Skip to content

What does a student learn in ?

This is the year social studies turns into real argument. Students stop just naming events and start using evidence from old letters, speeches, maps, and news sources to back up what they think happened and why. They look closely at how our government works, how money and trade shape daily choices, and how people and places have changed over time. By spring, students can write a short argument about a historical or civic question, point to the sources they used, and explain a different point of view.

  • Asking questions
  • Using sources
  • How government works
  • Citizens' rights
  • Money and markets
  • Maps and migration
  • U.S. and DC history
Source: District of Columbia DC Academic Content Standards
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Asking questions and weighing sources

    Students start the year learning how historians and citizens work. They ask sharp questions about the past and the news, then test whether a source is trustworthy before believing it.

  2. 2

    How government works

    Students dig into how DC, state, and federal government are set up and who has power to do what. They connect ideas like rule of law and civil rights to real issues in the news.

  3. 3

    Money, choices, and markets

    Students look at how people and countries decide what to buy, save, and trade when they cannot have everything. They also practice personal money skills like saving, credit, and budgeting.

  4. 4

    Places, maps, and movement

    Students read maps and photos to see how land, climate, and people shape each other. They follow how families and goods have moved between regions and what changes when cultures meet.

  5. 5

    US and DC history across eras

    Students trace the country's story from colonial times to today, with a close look at the District's role. They notice what has changed, what has stayed the same, and whose voices were heard.

  6. 6

    World history and building arguments

    Students compare turning points from world history and tie them to issues today. They finish the year writing arguments backed by evidence and taking informed action in school or the community.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 8.
Inquiry and Disciplinary Skills
  • Develop Questions

    Students come up with a big, arguable question about a real historical or civic issue, then build smaller questions underneath it that help answer the larger one.

  • Apply Disciplinary Tools

    Students pick up real tools from civics, economics, geography, and history to answer questions about how the world works. That might mean reading a map, tracing a cause, or weighing a policy decision.

  • Evaluate Sources and Use Evidence

    Students decide whether a source is trustworthy, then use it to back up a claim. That means checking who wrote a document, when, and why before citing it as proof.

  • Communicate and Take Action

    Students share what they learned from their research, in writing, a speech, or another format, then use those conclusions to do something real: vote in a school election, speak at a meeting, or push for a change in their community.

Civics and Government
  • Government Institutions

    Students learn how local, state, and federal government bodies are set up and what each one actually does, including how DC's government fits into that picture.

  • Foundational Principles

    Students take core ideas behind how the U.S. government works, like divided power and equal rights under the law, and use them to explain real events from the past and present.

  • Citizenship and Participation

    Students learn what rights they hold as citizens and what responsibilities come with them, then practice the skills needed to take part in democratic life, like voting, debating public issues, and engaging with government.

Economics
  • Economic Decision Making

    Scarcity means there is never enough of everything, so people make tradeoffs. Students study how those tradeoffs, and the rewards or consequences that push people toward certain choices, shape decisions at home, in businesses, and in government policy.

  • Markets and Exchange

    Markets match buyers and sellers, and prices signal where resources go. Students explain how competition shapes those prices across local and global economies.

  • Personal Finance

    Students learn how money decisions work in real life: when to save, when to spend, how credit and debt affect their finances, and what it means to invest money for the future.

Geography
  • Geographic Representations

    Students read maps, photos, and location data to understand what a place looks like, how it's organized, and how people there shape and respond to their surroundings.

  • Human-Environment Interaction

    Students examine how things like rivers, mountains, and climate push people to build, farm, and settle in certain ways, and how those human choices then change the land itself.

  • Movement and Connections

    Students study why people moved from one region to another, where they settled, and what they traded or shared along the way. The focus is on patterns: what made those movements happen and what changed as a result.

History
  • District of Columbia History

    Students trace the major events and figures that shaped Washington, D.C., from its founding to today, and explain how the city's story connects to U.S. history as a whole.

  • United States History

    Students map out how the United States changed and stayed the same from the colonial period to today, connecting major turning points across American history into one coherent story.

  • World History

    Students compare major civilizations and turning points across world history, such as empires, revolutions, and migrations, then trace how those events still shape politics, culture, and daily life today.

  • Historical Reasoning

    Students build a written argument about a historical event by pulling evidence from original documents and outside accounts, then weighing more than one point of view before reaching a conclusion.

Assessments
The state tests students at this grade and subject take.
National Monitoring

NAEP (National Assessment of Educational Progress)

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.

When given:
biennial in winter
Frequency:
every two years
Official source