Skip to content

What does a student learn in ?

This is the year social studies pulls together U.S. history since the late 1800s with how the government and economy actually work. Students trace the country from world wars and the Great Depression through the Cold War, civil rights, and recent decades of globalization and political division. They study the Constitution and Bill of Rights, landmark Supreme Court cases, and the jobs of Congress, the president, and the courts. By spring, students can explain how a bill becomes a law, build a monthly budget, and back up an argument about history with real evidence.

  • U.S. history since 1880
  • Constitution and Bill of Rights
  • Branches of government
  • Voting and elections
  • Supreme Court cases
  • Personal finance
  • Supply and demand
Source: Idaho Idaho 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

    Foundations of American government

    Students start with the ideas behind the Constitution. They read the Declaration of Independence, look at what the Founders borrowed from earlier thinkers, and trace the debate over how much power the federal government should have.

  2. 2

    How the government works

    Students walk through Congress, the presidency, and the courts. They follow how a bill becomes law, how a case reaches the Supreme Court, and how federal, state, and local governments share the job.

  3. 3

    Citizenship, rights, and elections

    Students study the Bill of Rights and landmark Supreme Court cases that shape daily life. They look at voting, political parties, campaigns, and the role of media and social media in shaping public opinion.

  4. 4

    Economics and personal finance

    Students learn how prices, jobs, and the broader economy move together. They also practice the money skills adults use every week, including budgeting, saving, credit, taxes, and comparing big purchases.

  5. 5

    Early 20th century America

    Students study the Progressive era, World War I, and the 1920s. They look at how reformers responded to factory work and corruption, why the country entered a world war, and what changed in daily life during the Roaring Twenties.

  6. 6

    Depression, World War II, and Cold War

    Students follow the country through the 1929 crash, the New Deal, World War II, and decades of Cold War tension. They weigh hard decisions, including the atomic bomb and the internment of Japanese Americans.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 11.
Fundamental Economic Concepts
  • Apply and explain the concepts of supply and demand, scarcity, opportunity costs

    9-12.EC.1
    High School

    Supply, demand, scarcity, and incentives shape every economic choice. Students use these concepts to explain why prices rise, why trade-offs exist, and what drives people to act the way they do with money and resources.

  • Identify ways in which the interaction of all buyers and sellers influences…

    9-12.EC.2
    High School

    Supply and demand sets prices. Students learn how the choices of millions of buyers and sellers, all acting independently, push prices up or down in any market.

  • Identify how incentives determine what is produced and distributed in a…

    9-12.EC.3
    High School

    Producers make more of what pays well and less of what doesn't. Students learn how prices and rewards shape the decisions behind what gets made, sold, and who gets it.

  • Describe the factors of production

    9-12.EC.4
    High School

    Students identify the basic inputs an economy uses to make goods and services: land, labor, capital, and entrepreneurship. Think of these as the raw materials, workers, tools, and decision-makers behind every product a business creates.

  • Analyze the various parts of the business cycle and its effect on the economy

    9-12.EC.5
    High School

    The business cycle describes the economy's pattern of growth and slowdown. Students learn to identify each phase (expansion, peak, recession, recovery) and explain how each one affects jobs, prices, and business decisions.

  • Compare and contrast the characteristics of different economic systems and…

    9-12.EC.6
    High School

    Students study how different societies decide who owns businesses, who sets prices, and how goods get distributed. They compare market economies, command economies, and mixed systems to understand the tradeoffs each one makes.

Federal Indian Policy Period, 1879 Present
  • Analyze how federal policies established the relationship between the United…

    9-12.US2.1
    High School

    Federal laws and government decisions have shaped what land, rights, and self-governance American Indian tribes have had. Students examine what those policies were meant to do and what actually happened as a result.

  • Allocation and Assimilated Period 1879-1934

    9-12.US2.1.1
    High School

    Students examine a stretch of U.S. history when the federal government broke up tribal land into individual plots and pushed American Indians to abandon their languages, customs, and ways of life. The goal was assimilation; the damage lasted generations.

  • Tribal Reorganization Period, 1934-1958

    9-12.US2.1.2
    High School

    Students examine the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 and the federal shift away from forced assimilation. They look at how tribes regained limited self-governance and what that change meant in practice for tribal lands and leadership.

  • Termination and Relocation Period, 1953-1971

    9-12.US2.1.3
    High School

    Students examine a period when the federal government ended its formal recognition of many tribes and pushed Native people to move to cities, exploring what was intended, what was lost, and what resistance followed.

  • Self-Determination Period, 1968-present

    9-12.US2.1.4
    High School

    Starting in 1968, federal policy shifted to let tribal nations govern themselves rather than forcing assimilation. Students examine what that change meant in practice, including which powers tribes gained and where tensions with federal authority remained.

Foundations of the American Political System
  • Examine the influences of leading European thinkers such as Locke and…

    9-12.GOV.1
    High School

    Students trace how ideas from Greek democracy, Roman government, and English law shaped the thinking of America's founders. Philosophers like Locke and Montesquieu gave the founders arguments about rights and limited power that show up directly in the Constitution.

  • Examine the Declaration of Independence and American grievances against British…

    9-12.GOV.2
    High School

    Students read the Declaration of Independence and study the specific complaints the colonists had against the British government before the Revolution.

  • Identify the strengths and weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation

    9-12.GOV.3
    High School

    Students examine America's first attempt at a national government and explain what it got right and where it fell apart, such as having no power to tax or enforce laws.

  • Analyze the Constitutional Convention of 1787, including the Great Compromise…

    9-12.GOV.4
    High School

    Students examine the debates that shaped the U.S. Constitution, including how delegates settled the dispute over state representation and why some Americans pushed back hard before agreeing to ratify it.

