Asking questions and weighing sources
Students start the year learning how to dig into a real question about society, politics, or history. They learn to spot which sources to trust and how to back up a claim with evidence instead of opinion.
This is the year social studies turns into real research. Students pick a question that matters, dig through sources, decide which ones to trust, and back up what they say with evidence. They study how governments, markets, and history shape the world they are about to vote, work, and live in. By spring, they can write a paper or give a talk that takes a clear position on a public issue and defends it with facts.
Students start the year learning how to dig into a real question about society, politics, or history. They learn to spot which sources to trust and how to back up a claim with evidence instead of opinion.
Students study how local, state, and federal government actually work, from town councils to the Supreme Court. They connect those rules to current issues and practice taking part in public life as informed adults.
Students look at how prices, jobs, and markets move, and how government and global trade shape what families pay. They also work on money skills they will use after graduation, including saving, credit, and investing.
Students use maps and data to study why people live where they do and how they move across borders. They look at how culture, trade, and the environment link communities here at home to places around the world.
Students trace how events build on each other across time and compare how different groups remember the same moment. They use primary documents to build arguments about what caused major turning points and what came after.
Students pull the year together by investigating a real issue at the school, town, state, or national level. They share their findings in writing or a presentation and propose a concrete next step they could take.
Students write big-picture questions worth investigating, then plan out the smaller questions needed to actually answer them. The goal is a line of inquiry that holds up across multiple sources and days of research.
Students pull from civics, economics, geography, and history to research a question, choosing sources and methods that fit the subject. The goal is finding information that actually answers what they set out to investigate.
Students judge whether a source is trustworthy, then use what they find to back up an argument. That means weighing who wrote something, why, and whether the evidence actually supports the point being made.
Students research a real issue, then share what they found through writing, a presentation, or another format, and take some kind of action to address it, from the school level up to the national level.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Develop Questions and Plan Inquiries Grades 11-12 | Students write big-picture questions worth investigating, then plan out the smaller questions needed to actually answer them. The goal is a line of inquiry that holds up across multiple sources and days of research. | CT-SS.INQ.11-12.1 |
| Apply Disciplinary Concepts and Tools Grades 11-12 | Students pull from civics, economics, geography, and history to research a question, choosing sources and methods that fit the subject. The goal is finding information that actually answers what they set out to investigate. | CT-SS.INQ.11-12.2 |
| Evaluate Sources and Use Evidence Grades 11-12 | Students judge whether a source is trustworthy, then use what they find to back up an argument. That means weighing who wrote something, why, and whether the evidence actually supports the point being made. | CT-SS.INQ.11-12.3 |
| Communicate Conclusions and Take Informed Action Grades 11-12 | Students research a real issue, then share what they found through writing, a presentation, or another format, and take some kind of action to address it, from the school level up to the national level. | CT-SS.INQ.11-12.4 |
Students learn how governments and political bodies are set up and what they actually do, from city hall to the United Nations. The focus is on why these institutions exist and how decisions get made at each level.
Students practice the habits that keep a democracy working, like listening to opposing views, making a reasoned case, and following through on civic commitments in school and the broader community.
Students take a real debate happening in the news today and work through it using actual laws, civic rules, and democratic processes to argue a position or evaluate a decision.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Civic and Political Institutions Grades 11-12 | Students learn how governments and political bodies are set up and what they actually do, from city hall to the United Nations. The focus is on why these institutions exist and how decisions get made at each level. | CT-SS.CIV.11-12.1 |
| Participation and Deliberation Grades 11-12 | Students practice the habits that keep a democracy working, like listening to opposing views, making a reasoned case, and following through on civic commitments in school and the broader community. | CT-SS.CIV.11-12.2 |
| Processes, Rules, and Laws Grades 11-12 | Students take a real debate happening in the news today and work through it using actual laws, civic rules, and democratic processes to argue a position or evaluate a decision. | CT-SS.CIV.11-12.3 |
Students weigh the real trade-offs behind a decision, not just the price tag. They ask what is given up, who gains, and whether the benefit is worth the cost.
Markets match buyers and sellers, and prices shift based on how much of something is available and how many people want it. Students examine how that competition pushes resources toward their most valued uses.
Government policy, central bank decisions, and global trade all shape whether prices rise, jobs are available, and economies grow. Students study how these forces connect and what happens when one of them shifts.
