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What does a student learn in ?

This is the stretch when health class shifts from following rules to making real choices. Students learn how friends, social media, and family shape the habits they pick up, and they practice spotting which sources of health information they can trust. They work on saying no, setting a goal they actually care about, and thinking through a decision before they make it. By spring, students can talk through a tough situation and explain a healthier choice and why it matters.

  • Healthy choices
  • Peer and media influence
  • Trusted health info
  • Communication skills
  • Goal setting
  • Standing up for health
Source: Ohio Ohio's 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

    Health basics and the body

    Students start the year learning how the body works and what choices keep it healthy. They look at sleep, food, exercise, and stress, and connect daily habits to how they feel at school and at home.

  2. 2

    Spotting what shapes choices

    Students notice what pushes them toward certain choices, from friends and family to ads and social media. They learn to tell a trustworthy source from a misleading one when looking up health questions online.

  3. 3

    Talking through hard moments

    Students practice how to speak up, say no, and listen well in tough conversations. They work on calm ways to handle conflict with friends, family, and classmates, and on asking a trusted adult for help.

  4. 4

    Making decisions and setting goals

    Students walk through a step-by-step way to make a choice and stick with a plan. They set a small personal health goal, track their progress, and adjust when something gets in the way.

  5. 5

    Healthy habits and speaking up

    Students put it all together by practicing safer daily routines and standing up for healthier choices. They might lead a small project at school or at home that encourages others to take better care of themselves.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 7.
Health Education
  • Use functional knowledge of health concepts to support health and well-being of…

    Grades 6-8

    Students apply what they know about health, not just to pass a test, but to make real decisions about their own bodies and lives and to help the people around them do the same.

  • Analyze influences that affect health and well-being of self and others

    Grades 6-8

    Students look at what shapes health choices, from friends and family to ads and social media, and explain how those pressures push people toward or away from healthy habits.

  • Access valid and reliable resources to support health and well-being of self…

    Grades 6-8

    Students learn to find trustworthy sources of health information, like a doctor's website or a school nurse, and use those resources to make better decisions for themselves and the people around them.

  • Use interpersonal communication skills to support health and well-being of self…

    Grades 6-8

    Students practice saying no, asking for help, and working through disagreements in ways that protect their own health and the health of the people around them.

  • Use a decision-making process to support health and well-being of self and…

    Grades 6-8

    Students practice a step-by-step process for making health choices, like deciding how to handle peer pressure or respond to a stressful situation. The goal is choices that protect their own health and the people around them.

  • Use a goal-setting process to support health and well-being of self and others

    Grades 6-8

    Students pick a real health goal, break it into steps, and track their progress. The focus is on habits that help both themselves and the people around them.

  • Demonstrate practices and behaviors to support health and well-being of self…

    Grades 6-8

    Students practice real health habits, like getting enough sleep, managing stress, and helping a friend who's struggling. The focus is on actions, not just knowing the facts.

  • Advocate to promote health and well-being of self and others

    Grades 6-8

    Students identify a health issue and make a clear case for change, whether that means speaking up for a friend, writing to a school official, or pushing for a policy that improves their community.

Common Questions
  • What does health class look like in middle school?

    Students learn how the body works, how to handle stress, how to make safer choices, and how to find trustworthy information. They practice skills like saying no, asking for help, setting a goal, and thinking through a decision before they make it.

  • How can I help at home if my child seems uncomfortable talking about health topics?

    Keep it low key. Bring up a topic while driving or making dinner so eye contact is optional. Short, calm chats about sleep, food, friendships, or online life work better than one big talk.

  • How do I sequence the eight skill areas across the year?

    Most teachers anchor each unit in one content area, such as nutrition or mental health, and rotate the skills through it. Start the year with accessing reliable information and interpersonal communication, since students will use those in every unit that follows.

  • What should my child be able to do by the end of eighth grade?

    Students should be able to spot when a source or social media post is not trustworthy, walk through a decision with real tradeoffs, set a small health goal and track it, and ask a trusted adult for help when something feels off.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Analyzing influences and decision making. Students can name peer pressure and media pressure in the abstract but struggle to spot it in their own choices. Build in short practice with real scenarios across the year, not just one unit.

  • How do I know my child is ready for high school health?

    Listen for how they talk about choices. A ready student can explain why they made a decision, name an influence on it, and point to where they would go for accurate information. They also know which adult to go to for which kind of problem.

  • How much time should I spend on goal setting and advocacy?

    Treat them as recurring routines, not standalone units. A short goal check every few weeks and one advocacy project per semester usually gives students enough reps without crowding out content.

  • What is a quick way to practice health skills at home?

    Pick one habit for two weeks, such as eight hours of sleep, water with meals, or phone out of the bedroom at night. Set the goal together, check in on Sundays, and adjust. That mirrors the goal-setting work students do in class.