  • Evaluate the arguments presented in the Federalist Papers, particularly Essay…

    9-12.GOV.5
    High School

    Students read the Federalist and Anti-Federalist Papers and weigh the arguments on each side. The focus is on what Madison argued in Essays 10 and 51 about factions, power, and why a strong central government could still protect individual rights.

  • Describe the purposes and functions of government as outlined in the Preamble…

    9-12.GOV.6
    High School

    Students read the Preamble and explain what it says the government is supposed to do: keep order, defend the country, and protect people's rights. It's the opening promise of the Constitution.

  • Describe limited government within the Constitution, including

    9-12.GOV.7
    High School

    The Constitution sets boundaries on what the government can and cannot do. Students learn how those limits, built into the document itself, protect individual rights and keep any one branch from gaining too much power.

  • Checks and balances

    9-12.GOV.7.1
    High School

    The Constitution splits power across three branches of government so no single branch can act alone. Congress passes laws, the President can veto them, and courts can strike them down.

  • Popular sovereignty

    9-12.GOV.7.2
    High School

    Popular sovereignty is the idea that government power comes from the people. Students learn how voting, elections, and civic participation are built into the Constitution as the main ways citizens keep control of their government.

  • Rule of law

    9-12.GOV.7.3
    High School

    The Constitution applies to everyone, including government officials. Students learn why no person or institution is above the law and how courts enforce that principle.

  • Federalism

    9-12.GOV.7.4
    High School

    Federalism is the system that splits power between the national government and state governments. Students learn which decisions belong to Washington and which belong to each state, and why the Constitution set it up that way.

  • Separation of powers

    9-12.GOV.7.5
    High School

    The Constitution splits government authority across three branches so no single branch controls everything. Students explain how Congress makes laws, the President carries them out, and courts decide whether they hold up.

  • Judicial review

    9-12.GOV.7.6
    High School

    Judicial review is the power courts use to strike down laws that conflict with the Constitution. Students learn how this check keeps Congress and the President from passing or enforcing laws that cross constitutional limits.

  • Majority rule and protection of minority rights

    9-12.GOV.7.7
    High School

    Majority rule means the larger group's vote decides an outcome, but the Constitution also protects the rights of those who voted the other way. Students learn how American government balances both.

  • Describe the structure of the Constitution and the process to amend it

    9-12.GOV.8
    High School

    Students learn how the Constitution is organized into articles and amendments, and what steps Congress and the states must take to change it.

  • Analyze how the Bill of Rights limits the powers of the government and ensures…

    9-12.GOV.9
    High School

    The Bill of Rights is the first ten amendments to the Constitution. Students examine what those amendments actually forbid the government from doing, such as silencing speech or conducting searches without cause, and what rights they protect for individuals.

  • Define the concepts of democracy and republic and examine the relationship…

    9-12.GOV.10
    High School

    Students learn what democracy and republic actually mean, then work out how the two ideas connect. The U.S. is both: citizens vote, but elected representatives make most of the decisions.

  • Understand the shared values and aspirations of Americans including liberty…

    9-12.GOV.11
    High School

    Students examine the core beliefs that most Americans share: personal freedom, equal treatment, individual responsibility, and limited government. These ideas show up in debates over laws, rights, and how much government should step into daily life.

  • Evaluate the arguments within the Declaration of Independence and its…

    9-12.GOV.12
    High School

    Students read the Declaration of Independence and judge whether its arguments for breaking from Britain hold up. They also examine what the document says an ideal government should look like and do.

Progressivism and Imperialism, 1890 1920
  • Evaluate Progressivism’s impact on circumstances and policies

    9-12.US2.2
    High School

    Progressivism was a reform movement that pushed government to fix real problems: unsafe food, dangerous factories, corrupt politicians, and poverty in city neighborhoods. Students examine which changes it brought about and which problems it left unsolved.

  • Exploitation of labor

    9-12.US2.2.1
    High School

    Students examine how workers in the early 1900s faced dangerous conditions, low wages, and long hours, and how Progressive Era reforms pushed back against those abuses through new labor laws and regulations.

  • Child labor

    9-12.US2.2.2
    High School

    Students examine how Progressive Era reformers pushed to end child labor in factories and mines, leading to new laws that set age limits and restricted working hours for children.

  • Spoils systems of government hiring

    9-12.US2.2.3
    High School

    The spoils system meant government jobs went to political allies, not qualified workers. Students examine how Progressive Era reformers pushed back against that practice and helped replace it with hiring based on merit and skill.

  • Machine politics

    9-12.US2.2.4
    High School

    Machine politics describes how powerful political bosses in the early 1900s traded city jobs, favors, and contracts for votes. Progressives fought to break up these networks and make local government more accountable to ordinary citizens.

  • Corruption

    9-12.US2.2.5
    High School

    Students examine how muckraking journalists and reform-minded politicians exposed bribery and backroom deals in government and big business, and how those investigations pushed new laws into place.

  • Immigration tension

    9-12.US2.2.6
    High School

    Students examine why immigration sparked political and social conflict in the early 1900s, including debates over who should be allowed into the country and what it meant to be American.

  • Women’s suffrage

    9-12.US2.2.7
    High School

    Students study how American women won the right to vote in 1920, tracing the decades of organizing, protests, and political fights that led Congress to pass the 19th Amendment.

  • Prohibition

    9-12.US2.2.8
    High School

    Students examine how the temperance movement pushed the federal government to ban alcohol sales nationwide, and what happened to communities, crime, and policy when that ban took effect in 1920.

