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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year art becomes about intent. Students plan a piece before they make it, pulling from their own experiences and the world around them to decide what they want to say. They refine their work over time instead of finishing in one sitting, and they learn to talk about why an artist made the choices they did. By spring, students can show a finished piece, explain the idea behind it, and give thoughtful feedback on someone else's work.

  • Artistic intent
  • Planning artwork
  • Revising art
  • Art critique
  • Cultural context
  • Presenting work
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

    Finding ideas worth making

    Students start the year by turning their own experiences and interests into art ideas. They keep a sketchbook, try out different starting points, and learn that good art usually starts with messy first drafts.

  2. 2

    Building and refining skills

    Students practice techniques with materials like paint, clay, and digital tools. They organize their ideas into planned pieces and rework parts that are not yet doing what they want.

  3. 3

    Looking at art with context

    Students study how artists have responded to their own time and place. They compare works from different cultures and periods, and start to see how an artwork carries the meaning of when it was made.

  4. 4

    Critique and revision

    Students learn to give and take honest feedback using shared criteria. They revise their own pieces based on what peers and teachers notice, and explain the choices behind their work.

  5. 5

    Presenting finished work

    Students choose which pieces to show and decide how to display them so the meaning comes through. Parents may see a final exhibit, a portfolio, or an artist statement that explains what each piece is about.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 7.
Connecting
  • Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art

    Students pull from what they know and what they've lived through to make their artwork mean something. Personal experiences and outside knowledge both shape the choices they make.

  • Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural

    Students look at artwork and connect it to the time, place, or culture it came from. That context helps explain why the work looks the way it does and what the artist was responding to.

Creating
  • Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work

    Students brainstorm and develop original ideas before picking up a brush or pencil. The focus is on thinking through what to make and why, not just producing a finished piece.

  • Organize and develop artistic ideas and work

    Students take a rough idea or sketch and develop it into a finished piece, making deliberate choices about composition, materials, and technique along the way.

  • Refine and complete artistic work

    Students revisit a piece of artwork, make deliberate improvements based on their own judgment, and decide when it is finished.

Performing/Presenting/Producing
  • Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation

    Students look at a collection of their own artwork, decide which pieces are strong enough to share, and explain why those pieces represent their best work.

  • Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation

    Students practice and improve a piece of visual art until it's ready to share with an audience. That means making real revisions, not just finishing an assignment.

  • Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work

    Students choose how to display or arrange their artwork so the viewer understands what they were trying to say. The presentation itself becomes part of the message.

Responding
  • Perceive and analyze artistic work

    Students look closely at a piece of art and describe what they notice, from color and shape to mood and meaning. Then they explain how those choices work together.

  • Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work

    Students look closely at a piece of art and explain what the artist was trying to say and why it matters. They go beyond describing what they see to making a case for what the work actually means.

  • Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work

    Students look at their own or others' artwork and use a set of agreed-upon criteria to explain what works, what doesn't, and why. It's structured looking, not just opinion.

Common Questions
  • What does seventh grade visual art actually cover?

    Students make their own art and learn to talk about art made by others. They sketch ideas, try different materials, finish a piece they can show, and explain what it means. They also look at how art connects to history and culture.

  • How can I help at home if drawing is not my thing?

    Drawing skill is not the point. Ask about the choices behind the work: why this color, why this size, what feeling it should give. A sketchbook, a few pencils, and ten quiet minutes a day does more than any expensive kit.

  • What should a finished project look like by the end of the year?

    A finished piece shows planning, real revision, and a clear idea behind it. Students should be able to point to what they changed and why. The work does not need to look professional. It needs to look thought through.

  • How do I sequence the year across creating, presenting, and responding?

    Most teachers anchor each unit in a making project, then build response and presentation work around it. Start the year with idea generation and sketchbook habits, move into longer projects with revision cycles, and end with a curated show where students write about their choices.

  • My child says their art is bad. What do I say?

    Shift the conversation from good or bad to choices. Ask what they were trying to show and what they would change next time. Seventh graders are hard on their own work, and naming one specific thing that works helps more than general praise.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching at this grade?

    Two areas tend to lag: generating original ideas instead of copying, and revising a piece instead of starting over. Short brainstorming routines and required revision steps inside each project help more than another technique lesson.

  • How much does art history fit into a making class?

    Enough to give students something to push against. A short look at an artist or period before a project gives ideas to borrow, react to, or argue with. Ten minutes of context can shape a whole unit.

  • How do I know my child is ready for eighth grade art?

    Listen to how they talk about a piece, theirs or someone else's. A ready student can name what the artist did, guess at why, and say whether it worked. Making skills will keep growing. The thinking is what carries forward.