You must clearly separate the pages based on number of columns. This is done with page styles.
If page 1 is a title/cover page not related to pages 6 and 7, it is better to create a specific page style for it (otherwise a common one for 1 and 6-7 will do).
I suggest the following structure: Cover for page 1, TwoCols for pages 2-5, built-in Default Style for pp. 6-7.
To create Cover and TwoCols:
- Press
F11
to open the style side pane and click on the fourth icon in the toolbar (Page Styles)
- Click anywhere and select
New
- Set the margins in the
Page
tab
- Enable header and footer if needed in
Header
and Footer
tab
- Select the required number of columns in
Columns
tab
- Give a name in the
Organizer
tab
For Cover, additionally select TwoCols from the drop-down Next Style menu (which means TwoCols must be defined before Cover) so that you automatically switch from Cover to TwoCols on page break.
Adjust Default Style properties (margins, header, footer) so that they are consistent with the other styles by right clicking on its name and Modify
.
With these styles, begin page 1 by forcing it at Cover: with the cursor in the page, double-click on Cover page style in the side pane.
Note: this double-click is the standard way to “restyle” a page. It could be useful if you don’t retype your document. But, ponder on what you’ve done so far so as not to create a mess.
When you want to leave for page 2, insert a manual page break Insert
>Manual Break
, Page variant. It should switch to TwoCols but if you want to make sure, you can force TwoCols style.
Similarly, to switch to 1-column format, insert a page break Insert
>Manual Break
, Page variant, forcing style to Default Style.
If this answer helped you, please accept it by clicking the check mark
to the left and, karma permitting, upvote it. If this resolves your problem, close the question, that will help other people with the same question.