  • 41TRace relations

    9-12.US2.2.9
    High School

    Students examine how Progressive Era reforms affected Black Americans, including whether civil rights improved, stayed the same, or got worse during a period when reformers focused on other causes.

  • Eugenics

    9-12.US2.2.10
    High School

    Students study the eugenics movement, a widely accepted but deeply harmful idea in the early 1900s that the government should control who could have children in order to "improve" the population. They examine how this pseudoscience shaped laws and policies.

  • Evaluate the impact of racial, economic, moral, political

    9-12.US2.3
    High School

    Students examine why the U.S. started taking control of territories overseas in the late 1800s and early 1900s. They weigh the mix of motives behind that push: profit, political power, racial attitudes, and a sense of moral duty.

  • Analyze the origins and the impacts of the Spanish-American War and American…

    9-12.US2.4
    High School

    Students examine why the U.S. went to war with Spain in 1898 and what happened after: American control over Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Philippines, and Hawaii, and new U.S. influence across Latin America and Asia.

Macroeconomics and International Trade
  • Analyze the impact of events such as wars, industrialization

    9-12.EC.7
    High School

    Wars, factory booms, and new technology all push the economy up or down. Students study how those events speed up growth, trigger recessions, or change how many people have jobs.

  • Explain monetary policy, fiscal policy

    9-12.EC.8
    High School

    Students learn how the government and the Federal Reserve use taxes, spending, and interest rates to slow down or speed up the economy. These are the main tools policymakers reach for during a recession or a period of rising prices.

  • Examine the economic implications of fiscal policy in the United States…

    9-12.EC.9
    High School

    Students study how the federal government uses taxes and spending to influence the economy, and what happens when the government spends more than it collects. This includes looking at how borrowing and debt affect everyday economic conditions.

  • Analyze global economic interdependence and competition

    9-12.EC.10
    High School

    Students examine how countries depend on each other to trade goods, and how they compete for jobs, markets, and resources. They look at how decisions made in one country ripple through economies elsewhere.

  • Apply economic concepts to explain the role of imports/exports both nationally…

    9-12.EC.11
    High School

    Students learn why countries buy goods from each other and sell goods abroad. They use basic economic ideas to explain how imports and exports shape a country's economy and its relationships with trading partners.

  • Describe the elements of entrepreneurship and successful businesses including…

    9-12.EC.12
    High School

    Entrepreneurship means spotting an opportunity and building a business around it. Students learn why countries and companies focus on what they do best, and how trading with others makes everyone more productive.

  • Identify the roles of financial markets and institutions on the economy

    9-12.EC.13
    High School

    Financial markets and institutions (banks, stock exchanges, insurance companies) move money from savers to borrowers and businesses. Students learn how these systems shape hiring, investment, and prices across the whole economy.

Personal Finance
  • Demonstrate how to set financial goals and analyze the costs and benefits of…

    9-12.EC.14
    High School

    Students practice setting a savings or spending goal, then weigh the real trade-offs before deciding where money goes. The focus is on making a deliberate choice, not just knowing the right answer.

  • Demonstrate procedures for opening and managing checking and savings accounts…

    9-12.EC.15
    High School

    Students learn how to open a checking or savings account, write a check, read a bank statement, and manage an account online.

  • Evaluate types of investments to determine how they meet the objectives of a…

    9-12.EC.16
    High School

    Students compare savings accounts, stocks, and bonds to figure out which investments fit a personal financial plan. The focus is on how compound interest quietly grows money over time, even when nothing else changes.

  • Research and analyze information on credit options available to consumers

    9-12.EC.17
    High School

    Students compare types of credit, such as credit cards, personal loans, and auto loans, to understand what borrowing actually costs. They look at interest rates, fees, and repayment terms before deciding which option fits a given situation.

  • Demonstrate how to use comparison shopping skills to make purchasing decisions…

    9-12.EC.18
    High School

    Students practice comparing prices, loan terms, and total costs before making big spending decisions, from buying a car to choosing a college. The goal is to find the best deal, not just the lowest sticker price.

  • Research and report on factors that affect creditworthiness and credit scores

    9-12.EC.19
    High School

    Students research what raises or lowers a credit score, such as payment history and how much debt a person carries, then explain their findings in a written or oral report.

  • Describe how life, health, home

    9-12.EC.20
    High School

    Insurance is a financial safety net. Students learn how life, health, home, and auto coverage limit the money a person loses when something goes wrong, from a car crash to a medical bill to a house fire.

  • Analyze the federal, state

    9-12.EC.21
    High School

    Students study how federal, state, and local taxes work and what each one takes from a paycheck. The goal is to see how those taxes fund schools, roads, and other public services everyone uses.

  • Explain how sales and property taxes affect financial decisions in terms of…

    9-12.EC.22
    High School

    Sales tax raises the price of what students buy; property tax affects what it costs to own a home. This standard explains how both taxes shape spending decisions and fund public services like schools and roads.

  • Build a monthly budget for an individual or a family given their income…

    9-12.EC.23
    High School

    Students practice building a real monthly budget by balancing take-home pay against rent, groceries, taxes, and savings goals. Fixed costs stay the same each month; variable costs shift, and the budget has to account for both.

  • Identify and evaluate modern consumer skills, tools

    9-12.EC.24
    High School

    Students learn to compare prices, read contracts, and spot misleading deals. The goal is to make smarter choices with real money in everyday situations.

Citizenship and Civic Participation
  • Describe, at the national, state

    9-12.GOV.13
    High School

    Students identify what citizens and residents are expected to do, from paying taxes and obeying the law to voting and jury duty, and explain why those responsibilities keep communities and the country functioning.

