Every Colorado science teacher I know has spent at least one August trying to stitch a whole year together from a folder of loose lessons, a dusty textbook, and whatever survived from the teacher before them. Do that across three grade levels and the job stops being lesson planning and starts being curriculum building, which is a different job entirely and one nobody actually gave you time for.
What I wanted, and what I finally went looking for, was a single starting point: a full grades 6-8 scope already organized into units, already pointed at our state standards, that I could open and edit instead of build. Below I walk through what science standards Colorado uses, what a complete middle-school bundle actually contains, and why editable units matter so much when you are trying to match a specific scope and sequence.
What science standards does Colorado use?
Colorado uses the Colorado Academic Standards for science. They are built on the NGSS framework, so they use three-dimensional learning: disciplinary core ideas, science and engineering practices, and crosscutting concepts woven together. Instead of memorizing facts in isolation, students apply practices and connect ideas across topics, which shapes how middle-school science units are designed.
The practical upshot for planning is that a good unit cannot just be a reading and a quiz. Because the Colorado Academic Standards are built on the NGSS three-dimensional approach, students are supposed to be doing something with the content: investigating, modeling, arguing from evidence. When I look at any curriculum for my classroom, the first thing I check is whether the units actually ask students to practice science, not just recall it.
What's in a full middle-school science curriculum bundle?
A full middle-school science curriculum bundle covers all three grades, 6 through 8, in one place. The bundle I use is organized into 48 editable units spanning life, earth, and physical science. Having the whole grades 6-8 arc together means topics build in a sensible order across the years instead of repeating or leaving gaps between teachers.
The thing I value most about a full bundle is coherence. When the same scope covers all three grades, you can see how a sixth-grade idea sets up something in seventh and pays off in eighth, instead of three teachers each guessing where the others started and stopped. Forty-eight units across grades 6-8 gives you enough to anchor a full year at each level with room to choose what fits your pacing.
- All three grades in one scope: a complete 6-8 sequence rather than a single grade or a handful of topics.
- Units across the major strands: life, earth, and physical science represented over the three years.
- A unit-based structure: 48 units you can order, pace, and assign rather than loose, disconnected lessons.
How do editable units help Colorado teachers?
Editable units let you adapt the curriculum to your own scope and sequence instead of teaching around a fixed resource. You can reorder units, adjust wording, trim or extend activities, and align the language to the Colorado Academic Standards your district emphasizes. That flexibility is what turns a purchased bundle into a curriculum that actually fits your classroom.
No bundle drops in perfectly, because no two Colorado districts pace the year exactly alike. Editable units mean that when my scope and sequence puts a topic in a different month, or my district phrases a standard a particular way, I can change the materials instead of fighting them. I start from a complete draft and spend my time adapting it, which is a far better use of a planning period than building from a blank page.
You are not going to find a curriculum that matches your room out of the box, and that is fine. The win is starting from a complete, editable grades 6-8 scope already pointed at the Colorado Academic Standards, then spending your time adjusting the parts that matter instead of inventing all 48 units yourself.