Click here to see subject pathways throughout the year levels.
Read below for course information about Year 7 subjects.
Each year the school prepares the curriculum budgets using the Department for Education regulations. Within these regulations some subjects incur a subject charge to cover additional costs beyond the standard curriculum delivery. Specific subject fees are detailed within this curriculum guide. Charges are reviewed annually and will be circulated to families in Term 3.
The English curriculum is built around the 3 interrelated strands of:
language: knowing about the English language
literature: understanding, appreciating, responding to, analysing and creating literature
literacy: expanding the repertoire of English usage.
Students extend their knowledge, understanding and skills in listening, reading, viewing, speaking, writing and creating. Students engage with a variety of texts for enjoyment. They listen to, read, view, interpret and evaluate a range of spoken, written and multimodal texts. These include newspapers, magazines and digital texts, early adolescent novels, nonfiction, poetry and dramatic performances. Students develop their understanding of how texts, including media texts, are influenced by context, purpose and audience. Students create texts for a range of purposes and audiences. They make presentations and contribute actively to class and group discussions. When creating and editing texts they demonstrate understanding of grammar, and use a variety of more specialised vocabulary, accurate spelling and punctuation. Students may participate in the Premier’s Reading Challenge.
Students are assessed against the Australian Curriculum Achievement Standards. There will be a range of major assessment pieces around writing, speaking, creating, viewing and listening.
There may be a cost throughout the year for optional activities and opportunities that align with the Learning and Assessment Plan.
There is a strong focus on improving students’ understanding, fluency, problem-solving and reasoning skills in Mathematics to develop successful lifelong learners. Students work mathematically in the following strands:
number and algebra: place values of number, real numbers, money and financial Mathematics, patterns and algebra
measurement and geometry: units of measurement, shape, location and transformation
statistics and probability: chance, data representation and interpretation.
Assessment is continual and in accordance with the Australian Curriculum Achievement Standards. Students are assessed via written tests, problem-solving tasks, observations, workbooks and assignments.
Students will learn about biological science (classification and food webs), chemical science (mixtures and solutions), physical sciences (motion and forces) and earth and space science (seasons and renewable resources). Students will learn through scientific inquiry and have the opportunity to further develop their skills and understanding of the Science curriculum by accessing the laboratories.
Students are assessed on science understanding (SU), science as a human endeavour (SHE) and science inquiry (SI). Assessment may include research work, inquiry tasks, practical lab work and multimodal presentations.
During the year, Global Studies will provide students with a broad understanding of the world that they live in and how they can participate in that world as active and informed citizens. They will study History, with a focus specifically on ancient cultures. They will also study Geography, with a focus on place and liveability, as well as water around the world. Civics and Citizenship will also form a part of the Global Studies curriculum, with a focus on democracy and how students can be a part of the democratic process.
Students are assessed against the Australian Curriculum Achievement Standards. There will be a range of major assessment pieces using a variety of written, spoken and multimodal forms which encourage students to question, think critically, solve problems and communicate effectively.
There may be a cost throughout the year for optional activities and opportunities that align with the Learning and Assessment Plan.
This is a compulsory course that is designed to enthuse students with a joy for movement and enhance the development of lifelong physical activity habits. It will provide the opportunity to develop motor skills through the performance of a variety of physical activities as well as the collaborative skills used to make performance more effective. Students also study a range of age-appropriate health issues as outlined within the SHINE program. Students also study the roles nutrition and physical activity have in the 'energy balance' a person has and the impact it can have on health.
practical: coordination of movement concepts, strategy and tactical analysis, learning through movement, collaboration, inclusivity and fair play (70%)
SHINE: relationships and sexual health (15%)
nutrition task (15%).
The Inquiry subject is designed to give students the opportunity to develop the skills and dispositions that will help them be successful in high school. Through the successful completion of this learning program students will develop an understanding of self through ongoing reflection, learn to utilise wellbeing and resilience strategies to support future learning and support their movement to high school. Students will also develop skills to engage in inquiry-based learning and to effectively use ICT. They will also be able to appropriately and effectively contribute to group and collaborative work. This will be achieved and demonstrated through the completion of a collaborative and self-directed Inquiry project.
metacognition tasks
collaborative inquiry
individual inquiry.
Students complete a compulsory semester of either Art and Design or Drama and Film.
Students explore various areas of the visual arts including drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture and digital design. Students are encouraged to express individuality in their creative visual art and design projects and appreciate works of art, artists and their cultures. Students will develop their skills in responding to artworks and planning, creating, displaying and evaluating their own works of art.
Arts making and responding.
The Drama and Film program develops students' knowledge and skills in the performing arts and explores various roles including acting, directing, backstage, lighting, sound, camera operation and editing. Students explore elements of the dramatic arts and work collaboratively to create and perform drama works on stage. Students explore the world of filmmaking and develop their knowledge and skills in scriptwriting, storyboarding, cinematography and editing. Students collaborate to create film products to demonstrate their learning. Performance opportunities are available throughout the year.
Arts making and responding.
