Skip to content

What does a student learn in ?

This is the year dance turns into a thinking craft, not just steps to copy. Students build short dances on purpose, choosing movements that carry an idea or feeling and revising them based on feedback. They also start asking why a dance was made and what it means, comparing pieces from different cultures and time periods. By spring, students can perform a short dance they shaped themselves and explain the choices behind it.

Illustration of what students learn in Grade 7 Arts: Dance
  • Choreography
  • Dance technique
  • Performance
  • Movement and meaning
  • Dance across cultures
  • Critique and revision
Source: California Content Standards for California Public Schools
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

    Building a movement vocabulary

    Students start the year sharpening their bodies as instruments. They explore how shape, energy, time, and space change a movement and begin pulling ideas from their own lives into short dance studies.

  2. 2

    Shaping ideas into choreography

    Students take rough movement ideas and organize them into longer pieces with a clear beginning, middle, and end. They learn to revise, swap weak sections, and make choices that hold an audience's attention.

  3. 3

    Dance in cultural and historical context

    Students look at dances from different communities and time periods, including styles that shaped the dances they see today. They notice how setting, music, and history change what a piece means.

  4. 4

    Preparing work for an audience

    Students rehearse with intention, clean up technique, and make decisions about what belongs on stage. They practice performing with focus so the meaning of the piece comes through clearly to viewers.

  5. 5

    Watching, interpreting, and evaluating

    Students watch their own dances and others' with a critical eye. They describe what they see, explain what the choreographer might mean, and use clear criteria to judge how well a piece works.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 7.
Connecting
Standard Definition Code

Using life experiences to make dances

Students connect something from their own life to a dance they create or perform, using that personal meaning to shape the movement choices they make.

CA-DA:Cn10.7.7

Dance reflects its time and place

Students examine a dance piece and connect it to the time period, culture, or social moment that shaped it. Understanding that context changes how the work reads and what it means.

CA-DA:Cn11.7.7
Creating
Standard Definition Code

Coming up with ideas for a dance

Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a dance, deciding what movement, theme, or feeling they want to explore before they begin creating.

CA-DA:Cr1.7.7

Developing a dance idea into a full piece

Students take a rough dance idea and shape it into something they could actually perform, making deliberate choices about movement, structure, and how the piece begins and ends.

CA-DA:Cr2.7.7

Finishing and refining a dance piece

Students revise a dance piece based on feedback, making deliberate choices about movement, timing, and structure until the work is ready to share.

CA-DA:Cr3.7.7
Performing/Presenting/Producing
Standard Definition Code

Choosing dances worth performing

Students choose which dances to perform and explain why each piece fits the audience, setting, or idea they want to convey.

CA-DA:Pr4.7.7

Refining dance skills for performance

Students rehearse and improve a dance before performing it for an audience, focusing on technique, timing, and how the movement looks from the outside.

CA-DA:Pr5.7.7

Perform a dance that says something

Students perform a dance they've practiced and make deliberate choices, like timing, spacing, or facial expression, so the movement communicates a specific feeling or idea to the audience.

CA-DA:Pr6.7.7
Responding
Standard Definition Code

Reading a dance with fresh eyes

Students watch a dance performance and explain what they notice, connecting specific movements to the choices the choreographer made.

CA-DA:Re7.7.7

Reading meaning in a dance performance

Students analyze a dance performance and explain what the choreographer was trying to say, using specific movements or patterns they observed as evidence.

CA-DA:Re8.7.7

How to judge a dance performance

Students watch a dance and use specific criteria to judge whether it works. They explain their thinking with reasons tied to what they actually saw.

CA-DA:Re9.7.7
Common Questions
  • What does dance class look like this year?

    Students create short dances of their own, learn and perform pieces with more control over body and timing, and watch dances to figure out what the choreographer was trying to say. There is more writing and discussion about dance than in earlier grades.

  • My child says they are not a dancer. Does that matter?

    No. The class is about making and understanding movement, not about being naturally talented. Students who try the steps, share ideas in group work, and rehearse their pieces tend to do well even with no prior training.

  • How can I help at home if my child has a dance to practice?

    Give them a clear space, a few minutes without interruption, and a phone to film a run-through. Watching the video back is one of the fastest ways for a student this age to fix timing and shape on their own.

  • How should I sequence the year?

    A common arc is technique and vocabulary first, then short solo and small-group composition tasks, then a longer choreography project tied to a theme or cultural context. Saving the responding and evaluating work for after students have made their own pieces makes the critique language land better.

  • Which part of the year usually needs the most reteaching?

    Refining work, the step between a rough draft and a finished piece. Students this age often want to call a dance done after one pass. Built-in rehearsal days with a specific revision focus, such as levels or transitions, help more than general notes.

  • What should my child be able to talk about by the end of the year?

    They should be able to describe a dance using words like shape, level, tempo, and energy, say what they think it means, and back that up with something they actually saw. Asking them to walk through a music video this way at home is good practice.

  • How do I know a student is ready for eighth grade dance?

    They can generate a movement idea from a prompt, shape it into a short piece with a clear beginning and end, perform it with intention, and give specific feedback on a classmate's work using shared criteria. A final choreography project plus a written reflection covers most of this in one task.

  • Why is my child being asked to write and talk so much in a dance class?

    Writing and discussion are how students show they understand what a dance is doing and why. At this grade, explaining the choices behind a piece is treated as part of the artistic work, not a separate subject.