonstrate accurate replication of three basic Naskh strokes.
  • Recognise the characteristics that distinguish Naskh from other scripts (curved structure, proportional balance).
  • Reflect briefly on the visual qualities Naskh brings to text and design.

Resources

  • Individual calligraphy kits:
    • Bamboo or reed pens (qalams) pre-cut to Naskh angle (approx. 45° bevel)
    • Black calligraphy ink pots
    • A5 smooth cartridge practice sheets with light grid guides
    • Paper towels
  • Visualiser or mini camera for demonstration
  • Whiteboard with starter prompt
  • Short printed visual reference sheet with Naskh alphabet (isolated short-form)

Prior Knowledge

None assumed – this is an introduction to calligraphy.


Pedagogical Approach

  • Multimodal learning: Visual demonstration, kinaesthetic practice, oral reflection
  • Inclusivity: Designed to empower all learners without cultural assumptions
  • Micro-task Flow: Focused, time-framed activities that give quick wins
  • Cultural Framework: Connecting past to present, concept to craft

Detailed Timings & Activities

❖ 0:00 – 0:02 | Introduction & Context Setting (Teacher-led)

Position students socially and visually – seats arranged in semicircle for clear view. Use the whiteboard or visualiser.

  • Pose a compelling question:
    “How can handwriting become art? What happens when language becomes form?”
  • Briefly introduce Naskh script – one of the oldest styles of Arabic calligraphy. Show examples: Qur’anic text, historic books, architectural inscriptions.
  • Emphasise that this is not about language proficiency, but shape, rhythm, and form.

Teacher says:
"Don’t worry about what the letters mean today. We will focus on the grace of the form – the shapes, not the sounds."


❖ 0:02 – 0:04 | Tools & Technique Introduction (Demonstration)

  • Show students each component of their kit.
  • Demonstrate how to hold the qalam at a consistent 45° angle.
  • Show three key stroke types used in Naskh:
    • Thin upstroke
    • Wide downstroke
    • Curved hook
      Use the visualiser to model this clearly — each stroke repeated twice slowly.

Tip: Don’t overload – only demonstrate 3 short forms (Recommended: alif, ba, and jeem).


❖ 0:04 – 0:12 | Practical Calligraphic Response (Student-led)

  • Students now practise each stroke, mimicking the teacher's strokes individually, then using them to form the three sample letters.
  • Encourage them to focus on:
    • Consistency of pressure
    • Stroke refinement
    • Flow and rhythm
      Teacher circulates with quiet feedback, using open-ended prompts:
    • “Which part of the stroke do you find most satisfying?”
    • “Which movement feels most natural — why?”

Challenge prompt (optional):

Try joining two letters into a flowing form, exploring spacing, flow and weight.


❖ 0:12 – 0:14 | Reflect & Connect (Paired Talk)

  • In pairs, students compare their practice sheets.
  • Prompt: “What surprised you about the movement or marks you made?”

This gets them talking art language about line, form, structure — not just “neatness”.

Teacher captures 2–3 reflections on whiteboard, noting use of terms like contrast, form, balance, and control.


❖ 0:14 – 0:15 | Closing Focus (Plenary)

  • Remind students that this is an ancient, respected form of writing treated as art.
  • Link to future work:

    “Next time, we’ll look at how repetition of these shapes becomes an artwork — not just communication — and how you might explore that in your personal investigation work.”

Offer each student a mini Naskh practice sheet as an invitation to explore further.


Extension / Differentiation

Support: Allow two students to work jointly if required with a shared ink pot and verbal collaboration. Encourage alternative practice using pencil before moving to ink.

Stretch: Invite confident students to try adapting a Western letter (e.g., “A” or “M”) in a Naskh-inspired style – bringing cultural fusion into focus.


Teacher Tips

  • Keep pace brisk – 15 minutes is immersive, not exhaustive.
  • This is as much about thinking through drawing as about accuracy.
  • Use positive formative feedback — focus on gestures and visual energy.

Assessment for Learning (AfL)

Formative only — no summative assessment for this micro-task.

Assessment types:

MethodPurpose
Visual checkObserve grip, stroke control
Verbal feedbackClarify misconceptions
Peer reflectionBuild art vocabulary

Links to Wider KS5 Criteria

Supports:

  • AO2 (Experimenting with techniques),
  • AO3 (Understanding visual language),
  • Cultural studies aspects within Component 1.

Encourages independent enquiry and technical skill building with grounding in global cultural awareness.


Final Thought

This isn’t just drawing letters — it’s drawing culture, rhythm, and memory.


Note: Designed to be part of a broader visual culture or typographic exploration sequence later in the term. Ideal as an openers project or portfolio enrichment add-on.

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