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Seventh Grade

Seventh Grade Teachers

Reece Aycock

Secondary Teacher

Ariana Garcia

Secondary Teacher

Albert "Nick" Garrett

Secondary Teacher
Nick

Sarah George

Secondary Teacher

Monica Glickman

Secondary Teacher

Ross Likins

Secondary Teacher

Jordan Martin

Secondary Teacher

Ian Perry

Secondary Teacher

Seventh Grade

The following are Colorado academic standards for seventh graders.
 

Comprehensive Health

  • Apply knowledge and skills to engage in lifelong healthy eating
  • Apply knowledge and skills necessary to make personal decisions that promote healthy relationships and sexual and reproductive health
  • Utilize knowledge and skills to enhance mental, emotional, and social well-being
  • Apply knowledge and skills to make health-enhancing decisions regarding the use of alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs
  • Apply personal safety knowledge and skills to prevent and treat intentional or unintentional injury

Dance

  • Demonstrate competence and confidence in performing a variety of dance styles and genres
  • Demonstrate awareness of fitness, wellness, and the body's potential for movement
  • Understand that dance performance requires technical competency
  • Demonstrate thinking skills such as describing, analyzing, interpreting, evaluating, and problem-solving through dance movement and verbal discussion
  • Demonstrate and use the principles and practices of choreography in the creative process
  • Improvise and create movement based on an intent or meaning
  • Demonstrate an understanding of form and structure to create dances
  • Understand and appreciate a dance in terms of the culture in which it is performed
  • Explore and perform dance styles from various cultures and times
  • Use criticism and analysis to reflect upon and understand new works, reconstructions, and masterpieces

Drama and Theatre Arts

  • Employ drama and theatre skills, and articulate the aesthetics of a variety of characters and roles
  • Use a variety of methods, new media, and technology to create theatrical works through the use of the creative process for performance, directing, design, construction, choreography, playwriting, scriptwriting, and dramaturgy
  • Create drama and theatre by interpreting and appreciating theatrical works, culture, and experience through scenes and scenarios, improvisation, creating environments, purposeful movement, and research
  • Express drama and theatre arts skills in a variety of performances, including plays, monologues, improvisation, purposeful movement, scenes, design, technical craftsmanship, media, ensemble works, and public speaking
  • Demonstrate the evolution of rehearsal and product through performance and/or production teamwork while simultaneously validating both as essential to the theatre making process
  • Demonstrate an understanding and appreciation of theatre history, dramatic structure, dramatic literature, elements of style, genre, artistic theory, script analysis, and roles of theatre practitioners through research and application
  • Make informed, critical evaluations of theatrical performance from an audience member and a participant point of view, and develop a framework for making informed theatrical choices
  • Discern and demonstrate appropriate theatre etiquette and content for the audience, self, venue, technician, and performer

Mathematics

  • Make both relative (multiplicative) and absolute (arithmetic) comparisons between quantities. Multiplicative thinking underlies proportional reasoning
  • Are fluent with basic numerical and symbolic facts and algorithms, and are able to select and use appropriate (mental math, paper and pencil, and technology) methods based on an understanding of their efficiency, precision, and transparency
  • Understand that equivalence is a foundation of mathematics represented in numbers, shapes, measures, expressions, and equations
  • Use critical thinking to recognize problematic aspects of situations, create mathematical models, and present and defend solutions
  • Recognize and make sense of the many ways that variability, chance, and randomness appear in a variety of contexts
  • Apply transformation to numbers, shapes, functional representations, and data
  • Understand quantity through estimation, precision, order of magnitude, and comparison. The reasonableness of answers relies on the ability to judge appropriateness, compare, estimate, and analyze error

Music

  • Employ musical skills through a variety of means, including singing, playing instruments, and purposeful movement
  • Demonstrate the processes of development of musical literature from rehearsal to performance, exhibiting appropriate interpersonal and expressive skills, both individually and within ensembles
  • Demonstrate the expressive elements of music - including melody, harmony, rhythm, style, genre, texture, voicing/instrumentation, mood, tonality, and form - through voice, musical instruments, and/or the use of electronic tools
  • Perform music with appropriate technique and level of expression at an appropriate level of difficulty in sight reading and prepared performance
  • Create music by composing and/or arranging what is heard or envisioned, in notated or non-notated form, with or without the use of music technology, demonstrating originality and technical understanding
  • Display instrumental or vocal improvisation skills by performing extemporaneously what is created in the mind
  • Demonstrate melodic, harmonic, and rhythmic aural skills through identification, transcription, and vocalization or instrumental playback of aural musical examples
  • Read and employ the language and vocabulary of music in discussing musical examples and writing music, including technology related to melody, harmony, rhythm, style, genre, voicing/orchestration, mood, tonality, expression, and form
  • Make informed, critical evaluations of the effectiveness of musical works and performances on the basis of aesthetic qualities, technical excellence, musicality, or convincing expression of feelings and ideas related to cultural and ideological associations
  • Develop a framework for making informed personal musical choices, and utilize that framework in the making and defending of musical choices
  • Demonstrate a nuanced understanding of aesthetics in music, appropriate to the particular features of given styles and genres, as it relates to the human experience in music
  • Know the place of each of the participants in the performance environment and practice appropriate audience participation; recognize the place and importance of music in life