Students apply real money decisions: how much to save, how to use credit responsibly, and how basic investing works. The goal is to connect those choices to long-term financial health.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Economic Decision Making Grades 11-12 | Students weigh the real trade-offs behind a decision, not just the price tag. They ask what is given up, who gains, and whether the benefit is worth the cost. | CT-SS.ECON.11-12.1 |
| Exchange and Markets Grades 11-12 | Markets match buyers and sellers, and prices shift based on how much of something is available and how many people want it. Students examine how that competition pushes resources toward their most valued uses. | CT-SS.ECON.11-12.2 |
| The National and Global Economy Grades 11-12 | Government policy, central bank decisions, and global trade all shape whether prices rise, jobs are available, and economies grow. Students study how these forces connect and what happens when one of them shifts. | CT-SS.ECON.11-12.3 |
| Personal Financial Literacy Grades 11-12 | Students apply real money decisions: how much to save, how to use credit responsibly, and how basic investing works. The goal is to connect those choices to long-term financial health. | CT-SS.ECON.11-12.4 |
Students read maps, photos, and geographic data to study how places look, what makes a region distinct, and how people and their environment shape each other.
Students examine how geography shapes what people build, grow, and settle, and how those choices change the land in return. A city built around a river and farmland lost to drought are both examples of this two-way relationship.
Students look at why people have moved to different regions throughout history, how they settled, and what ideas or traditions they carried with them. The focus is on patterns across places, not just individual stories.
Students examine how countries are linked through trade, shared culture, and political agreements, then explain how a change in one place (a drought, an election, a factory closing) ripples into decisions made somewhere else on the map.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Geographic Representations Grades 11-12 | Students read maps, photos, and geographic data to study how places look, what makes a region distinct, and how people and their environment shape each other. | CT-SS.GEO.11-12.1 |
| Human-Environment Interaction Grades 11-12 | Students examine how geography shapes what people build, grow, and settle, and how those choices change the land in return. A city built around a river and farmland lost to drought are both examples of this two-way relationship. | CT-SS.GEO.11-12.2 |
| Movement and Migration Grades 11-12 | Students look at why people have moved to different regions throughout history, how they settled, and what ideas or traditions they carried with them. The focus is on patterns across places, not just individual stories. | CT-SS.GEO.11-12.3 |
| Global Interconnections Grades 11-12 | Students examine how countries are linked through trade, shared culture, and political agreements, then explain how a change in one place (a drought, an election, a factory closing) ripples into decisions made somewhere else on the map. | CT-SS.GEO.11-12.4 |
Students trace how a place or society changed over time, and what stayed the same, across different eras and parts of the world. They look for patterns that connect events across centuries and continents.
Students read accounts of the same historical event from people on different sides, then explain how each viewpoint shaped what we think we know about what happened.
Students read primary and secondary sources, judge how reliable each one is, and use the strongest evidence to back up a historical argument they can defend.
Students look at why major historical events happened and what changed because of them, then build written arguments backed by real evidence from primary sources, data, or other historical records.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Change, Continuity, and Context Grades 11-12 | Students trace how a place or society changed over time, and what stayed the same, across different eras and parts of the world. They look for patterns that connect events across centuries and continents. | CT-SS.HIST.11-12.1 |
| Perspectives Grades 11-12 | Students read accounts of the same historical event from people on different sides, then explain how each viewpoint shaped what we think we know about what happened. | CT-SS.HIST.11-12.2 |
| Historical Sources and Evidence Grades 11-12 | Students read primary and secondary sources, judge how reliable each one is, and use the strongest evidence to back up a historical argument they can defend. | CT-SS.HIST.11-12.3 |
| Causation and Argumentation Grades 11-12 | Students look at why major historical events happened and what changed because of them, then build written arguments backed by real evidence from primary sources, data, or other historical records. | CT-SS.HIST.11-12.4 |
Federally administered sample-based assessment in reading, mathematics, science, and writing. NAEP results inform state-by-state comparisons rather than individual student or school accountability.
Students dig into how government, the economy, geography, and history actually work together. They build their own research questions, weigh evidence from real sources, and write or present arguments backed by that evidence. Expect more debate, more writing, and more current events than in earlier grades.
Pick one news story a week and talk about it for five minutes at dinner. Ask who is affected, who pays, and who decides. That short habit builds the same thinking skills students use in class, without needing a textbook.
Students can read a primary source, judge how trustworthy it is, and use it to support a claim in writing or discussion. They can also explain how a law gets made, how prices move in a market, and why a place looks the way it does today.
Most teachers anchor the year in history or civics and pull in economics and geography as the content demands. Plan a few sustained inquiries, each running two to four weeks, so students have time to develop questions, gather sources, and produce real work.
Source evaluation and claim writing. Students often accept a source because it sounds confident, or they state an opinion without grounding it in evidence. Build short, repeated practice with sourcing and counterclaims into every unit rather than saving it for a research paper.
Walk through real bills, a bank statement, or a paycheck stub together. Talk about what a credit card actually costs if you only pay the minimum, and what a savings account or retirement fund grows into over time. Real numbers stick better than definitions.
Look for a student who can take a question they care about, find solid sources, and write a short argument that uses those sources well. They should also be able to explain a current public issue from more than one side without dismissing the other.
Informed action means using what students learned to do something real, like writing a letter to a town council, running a voter registration table, or sharing research with a community group. It does not have to be partisan. The point is taking a researched position into the world.