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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year art shifts from making pictures to making choices. Students plan their ideas before they start, try different ways to show what they mean, and go back to fix what isn't working. They also begin talking about art with real reasons, explaining why a piece feels a certain way or what the artist might have meant. By spring, students can pick a finished piece, share it for others to see, and say why they chose it.

Illustration of what students learn in Grade 3 Arts: Visual Arts
  • Planning artwork
  • Revising and finishing
  • Art techniques
  • Talking about art
  • Sharing finished work
Source: New York P-12 Learning Standards
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Sparking ideas for art

    Students start the year gathering ideas from their own lives and the world around them. They sketch, brainstorm, and try out different ways to turn an idea into a picture or object.

  2. 2

    Building skills and choices

    Students practice using tools and materials like paint, paper, and clay with more control. They learn to make choices about color, shape, and arrangement as they shape a piece from rough draft to finished work.

  3. 3

    Looking closely at art

    Students slow down to study artwork made by others and by themselves. They notice what an artist might be trying to say and start using simple reasons to explain what works in a piece and what could be stronger.

  4. 4

    Sharing art with an audience

    Students wrap up the year by choosing pieces to display and thinking about how the setup shapes what viewers notice. They also connect art to history and culture, seeing how artists across time have told stories through images.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 3.
Connecting
Standard Definition Code

Making art from what you know and live

Students connect something from their own life to the art they make, using personal memories or observations as a starting point for a project.

VA:Cn10.3

Art from other times and places

Students look at a piece of art and ask where, when, and why it was made. Connecting a painting or sculpture to its time and place helps students understand what the artist was trying to say.

VA:Cn11.3
Creating
Standard Definition Code

Coming up with ideas for art

Students brainstorm ideas for their own artwork, sketching out plans or making early choices about what to create before picking up a brush or cutting paper.

VA:Cr1.3

Organize ideas into finished artwork

Students take a rough idea for an artwork and make deliberate choices about color, shape, and composition to turn it into a finished piece.

VA:Cr2.3

Finish and improve your artwork

Students review their own artwork, make small adjustments, and decide when a piece is finished. The focus is on looking closely and improving the work before calling it done.

VA:Cr3.3
Performing/Presenting/Producing
Standard Definition Code

Choosing art to share with others

Students look at several of their own artworks, talk about what makes each one strong, and choose the piece they want to show to others.

VA:Pr4.3

Improve your artwork before showing it

Students practice and improve a piece of artwork before sharing it with others. They learn how to refine details, fix mistakes, and get a finished piece ready to display.

VA:Pr5.3

Sharing art and explaining what it means

Students choose how to display or share their artwork so viewers understand the idea or feeling behind it. The way a piece is presented is part of what it communicates.

VA:Pr6.3
Responding
Standard Definition Code

Looking closely at art and explaining what you see

Students look closely at a piece of art and describe what they notice, from the colors and shapes to the overall mood or story the artist seems to be telling.

VA:Re7.3

Reading what art is trying to say

Students look at a piece of art and explain what they think the artist meant to say or show. They use details they can see to back up their thinking.

VA:Re8.3

Judging what makes art work

Students look at a piece of art and decide what makes it work or fall short, using specific reasons like color choice, detail, or how well it fits the assignment.

VA:Re9.3
Common Questions
  • What does a year of visual arts look like at this age?

    Students make art from their own ideas and experiences, learn to plan before they start, and practice finishing work they are proud of. They also look closely at art other people made, talk about what it might mean, and try out new tools like paint, clay, and collage.

  • How can I support art at home without buying a lot of supplies?

    Keep a small box with paper, pencils, markers, scissors, glue, and a few recycled items like cardboard or magazines. Ask students to draw something from their day or design something they wish existed. Ten minutes of regular drawing matters more than fancy materials.

  • My child says they are bad at art. What should I do?

    At this age, art is about thinking and trying, not making something that looks real. Praise the idea, the effort, and the choices students made, such as the colors picked or the part added last. Avoid drawing on top of their work to fix it.

  • How should art be sequenced across the year?

    Start with idea generation and basic skills like line, shape, and color mixing, then move into longer projects that ask for planning and revision. Save presentation and critique work for later in the year, once students have finished pieces they care about and a shared vocabulary to talk about them.

  • What does mastery look like by the end of the year?

    Students can come up with their own idea for a piece, sketch a plan, and follow it through to a finished work. They can talk about what their art means, point to choices they made, and notice details in other artists' work using words like line, shape, color, and texture.

  • How much should students be talking about art, not just making it?

    Plan for short discussions in most classes, even five minutes. Show one artwork, ask what students notice, what they think is happening, and what makes them say that. This builds the language students need to describe their own choices later.

  • Why is my child looking at art from other cultures and time periods?

    Students learn that art has always been a way people share ideas about where they live, what they believe, and who they are. Looking at art from different places and times helps students see more possibilities for their own work and connects art class to social studies.

  • How can I help my child finish a project they started?

    Sit with them and ask what part is done, what part still needs work, and what they want a viewer to notice. Set a small goal for one sitting, like finishing the background or adding details to one area. Finishing matters more than making it perfect.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Planning before making and revising after a first try are the hardest habits at this age. Many students want to jump straight to a final piece, then call it done. Build in quick sketch steps and a short reflection at the end of each project so revision feels normal.