Physical Education

  • Demonstrate competency in motor skills and movement patterns needed to perform a variety of physical activities
  • Exhibit responsible personal and social behavior that respects self and others in physical activity settings
  • Apply personal safety knowledge and skills to prevent and treat intentional or unintentional injury

Reading, Writing and Communicating

  • Deliver organized and effective oral presentations for diverse audiences and varied purposes
  • Collaborate effectively as group members or leaders who listen actively and respectfully pose thoughtful questions, acknowledge the ideas of others, and contribute ideas to further the group's attainment of an objective
  • Seek feedback, self-assess, and reflect on personal learning while engaging with increasingly more difficult texts
  • Engage in a wide range of nonfiction and real-life reading experiences to solve problems, judge the quality of ideas, or complete daily tasks
  • Evaluate how an author uses words to create mental imagery, suggest mood, and set tone
  • Effectively use content-specific language, style, tone, and text structure to compose or adapt writing for different audiences and purposes
  • Write with a clear focus, coherent organization, sufficient elaboration, and detail
  • Apply standard English conventions to effectively communicate with written language
  • Gather information from a variety of sources; analyze and evaluate the quality and relevance of the source; and use it to answer complex questions
  • Exercise ethical conduct when writing, researching, and documenting sources
  • Evaluate explicit and implicit viewpoints, values, attitudes, and assumptions concealed in speech, writing, and illustration

Science

  • Apply an understanding of atomic and molecular structure to explain the properties of matter, and predict outcomes of chemical and nuclear reactions
  • Explain how biological evolution accounts for the unity and diversity of living organisms
  • Analyze the relationship between structure and function in living systems at a variety of organizational levels, and recognize living systems' dependence on natural selection
  • Evaluate evidence that Earth's geosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere interact as a complex system
  • Describe and interpret how Earth's geologic history and place in space are relevant to our understanding of the processes that have shaped our planet

Social Studies

  • Develop an understanding of how people view, construct, and interpret history
  • Analyze key historical periods and patterns of change over time within and across nations and cultures
  • Develop spatial understanding, perspectives, and personal connections to the world
  • Examine places and regions and the connections among them
  • Understand the allocation of scarce resources in societies through analysis of individual choice, market interaction, and public policy
  • Acquire the knowledge and economic reasoning skills to make sound financial decisions (PFL)
  • Analyze and practice rights, roles, and responsibilities of citizens
  • Analyze origins, structure, and functions of governments and their impacts on societies and citizens

Visual Arts

  • Explain, demonstrate, and interpret a range of purposes of art and design, recognizing that the making and study of art and design can be approached from a variety of viewpoints, intelligences, and perspectives
  • Analyze, interpret, and make meaning of art and design critically using oral and written discourse
  • Recognize, articulate, and debate that the visual arts are a means for expression
  • Use specific criteria to discuss and evaluate works of art
  • Recognize, articulate, and implement critical thinking in the visual arts by synthesizing, evaluating, and analyzing visual information
  • Recognize, interpret, and validate that the creative process builds on the development of ideas through a process of inquiry, discovery, and research
  • Create works of art that articulate more sophisticated ideas, feelings, emotions, and points of view about art and design through an expanded use of media and technologies
  • Develop and build appropriate mastery in art-making skills using traditional and new technologies and an understanding of the characteristics and expressive features of art and design
  • Explain, compare and justify that the visual arts are connected to other disciplines, the other art forms, social activities, mass media, and careers in art and non-art related arenas
  • Identify, compare and justify that the visual arts are a way to acknowledge, exhibit and learn about the diversity of peoples, cultures and ideas
  • Identify, compare, and interpret works of art derived from historical and cultural settings, time periods, and cultural contexts
  • Transfer the value of visual arts to lifelong learning and the human experience