Technologies includes 2 distinct but related subjects:
Design and Technologies, where students will design, generate and then finally create a product. They will learn about how to design their own products, generate their design and then finally make their product.
Food Technology, in which students will learn different culinary practices. They will be cooking, learning about food safety and hygiene as well as knife skills throughout this program.
Design and Technology assessment (50%)
Home Economics assessment (50%).
Year 7 Languages is designed to introduce students to the language and culture within 1 of our languages: French, German or Japanese. Students develop the basic vocabulary, grammar and communicative skills in topics such as self-introduction, numbers, the days of the week, animals and culture as well as expanding their appreciation of culture and diversity through authentic learning and intercultural opportunities.
Students are assessed through the specific Achievement Standards of the Australian Curriculum on both the receptive (listening and reading) and productive (writing and speaking) skills of their language and complete a variety of cultural learning tasks.
There may be a cost throughout the year for optional activities and opportunities that align with the Learning and Assessment Plan.
No prior experience in the language is required.
The Arts Academy caters for students with skills and passion for the Arts. Students need to have successfully applied during transition into high school to be considered for the Arts Academy for Year 7. Arts Academy students will have a 1 semester course of tailored Arts learning in their specialist areas. Participation in relevant Arts events such as Fringe@REC, exhibitions, music, drama and film nights and the whole school production/Arts showcase is an expectation of our Arts Academy students. See the Arts Academy section of the school website for more information.
Students will study contemporary and jazz dance. They will learn safe dance practice and the fundamental requirements for effective dance composition. Students will use technology as they explore dance performance and the stagecraft of lighting, sound and costuming for performance. Students will participate in performance opportunities such as Fringe@REC, choreographic competition, Arts showcase and/or whole school production.
Practical participation and performance skills demonstration, composition, theory and written tasks.
Students are required to have successfully applied to the Arts Academy program.
Students in this program are expected to attend additional out of class rehearsals.
Students in this program are expected to perform at REC Arts events as part of their assessment.
Students will study the basics of contemporary music, sound and notation as well as playing various instruments. Composition will also be studied using music technology and the elements of music will be discussed in various musical genres. Students will participate in a class band on their chosen instrument and learn solo playing skills. Students are expected to participate in either concert band or choir. Students will explore percussion, keyboard, guitar, class band, solo playing skills, composition and arranging.
Practical participation and performance skills, composition, theory and written tasks.
Students are required to have successfully applied to the Arts Academy program.
Students must actively learn an instrument within the school’s instrumental music program or private tuition and participate in an ensemble (choir, percussion ensemble or concert band, depending on their instrument of choice).
For students learning an instrument, costs may include an instrument hire fee of up to $150 per year, depending on their instrument of choice.
Students in this program are expected to perform at REC Arts events as part of their assessment.
Students will extend their knowledge and skills in a variety of areas including drawing, painting, printmaking, sculpture and digital design. Students are encouraged to express individuality in their creative visual art projects and appreciate works of art, artists and their cultures. Visual Art Academy students will also engage in a range of school and community-based art projects including mural design and creation, arts grant applications, guest artist workshops and support productions and events with prop and set design and creation.
Arts making and responding.
Students are required to have successfully applied to the Arts Academy program.
The course is an option instead of the compulsory HPE course. It is aimed at students who are highly motivated and have a genuine interest in improving their own and others' sporting performance. Students are introduced to the future specialist areas of basketball, football, netball, touch, soccer, volleyball and fitness as well as other complementary sports. The course incorporates a theoretical understanding of the various components of fitness and their potential impact on performance as well as the SHINE program, which deals with age-appropriate health topics such as values, puberty, relationships, decision making and STIs.
practical: coordination of movement concepts, strategy and tactical analysis, learning through movement, collaboration, inclusivity and fair play (70%)
SHINE: relationships and sexual health (15%)
inquiry portfolio (15%).
For Sports Academy students, participation in multiple sports at a high level is ideal. There are prerequisites that must be completed to enter this course:
a letter of application
a practical skills test.
See the Sports Academy section of the school website for more information.
Watch the video below to find out more about Year 7 Sports Academy:
Course Content
The course is focused on problem and inquiry-based learning where students will apply science, mathematical and technology theory to everyday problems in order to engineer innovative design solutions. Design challenges are student led and supportive of students improving perseverance, self-management and self-confidence. The course begins with a focus on teamwork and communication skills whilst developing students' critical and creative thinking skills, to prepare them for the coming tasks. These tasks will be derived from individually selected real-world problems/issues. Students will work collaboratively in teams to realise solutions to the problems or issues that they have identified. The intended outcome is that STEM participants will be successful, confident and creative independent learners as well as active and informed citizens.
Assessment
Is in accordance with the Australian Curriculum, with a specific focus on the curriculum’s general capabilities, and structured to suit SACE Integrated Learning. Assessment is based on 3 different pieces:
practical enquiry (30%)
personal endeavour (40%)
connections task (30%).
Acceptance into the Innovators Academy is by application. See the Innovators Academy section of the school website for more information.