Banksy - IB Body of Work full SOW
About This Resource
This comprehensive, ready-to-teach scheme of work uses Banksy’s iconic street and protest art as a rich, culturally relevant springboard for deep literary and visual analysis. Designed with the IB Language & Literature course in mind, it is equally well suited to any A-Level, GCSE, or high school English or Art & Culture unit that demands critical thinking, analytical writing, and creative response.
Across 13 carefully sequenced lessons, students move from first impressions and biographical context through to essay planning, scholarly research practice, and a hands-on stencil-making creative project. Every lesson is discussion-rich, written-task-heavy, and built around Banksy’s most thought-provoking works — making abstract analytical skills feel urgent, exciting, and genuinely relevant to students’ lives.
What’s Included in This Presentation (44 Slides)
• Lesson 1 – Introduction to Banksy: Starter discussion prompts on graffiti vs. vandalism; analysis of Banksy’s famous quotation; BBC documentary clip integration
• Lesson 2 – IB Fields of Inquiry: Mapping Banksy’s work onto the five IB fields (culture/identity/community; beliefs/values/education; politics/power/justice; science/technology/environment; art/creativity/imagination)
• Lesson 3 – Culture, Identity & Community I: Visual analysis of key artworks using a structured analysis table; paired discussion activity on location, juxtaposition, and visual hierarchy
• Lesson 4 – Culture, Identity & Community II: Guided questions on cultural symbols, identity, and community; 200–300 word analytical paragraph task
• Lessons 5 & 6 – Essay Plan Practice: Image-based prompt on environmentalism, violence, and loss of innocence; scaffolded essay planning
• Lessons 7 & 8 – Beliefs, Values & Education: Analysis of Banksy’s museum interventions; intertextual link to the ‘Napalm Girl’ photograph; exploration of irony, humour, and the role of the viewer
• Lesson 9 – Politics, Power & Justice: Comparative analysis task; analytical paragraph writing using juxtaposition, irony, symbolism, and subversion; Bethlehem wall mural discussed in geopolitical context
• Lesson 10 – Art, Creativity & the Imagination: Comparative activity with Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup Cans; multi-perspective response task (art critic, child, 1960s housewife, IB student)
• Lessons 11 & 12 – Scholarly Research Practice: Extended Essay preparation; research skills and academic source use
• Lesson 13 – Essay Practice: Social critique analysis using Banksy’s Bethlehem wall piece
• Homage to Banksy – Creative Project: stencil-making activity for students to create their own protest art. Includes samples of student work.






