Woman and child working together at a desk

Inquiry-based Visual Artefact

Lane 2 Assessment

Students gather qualitative data and create visual designs that combine theory, personal perspectives and participant insights.

Overview

Inquiry-based visual artefacts have students collect, synthesise, and transform qualitative data into a defendable visual representation that responds to participant ideas and feedback, interrogates unit theories, and demonstrates their personal disciplinary philosophy.

Key features

How it works

Curtin snapshot   

Madeleine Dobson
Case Study

A/Prof Madeleine Dobson

“There is a great diversity of ideas, and the students do wonderful work at imagining this in creative ways.”

Faculty of Humanities

Madeleine’s example assessment

About my unit: Faculty of Humanities | 50-100 students | Hybrid | Individual work 

I use the inquiry-based visual artefact assessment to give students a lot of creative flexibility to respond to data and represent who they are as teachers and how they envision play in their future teaching.

The task is for students to have a reasonably brief, informal conversation with children aged 5-8 and use their ideas to design a play environment to support the learning, development, and wellbeing of all children. Students will create a detailed map of their play-based learning environment using the ideas and images collected from their interviews and unit readings. They are encouraged to integrate a range of visual elements – for example, photos or illustrations of particular resources, or features of the play environment they wish to illuminate in greater depth and detail.

A strong rationale defending the value of the environment should accompany the representation, explaining how the environment supports different thinking skills, considers the ideas of the children interviewed, and addresses how the play-space meets six key elements:

My advice 

It’s important to emphasise conceptual understanding over artistic ability; the marking focus should be on theoretical application and communication effectiveness rather than aesthetic perfection. I also encourage students to consider including this in their Digital Professional Portfolio, as it’s a beautiful way to demonstrate their expertise about play in education settings, and their readiness to engage with and respond to children’s perspectives.  

Suggested marking criteria

Note: Marking criteria and weighting are suggested guidelines. Specific descriptions should be adapted to relevant content and learning objectives.