  • Compare and contrast major American political ideologies

    9-12.GOV.14
    High School

    Students study the core beliefs of liberals, conservatives, libertarians, and other political groups, then explain where those beliefs overlap and where they split.

  • Evaluate the roles of the federal and state governments in the Civil Rights…

    9-12.GOV.15
    High School

    Students examine what federal and state governments actually did during the Civil Rights Movement. That includes which laws Congress passed, how presidents responded, and where state governments stood in the way or pushed change forward.

  • Explain the role and evolution of political parties in governing and in the…

    9-12.GOV.16
    High School

    Political parties recruit candidates, shape policy, and organize how government runs. Students study how parties have changed over time and how primaries, caucuses, and general elections each serve a different role in deciding who ends up on the ballot and who wins office.

  • Evaluate the role of the media/social media as a means of communicating…

    9-12.GOV.17
    High School

    Students examine how news outlets and social media shape what people think matters and why. That includes learning to spot when information is accurate and when it is misleading.

  • Describe the means that citizens use to responsibly participate in the…

    9-12.GOV.18
    High School

    Citizens have real tools for shaping government: voting, signing petitions, joining protests, running for office, and lobbying elected officials. Students learn what each method looks like in practice and when people use them.

  • Explain the requirements to be considered a natural-born U.S

    9-12.GOV.19
    High School

    Students learn who qualifies as a natural-born U.S. citizen and how immigrants become citizens through naturalization, including what the civics and history exam covers.

  • Explain the history and significance of dual citizenship regarding American…

    9-12.GOV.20
    High School

    Dual citizenship lets American Indians hold citizenship in both their tribal nation and the United States. Students trace how that came to be, from early treaties through the 1924 Indian Citizenship Act, and what it means legally and politically today.

  • Identify and be able to engage with key officials, both elected and appointed…

    9-12.GOV.21
    High School

    Students learn who holds power in government and how to actually reach them. That means knowing the difference between an elected senator and an appointed judge, and understanding who to contact at the federal, state, and local level when something matters.

  • Distinguish between civil rights and civil liberties and how they are put into…

    9-12.GOV.22
    High School

    Civil rights protect people from discrimination by others, especially the government. Civil liberties protect personal freedoms like speech and religion from government interference. Students learn how each shows up in real decisions, laws, and everyday life.

  • Evaluate the Supreme Court’s interpretations of the freedoms articulated in the…

    9-12.GOV.23
    High School

    Students read actual Supreme Court rulings to figure out where First Amendment freedoms end and government limits begin. Cases cover protest, religion in public schools, obscenity, and press freedom.

  • Evaluate the Supreme Court’s interpretations of freedoms in the Fourth through…

    9-12.GOV.24
    High School

    Students study landmark Supreme Court cases to see how the Bill of Rights protects people accused of crimes. Cases like Miranda v. Arizona and Gideon v. Wainwright show how the Court has decided what "fair treatment" actually means in practice.

  • Evaluate the Supreme Court’s interpretations of the freedoms in the 14th…

    9-12.GOV.25
    High School

    Students read landmark Supreme Court rulings and judge whether the Court got it right. Cases include Brown v. Board of Education, Loving v. Virginia, and Obergefell v. Hodges, all turning on what the 14th Amendment's equal protection and due process clauses actually require.

World War I, 1915-1919
  • Explain the factors that led to World War One and describe the factors…

    9-12.US2.5
    High School

    Students trace what pushed Europe into war in 1914, then explain why the U.S. stayed out as long as it did and what finally pulled the country in.

  • Determine the impact of government mobilization programs, restrictions…

    9-12.US2.6
    High School

    Students examine how the U.S. government rallied public support during World War I by studying war bond drives, censorship laws, and propaganda posters. They weigh what those efforts cost ordinary Americans in everyday rights and freedoms.

  • Explain how new technologies influenced strategies, military tactics

    9-12.US2.7
    High School

    New weapons like poison gas, machine guns, and tanks forced armies to dig miles of trenches and rethink how battles were fought. Students explain how each technology changed the conditions soldiers faced on the Western Front.

  • Analyze the goals and effects of the Treaty of Versailles

    9-12.US2.8
    High School

    Students read the Treaty of Versailles and weigh what Allied leaders were trying to achieve against what the treaty actually caused. The focus is on how its terms shaped Germany's collapse and set the stage for the next world war.

The Roaring 20s, 1920-1929
  • Describe the impacts of economic, demographic, social

    9-12.US2.9
    High School

    The 1920s brought rapid change: new industries created wealth, cities grew, and popular culture shifted in ways that reshaped how Americans worked and lived. Students explain what drove those changes and what they left behind.

  • Evaluate the social tensions of the era, including

    9-12.US2.10
    High School

    Students examine the cultural clashes of the 1920s: immigration backlash, racial violence, Prohibition, and the clash between urban and rural values over religion and modern life.

  • Race

    9-12.US2.10.1
    High School

    Students study the racial tensions of the 1920s: the rise of the second Ku Klux Klan, racial violence and riots, and the migration of Black Americans to northern cities in search of safety and opportunity.

  • Christian fundamentalism

    9-12.US2.10.2
    High School

    Students examine the rise of Christian fundamentalism in the 1920s, including conflicts over evolution being taught in public schools. The Scopes Trial put that tension on national display.

  • Labor

    9-12.US2.10.3
    High School

    Students examine the labor conflicts of the 1920s, including strikes, union battles, and the push-and-pull between workers and factory owners in a decade when American industry was booming but worker rights were still unsettled.

