What school supplies do I need for 7th grade? And BQ for girls? “emergency supply list”

by admin on February 6, 2012

Question by God: What school supplies do I need for 7th grade? And BQ for girls?
In my school district, we don’t have middle school! 7th grade is in the same building as high school, and it is considered high school. So can you please make a list of what I might need? I don’t want to wait until school starts and the teacher tells me what to get because by then the stores no longer have sales and they also don’t have the supplies I usually need. So what do I need for high school?

PLEASE MAKE A LIST! Thanks so much!
BQ: I like to keep an emergency kit in my locker because I never know. What should I keep in it? (for girls!)

Best answer:

Answer by Kade Supernova™
God, you already have your high school diploma.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
“emergency supply list”

Penny Hill and Mel Hill of Kalakaska at 2011 MLGMA Summer Conference
emergency supply list

Image by Michigan Municipal League (MML)
More than 100 municipal leaders from throughout Michigan as well as several media representatives attended Gov. Rick Snyder’s speech in St. Joseph (July 28, 2011) at the annual Michigan Local Government Management Association summer conference. The speech highlighted the governor’s accomplishments, including that he’s already signed more than 120 bills into law, and allowed for an extended Q & A with MLGMA attendees. He stressed his appreciation for public service, and the importance of collaboration between the state and local units of government. He also reiterated the importance of service sharing between various units of government. The Governor said he was working on a special message on health and one on talent. He said he believed talent attraction and development (http://www.mml.org/resources/21c3/econ_development.html) is a matter of supply meeting demand. The Michigan Municipal League also agrees that talent attraction is important in having thriving communities and state, but place is extremely important as well as identified in the League’s Center for 21st Century Communities initiative: www.mml.org/resources/21c3/about.html. Transportation (http://www.mml.org/resources/21c3/transit.html) ranked high on the list of things managers were curious about, and the governor assured everyone he is open to hearing what needs to be improved. View photos from the MLGMA event here: www.flickr.com/photos/michigancommunities/. For more about the Michigan Municipal League and what we do go to mml.org. The annual MLGMA summer conference is an opportunity to city managers, county executives, village managers and other municipal leaders to gather, network, share ideas and learn about the latest legislation, policies and techniques related to Michigan communities. Other speakers appearing at the convention included Roger Fraser, deputy state treasurer for local government services, Joseph Harris, emergency manager for Benton Harbor; Eric Scorsone, state and local government specialist at Michigan State University; Royal Oak City Manager Donald Johnson, Samantha Harkins of the Michigan Municipal League; Scott Huebler, Whitehall City manager: Steve Brock, Farmington Hills city manager and MLGMA President; Jeff Noel, vice president for Whirlpool Corp.; Wendy Dant Chesser, executive director of Cornerstone Alliance; Adam Smith, Jonesville Village Manager; Frank Walsh, St. Joseph city manager; Pat McGinnis, Grand Haven city manager; Robert Judd, St. Joseph mayor; Kate McDonald, vice president/funds relationship manager for JP Morgan Asset Management; Christine Andrysiak, of Plante & Moran; Ben Hughes, St. Clair Shores city manager; Larry Lane, Brighton Area Fire Chief; Gary McCririe, Genoa Township supervisor; Peter Provenzano, Macomb County finance director; State Rep. Al Pscholka; Erik Wilson, Plainwell city manager; Wayne Bauman, of Conestoga-Rover & Associates; Mark Lange, of Edward Lowe Foundation; and Penny Lewandowski, of the Edward Lowe Foundation.

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

Crystal_Aura . February 6, 2012 at 7:38 am

just get the stuff you know you will need, such as backpack, pencils/pens. Because each school is different. Let the teacher tell you.

BQ: just some pads

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TOUCH THIS SHAWTY AND DIE! February 6, 2012 at 8:11 am

Uhh what kind of a school waits that long to give out a supply list?

Just get the general stuff like 3 ring binders, dividers, plenty of paper, pens and pencils, maybe even a handheld pencil sharpener, erasers, spiral bound notebooks.

BQ: In that kit you should have bandaids, gauze, pads (for period accidents), hand sanitizer, aaaaand I can’t think of anything else.

Reply

ItachisXeyes February 6, 2012 at 8:46 am

well you’ll need notebooks and pencils….in 7th grade they still bitch about pens and stuff, but in high school you generally can use pens..i’m a pen person. XD
you’ll need book covers too. if your taking higher math a scientific calculator will do but you might wanna bite the bullet and get a graphing calculator, take good care of it and it will last you through high school and college.
now this depends on the school really but you might need a jump drive…and some kind of computer at home. i switched schools in middle school, one really didn’t do assignments that assumed you had a jump drive and a compute at home and the other basically forced you to have them.
also if your a binder kind of person…get one. i just carried my books and notebooks around and made frequent stops at my locker and now that i’m in college i just have a satchel…like indiana jones XD

but most of this you’ll find out on the first couple of days.

and i’ve never made a BQ before…nor am i a girl, i could make some guesses but they would be guesses at best (^_^)

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