English Language Arts
Advanced reading, literary analysis, and academic vocabulary that strengthen thinking and communication.

ADCA Charter Academy's middle school program helps students develop responsibility, organization, academic confidence, leadership, critical thinking, STEM skills, and readiness for high school.
A look at the core programs and habits that shape the middle school experience at ADCA Charter Academy.
Advanced reading, literary analysis, and academic vocabulary that strengthen thinking and communication.
Structured writing instruction, grammar mastery, and beginning research practices for long-form work.
Applied mathematics, ratios, expressions, and the foundational skills that lead into algebra.
Earth science, physical science, and life science taught through investigation and lab-based learning.
World history, U.S. history, geography, and the civic understanding scholars need for high school.
Clubs, student government, service, and early exposure to careers that build identity and direction.
Each middle school grade introduces greater rigor in core content, expanded electives, and growing leadership and technology integration.
Our middle school years intentionally cultivate the habits, mindset, and skills students need to thrive in high school, college, and life.
Planners, study routines, and time-management habits that scholars carry into high school.
Ownership of learning, assignments, and behavior in and beyond the classroom.
Analysis, reasoning, and structured problem solving across every subject area.
Student government, mentorship, and service opportunities that build confident voices.
A measurable jump in rigor, vocabulary, writing, and mathematical reasoning.
Pathways like Algebra I in 8th grade prepare scholars for honors and advanced high school work.
Download and complete the Middle School Admissions Application, then email the completed form and required documents to admin.registraradcacademy@gmail.com.
Middle school at ADCA is a pivotal stage of formation — a place where scholarship deepens, leadership takes root, and students develop the maturity and academic ownership that high school and college demand.