  • Immigration

    9-12.US2.10.4
    High School

    Students examine how immigration shaped American life in the 1920s, including the fears and prejudices that led Congress to sharply limit who could enter the country and from where.

  • Changing social values

    9-12.US2.10.5
    High School

    Social norms shifted fast in the 1920s. Students examine how new music, fashion, and ideas about gender and race put traditional values in conflict with a modernizing country.

  • The Red Scare

    9-12.US2.10.6
    High School

    Fear of communist revolution led to widespread suspicion of immigrants and political radicals after World War I. Students examine how the U.S. government responded, including mass arrests and deportations, and what that response revealed about civil liberties under pressure.

  • Rise of the Ku Klux Klan

    9-12.US2.10.7
    High School

    Students examine how the Ku Klux Klan grew from a few thousand members to millions during the 1920s, spreading beyond the South into Northern cities and suburbs. They look at what fueled that growth and what it revealed about racial and ethnic hostility in the decade.

  • Prohibition

    9-12.US2.10.8
    High School

    Prohibition banned the sale and production of alcohol nationwide starting in 1920. Students examine why the law passed, how it gave rise to bootleggers and organized crime, and why it was repealed thirteen years later.

  • Rise of the mob and mafia

    9-12.US2.10.9
    High School

    Students examine how Prohibition-era crime syndicates took hold in American cities, tracing how bootlegging and corruption helped organized crime gain real political and economic power during the 1920s.

Political Economy
  • Explain the government’s limited role in free enterprise and how that affects…

    9-12.GOV.26
    High School

    In a free market, the government sets basic rules but mostly stays out of buying and selling decisions. Students learn how that limited role shapes what individuals can own, earn, and spend.

  • Evaluate the government’s establishment and maintenance of the rules and…

    9-12.GOV.27
    High School

    Students examine why governments set the rules that markets run on: who owns what, how contracts get enforced, what protections workers and consumers have, and how regulators keep competition fair.

  • Compare the types and purposes of taxation that are used by local, state

    9-12.GOV.28
    High School

    Students compare how local, state, and federal governments each collect taxes differently and for different reasons. A city funds schools and roads; a state funds highways and courts; the federal government funds the military and social programs.

  • Describe how the Federal Reserve can use monetary policy to pursue price…

    9-12.GOV.29
    High School

    The Federal Reserve controls interest rates and the money supply to keep prices steady and jobs available. Students learn how those tools speed up or slow down the economy depending on what the country needs.

The Great Depression and the New Deal 1929-1939
  • Analyze the causes of the crash of 1929 and the Great Depression

    9-12.US2.11
    High School

    Students learn what triggered the 1929 stock market collapse and why the economy kept getting worse. They look at bank failures, debt, falling wages, and the policy choices that turned a bad year into a decade-long crisis.

  • Analyze the impact of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl on…

    9-12.US2.12
    High School

    Students examine how the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl hit different groups differently: which farmers lost their land, which workers lost jobs, and how Black, Latino, and other minority communities faced the harshest conditions with the least help.

  • Evaluate the effectiveness of New Deal programs in addressing economic issues…

    9-12.US2.13
    High School

    Students look at specific New Deal programs, like Social Security and public works jobs, and judge whether they actually solved the economic problems that caused the Depression. They use evidence to decide what worked, what fell short, and why.

  • Evaluate the social tensions of the era, including

    9-12.US2.14
    High School

    Students examine the social conflicts that ran through Depression-era America, including racial inequality, labor unrest, and the strain poverty placed on families and communities across the country.

  • Race

    9-12.US2.14.1
    High School

    Students examine how the Great Depression deepened racial inequality, from job discrimination that pushed Black workers out first to the New Deal programs that often excluded or shortchanged Black Americans.

  • Labor

    9-12.US2.14.2
    High School

    Students examine how workers organized during the 1930s, including strikes, union growth, and clashes with employers, to understand how labor conflicts shaped federal policy and everyday life for American families.

  • Domestic Migration

    9-12.US2.14.3
    High School

    During the Depression, millions of Americans left their home states, moving from the Dust Bowl and rural South toward cities and western states in search of work. Students examine why families moved and what they found when they got there.

  • Changing social values

    9-12.US2.14.4
    High School

    Social norms around gender roles, race, religion, and public life shifted during the Depression years. Students examine how economic collapse reshaped what Americans expected from work, family, and government.

  • The Rise of Political Extremism

    9-12.US2.14.5
    High School

    Students examine how economic collapse in the 1930s pushed millions of Americans toward radical political movements, including fascism and communism, and why some people lost faith in democracy when jobs and savings disappeared.

Function and Structure of the United States Political System
  • Analyze Article I and the 17th Amendment of the Constitution as they relate to…

    9-12.GOV.30
    High School

    Students read Article I and the 17th Amendment to see how Congress is set up: who can run for the House or Senate, how long they serve, what they do in office, and how voters elect them directly.

  • Describe the census and its role in redistricting and reapportionment…

    9-12.GOV.31
    High School

    Every ten years, the government counts every person living in the U.S. That count determines how many seats each state gets in Congress and how voting district lines get redrawn. Baker v. Carr was the Supreme Court case that gave federal courts power to step in when those lines are drawn unfairly.

  • Identify leadership positions of the legislative branch, including majority and…

    9-12.GOV.32
    High School

    Congress has its own leadership structure, separate from the president. Students learn who holds key roles in the Senate and House, from the Speaker to the majority and minority leaders, and what each position actually does.

  • Describe the process of how a bill becomes law

    9-12.GOV.33
    High School

    Students trace how a proposed law moves from a single idea through committee debate, votes in both chambers of Congress, and a presidential signature or veto. The focus is on each decision point where a bill can stall or advance.

