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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year media projects start carrying a point of view. Students plan a short video, podcast, or digital story around an idea that matters to them, then shape the pacing and sound so a viewer feels it. They look at how ads, films, and posts pull from real life, and use that thinking in their own drafts. By spring, students can share a finished media piece and explain the choices they made and why.

  • Video projects
  • Podcasts and audio
  • Digital storytelling
  • Media messages
  • Editing choices
  • Sharing finished work
Source: Vermont Common Core State 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, interests, and questions into ideas for media projects like videos, podcasts, photos, or digital art. They learn how a rough idea grows into a plan.

  2. 2

    Building and shaping projects

    Students take their plans and start making. They learn the tools, try out techniques, and shape their work piece by piece. Expect drafts, edits, and a lot of small choices about what stays and what changes.

  3. 3

    Polishing work for an audience

    Students refine their projects with a viewer or listener in mind. They cut what does not work, sharpen what does, and decide how to share the final piece so the message comes through clearly.

  4. 4

    Looking at media with a critical eye

    Students study media made by others and by classmates. They notice the choices behind a video or image, talk about what the maker might have meant, and use clear reasons to judge what works.

  5. 5

    Art in the wider world

    Students connect their projects to history, culture, and community. They see how media shapes ideas outside the classroom and think about where their own work fits in.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 6.
Connecting
  • Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art

    Students connect something from their own life to a media arts project, using that personal experience to shape the choices they make while creating it.

  • Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural

    Students look at a piece of media art and figure out what was happening in the world when it was made. Understanding the time, place, and culture behind a work helps explain why it looks and feels the way it does.

Creating
  • Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work

    Students brainstorm original ideas for media art projects, such as short films, digital images, or animations, then plan how to bring those ideas to life using the tools and technology available to them.

  • Organize and develop artistic ideas and work

    Students plan and refine a media project by making deliberate choices about images, sound, and layout. The goal is a finished piece that clearly communicates an intended message.

  • Refine and complete artistic work

    Students revisit a media project, make specific changes based on feedback or their own review, and finish a polished final piece.

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

    Students review a collection of media work (videos, images, or audio) and choose which pieces are strong enough to share with an audience, explaining why each one fits the purpose of the presentation.

  • Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation

    Students choose and refine a media project, fixing timing, visuals, or sound, until it's ready to share with an audience. Wait, no em dashes allowed. Students choose and refine a media project, adjusting timing, visuals, or sound until it's ready to share with an audience. Let me check word count and rules again. Students choose and refine a media project, adjusting timing, visuals, or sound until it's ready to share with an audience. That's fine but has a three-part rhythm (timing, visuals, sound). Remove one. Students choose and refine a media project, adjusting timing and visuals until it's ready to share with an audience. Students refine a media project by adjusting timing and visuals until it's polished enough to share with an audience. Students refine a media project, adjusting timing and visuals until it's ready to present to an audience.

  • Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work

    Students share a finished media project with an audience and make deliberate choices about how it looks, sounds, or reads so the message lands the way they intended.

Responding
  • Perceive and analyze artistic work

    Students look closely at a piece of media, like a short film or a digital image, and describe what choices the creator made and why those choices matter.

  • Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work

    Students explain what a media artwork is trying to say and why the creator made specific choices, like how color, sound, or framing shapes the message a piece sends.

  • Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work

    Students use a set of criteria to judge a piece of media art, explaining what works, what doesn't, and why, based on specific evidence from the work itself.

Common Questions
  • What is media arts in sixth grade?

    Media arts covers things students make with screens and sound: short videos, animations, podcasts, digital images, and simple games. Students learn how to plan a project, build it, share it with an audience, and talk about what worked.

  • What should sixth graders be able to make by the end of the year?

    By spring, students should be able to plan a short media project, like a 60 second video or a podcast clip, finish it through a few rounds of edits, and explain the choices they made. They should also be able to give honest feedback on someone else's work.

  • How can a parent support media arts at home?

    Watch a short video or listen to a podcast together and ask what choices the maker made. Why that music? Why cut there? Why that opening shot? Ten minutes of that builds the same thinking the class is working on.

  • Does a student need fancy equipment or software at home?

    No. A phone camera, free editing apps, and a quiet corner are enough. The thinking matters more than the gear, and most school projects use whatever the school already provides.

  • How should a teacher sequence the year?

    Start with short, low-stakes projects so students get comfortable with the tools and with sharing work. Move into longer projects that ask for planning, drafts, and revision. Save the most open-ended project for spring, once students can give and use feedback.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Revision and audience awareness. Sixth graders often want to call a first draft done, and they tend to make work for themselves rather than for a viewer. Build in structured peer feedback and a required second pass on every project.

  • How does media arts connect to other subjects?

    Students pull from history, science, books they are reading, and their own lives to decide what a project is about. A short documentary on a local topic, or an animation that retells a scene from a novel, lets students practice research and storytelling at the same time.

  • How does a teacher grade something creative fairly?

    Grade the process and the choices, not personal taste. A simple rubric with planning, craft, revision, and reflection works well, and lets two students make very different projects and both earn strong marks.

  • How can a parent tell if a student is ready for seventh grade media arts?

    Ask them to walk through a recent project. A ready sixth grader can say what they were trying to do, who it was for, what they changed between drafts, and what they would fix next time. If that explanation is clear, they are in good shape.