  • Describe the powers of United States’ Congress, including appropriations…

    9-12.GOV.34
    High School

    Congress holds two kinds of power: specific powers written into the Constitution (like setting the budget, regulating trade, and declaring war) and broader implied powers that let Congress pass laws needed to carry out its listed duties.

  • Analyze Article II of the Constitution as it relates to the executive branch…

    9-12.GOV.35
    High School

    Students read Article II of the Constitution and work through what it actually gives the president: who can hold the office, how long they serve, what powers they have over the military and treaties, and what happens when a president cannot finish a term.

  • Identify major departments of the executive branch, including cabinet and…

    9-12.GOV.36
    High School

    Students name the major departments and agencies that run day-to-day federal operations, such as the Department of Defense or the EPA, and explain whether each answers directly to the President's cabinet.

  • Explain the Electoral College system

    9-12.GOV.37
    High School

    Students learn how the Electoral College decides presidential elections, trace how the system has changed since the Constitution was written, and weigh the case for keeping it against the case for replacing it with a national popular vote.

  • Analyze Article III of the Constitution as it relates to judicial power…

    9-12.GOV.38
    High School

    Article III sets up the federal courts and gives the Supreme Court its authority. Students study how justices get lifetime appointments and which cases the Supreme Court has the power to hear.

  • Analyze the origin and evolution of the modern federal court structure…

    9-12.GOV.39
    High School

    Students trace how the federal court system was built, starting with the Judiciary Act of 1789, and explain how it has changed since. They look at why courts were set up the way they were and what shifted over time.

  • Explain the processes of selection and confirmation of Supreme Court justices

    9-12.GOV.40
    High School

    Students learn how a person gets a seat on the Supreme Court: the President nominates a candidate, and the Senate holds hearings and votes to confirm or reject that choice.

  • Describe the Supreme Court’s role, established by Marbury vs

    9-12.GOV.41
    High School

    Students learn how the 1803 Marbury v. Madison case gave the Supreme Court the power to strike down laws passed by Congress or actions taken by the President if those laws or actions conflict with the Constitution.

  • Compare and contrast different judicial philosophies including activism vs

    9-12.GOV.42
    High School

    Students compare how judges decide cases. Some judges stick closely to what the Constitution's words meant when written; others read it as a document that adapts over time. Understanding these differences explains why courts often split on the same law.

  • Explain the functions, powers, interactions

    9-12.GOV.43
    High School

    Students learn how federal, state, local, and tribal governments divide and share power. Key court cases and the 10th Amendment shaped those boundaries, and the relationship has shifted over time from strict separation toward governments working together.

  • Analyze and discuss sovereignty and the federal responsibility the United…

    9-12.GOV.44
    High School

    Students examine the legal relationship between the U.S. government and recognized tribal nations, including what each side controls and owes the other. In Idaho, that shows up in specific agreements around land use and hunting and fishing rights.

  • Explain the organization and powers of state and local government as described…

    9-12.GOV.45
    High School

    Students learn how Idaho's state government is organized and what each branch is allowed to do. They look at how the legislature, governor, and courts each hold different powers under the Idaho Constitution.

  • Compare the lawmaking process at the national, state

    9-12.GOV.46
    High School

    Students compare how a bill becomes a law at the federal, state, and local levels, looking at where the similarities and differences show up. The goal is to see how each level of government decides what rules to make.

  • Understand the structure, powers

    9-12.GOV.47
    High School

    Local governments (counties, cities, special districts) get their authority from the state and share power with regional boards and commissions. Students learn how those bodies make laws and how each level of government relates to the others.

  • Compare partisan and non-partisan offices and elections

    9-12.GOV.48
    High School

    Students learn the difference between races where candidates run under a party label (Democrat, Republican) and races where party affiliation does not appear on the ballot, such as many local judge or school board seats.

World War II 1939-1945
  • Explain the events and actions that led to World War Two, including the rise…

    9-12.US2.15
    High School

    Students trace how World War II started: dictators rose to power in Germany, Italy, and Japan, other nations gave in to their demands hoping to avoid conflict, and those same nations built empires by force. Each step made war harder to stop.

  • Analyze American participation in the international response to the Holocaust

    9-12.US2.16
    High School

    Students examine how the U.S. government and its people responded when they learned about the Holocaust during World War II, including decisions about refugees, military action, and what the country chose to do or not do.

  • Describe the strategies, events

    9-12.US2.17
    High School

    Students trace how key battles and decisions changed the direction of World War II. They look at moments like D-Day or the Pacific campaign and explain why those events shifted the war's outcome.

  • Compare and contrast the experience of Americans on the Pacific and European…

    9-12.US2.18
    High School

    Students compare how American soldiers fought in Europe against Nazi Germany with how they fought in the Pacific against Japan. The two wars looked very different: different geography, different enemies, different tactics.

  • Evaluate the factors that influenced the decision to employ atomic weapons…

    9-12.US2.19
    High School

    Students examine why U.S. leaders chose to drop atomic bombs on Japan in 1945, weighing the military situation, projected casualties from a land invasion, and the push to end the war quickly before the Soviet Union gained more influence in the Pacific.

  • Analyze the impact of events and policies on the Homefront during World War…

    9-12.US2.20
    High School

    Students examine how the war changed daily life inside the United States. That includes rationing, factory work, the roles women and minorities took on, and the policies that reshaped American society while soldiers fought overseas.

  • Evaluate Supreme Court and executive decisions to limit civil liberties and to…

    9-12.US2.21
    High School

    Students examine real government decisions made during World War II that restricted the rights of Japanese Americans, including forced removal from their homes to internment camps. They weigh whether those decisions were justified or a violation of civil liberties.

Affluence, Cold War, and Social Revolutions 1945-1974
  • Evaluate the impact of postwar demobilization and the GI Bill on…

    9-12.US2.22
    High School

    Students examine how millions of soldiers returning home after World War II reshaped everyday American life. They look at how the GI Bill helped veterans buy homes, attend college, and start families, fueling the suburbs and a growing middle class.

  • Describe the ways the United States competed with the Soviet Union culturally…

    9-12.US2.23
    High School

    The U.S. and Soviet Union spent decades racing to outspend, outbuild, and outinfluence each other. Students examine how that rivalry shaped American military spending, economic growth, and foreign policy from the late 1940s through the early 1970s.

  • Analyze various foreign policy events through the lens of the Cold…

    9-12.US2.24
    High School

    Students examine how U.S. foreign policy decisions from 1945 to 1974 were shaped by the rivalry with the Soviet Union. That includes declared wars, undeclared conflicts, and secret government operations carried out during that era.

  • Berlin Blockade

    9-12.US2.24.1
    High School

    Students examine how the Soviet Union cut off Western supply routes into West Berlin in 1948, forcing the U.S. and its allies to airlift food and fuel into the city for nearly a year.

  • Rise of the Communist regime in China

    9-12.US2.24.2
    High School

    Students examine how Mao Zedong and the Communist Party took control of China in 1949, why the U.S. saw it as a Cold War loss, and what it meant for American foreign policy in Asia.

  • Korean War

    9-12.US2.24.3
    High School

    Students examine why the United States sent troops to Korea in 1950 and how that conflict shaped American foreign policy during the early Cold War. The war ended in a stalemate, with Korea divided near the same line where fighting began.

  • Central Intelligence Agency’s support of coups in Iran and Guatemala

    9-12.US2.24.4
    High School

    Students examine how the CIA secretly worked to overthrow elected governments in Iran and Guatemala during the 1950s, and why U.S. leaders believed those actions were necessary to limit Soviet influence.

  • Cuban Missile Crisis

    9-12.US2.24.5
    High School

    Students examine the tense 1962 standoff when the Soviet Union placed nuclear missiles in Cuba, bringing the U.S. and Soviet Union to the edge of war. They study how diplomatic pressure and negotiation pulled both sides back.

  • U2 incident

    9-12.US2.24.6
    High School

    Students examine the 1960 spy plane incident in which the Soviet Union shot down an American U-2 reconnaissance aircraft, capturing the pilot and exposing U.S. espionage operations during a tense moment in Cold War diplomacy.

  • Berlin Wall

    9-12.US2.24.7
    High School

    Students examine why the Soviet Union built a concrete barrier dividing East and West Berlin in 1961 and what that wall revealed about Cold War tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union.

  • Vietnam War

    9-12.US2.24.8
    High School

    Students examine why the U.S. sent troops to Vietnam, how the war was fought and debated at home, and what ended American involvement. The conflict shaped U.S. foreign policy and divided the country for a generation.

  • Compare various ways the United States and the Soviet Union built…

    9-12.US2.25
    High School

    Students compare how the U.S. and Soviet Union each pulled other countries into their orbit during the Cold War, using trade deals, military pacts, and political pressure to win allies around the world.

  • Truman Doctrine

    9-12.US2.25.1
    High School

    The Truman Doctrine was President Truman's 1947 promise to send money and military aid to countries threatened by Soviet expansion. Students examine how this policy became a foundation for U.S. Cold War alliances worldwide.

  • Marshall Plan

    9-12.US2.25.2
    High School

    The Marshall Plan was the U.S. program that sent billions of dollars to rebuild Western European economies after World War II, partly to stop the spread of Soviet influence. Students examine how foreign aid became a tool for building political and military alliances.

  • North Atlantic Treaty Organization

    9-12.US2.25.3
    High School

    NATO was a military alliance formed in 1949 where the United States and Western European countries agreed to treat an attack on one member as an attack on all. Students examine how this pact shaped American Cold War strategy.

  • Occupation and rebuilding of Japan and West Germany

    9-12.US2.25.4
    High School

    Students examine how the U.S. occupied and rebuilt Japan and West Germany after World War II, turning former enemies into democratic allies through aid, new governments, and military protection during the early Cold War.

  • Warsaw Pact

    9-12.US2.25.5
    High School

    The Warsaw Pact was a military alliance the Soviet Union formed with seven Eastern European countries in 1955. Students compare how this alliance worked alongside similar U.S.-led agreements to show how both superpowers built networks of allied nations during the Cold War.

  • Occupation and rebuilding of Eastern Europe

    9-12.US2.25.6
    High School

    Students examine how the Soviet Union took control of Eastern Europe after World War II, installing friendly governments and stationing troops to keep those countries inside its political and military orbit.

  • Examine the influence of the Cold War on United States politics and society

    9-12.US2.26
    High School

    Students study how the Cold War shaped decisions at home and abroad, from military spending and foreign policy to fear of communism inside the U.S. itself. The goal is to see how rivalry with the Soviet Union ran through everyday American life for decades.

  • The House of Un-American Activities Committee

    9-12.US2.26.1
    High School

    HUAC was a congressional committee that investigated Americans suspected of communist ties. During the late 1940s and 1950s, it questioned writers, filmmakers, and government workers, and being called to testify could end a career.

  • McCarthyism

    9-12.US2.26.2
    High School

    Students study the Red Scare era of the early 1950s, when Senator Joseph McCarthy led aggressive investigations accusing government officials, entertainers, and ordinary Americans of being Communist sympathizers, often without solid evidence.

  • The Alger Hiss Case

    9-12.US2.26.3
    High School

    The Alger Hiss case was a 1948 spy scandal in which a senior U.S. government official was accused of passing secrets to the Soviet Union. Students examine how the trial deepened public fear of communist infiltration and shaped the politics of the early Cold War.

  • The Rosenberg Case

    9-12.US2.26.4
    High School

    The Rosenberg Case put two Americans on trial for passing nuclear secrets to the Soviet Union. Students examine the evidence, the verdict, and how the case shaped public fears about communism and espionage inside the United States.

  • Describe the causes and effects on American society and culture of widespread…

    9-12.US2.27
    High School

    Students examine the economic boom that followed World War II, who benefited from it, and who was left behind. They look at how rising wages and suburban growth reshaped daily life while many communities saw little of that prosperity.

  • Analyze the American Labor Movement during the post-war period

    9-12.US2.28
    High School

    Students examine how American workers organized unions, went on strike, and pushed for better wages and working conditions in the decades after World War II.

  • Analyze the motives, strategies, methods, organizations

    9-12.US2.29
    High School

    Students study the Civil Rights Movement and similar struggles by looking at why groups organized, what tactics they used, and what actually changed. That includes protests, legal battles, and the organizations that drove the work forward.

  • Analyze the experiences of American soldiers in Vietnam and their experiences…

    9-12.US2.30
    High School

    Students examine what American soldiers faced in Vietnam and what waited for them when they came back, comparing that to earlier wars like World War II. The gap between how Vietnam veterans were treated and how earlier soldiers were received is a central part of this standard.

  • Describe the relationships between the Vietnam War, the…

    9-12.US2.31
    High School

    Students explain how the Vietnam War fueled protests at home, connecting the rise of anti-war marches and the counterculture of the 1960s to the conflict overseas and the government's response to dissent.

  • Examine the various ways the counterculture critiqued United States society

    9-12.US2.32
    High School

    Students study how young Americans in the 1960s pushed back against mainstream culture, challenging ideas about war, race, gender roles, and what a good life looked like.

  • Analyze the major features of the Great Society policy

    9-12.US2.33
    High School

    The Great Society was President Lyndon Johnson's set of domestic programs from the 1960s. Students examine what those programs did, such as creating Medicare and expanding civil rights protections, and whether they achieved their goals.

  • War on Poverty

    9-12.US2.33.1
    High School

    Students study Lyndon Johnson's 1960s push to reduce poverty in America through federal programs like Medicare, food stamps, and federal education funding.

  • Medicare/Medicaid

    9-12.US2.33.2
    High School

    Medicare and Medicaid, two federal health programs created in the 1960s, are key parts of the Great Society. Medicare covers healthcare costs for older Americans, while Medicaid covers low-income families who can't afford medical bills on their own.

  • Head Start and Education Reform

    9-12.US2.33.3
    High School

    Head Start put federal money into early childhood programs for low-income kids, and the Elementary and Secondary Education Act sent federal funding to public schools for the first time. Together, these were the cornerstone education pieces of Johnson's Great Society.

  • Urban Renewal

    9-12.US2.33.4
    High School

    Urban Renewal describes federal programs that used government money to tear down and rebuild run-down city neighborhoods. Students examine who benefited from those projects and who, often poor and Black residents, got pushed out.

  • Support for the Arts and Humanities

    9-12.US2.33.5
    High School

    The Great Society created federal agencies to fund artists, musicians, writers, and scholars across the country. Students examine why the government decided public money should support culture, and what that meant for American life in the 1960s.

  • Immigration Reform

    9-12.US2.33.6
    High School

    Immigration Reform describes the 1965 law that ended a quota system favoring European immigrants. Students study how it reshaped who could come to the United States and why Congress changed the rules after decades of exclusion.

  • Environmental Initiatives

    9-12.US2.33.7
    High School

    Students examine the environmental laws and programs launched under President Johnson's Great Society, including early efforts to protect air, water, and public lands across the United States.

  • Examine the causes and consequences of the constitutional crisis that led…

    9-12.US2.34
    High School

    Students trace how the Watergate break-in unraveled into a constitutional crisis, forcing Nixon to become the first U.S. president to resign. The focus is on what caused the scandal and what it changed about trust in government.

  • Analyze how Vietnam and Watergate reduced American faith in government and the…

    9-12.US2.35
    High School

    Students examine how the Vietnam War and Watergate scandal shook public trust in the government and military, then trace the laws and constitutional changes that followed.

The American Electoral System
  • Describe the evolution of voting

    9-12.GOV.49
    High School

    Students trace how the right to vote expanded over time, from the 15th Amendment giving Black men the vote to the 26th Amendment covering 18-year-olds. They study the laws and constitutional changes that ended barriers like poll taxes and literacy tests.

  • Examine campaign finance laws and campaign funding and spending, including the…

    9-12.GOV.50
    High School

    Students study how political campaigns raise and spend money, including why Supreme Court rulings changed the rules, where the money actually comes from, and how interest groups shape who gets funded.

  • Describe the nomination and election process in American national and state…

    9-12.GOV.51
    High School

    Students trace how a candidate moves from announcing a run to winning office, including how primary elections narrow the field and how the Electoral College determines the presidency rather than the national popular vote.

  • Analyze the influence of political parties, media coverage, campaign…

    9-12.GOV.52
    High School

    Students examine what shapes election outcomes: how political parties, ads, interest groups, and news coverage push voters toward one candidate or another. Social media and polls are part of that picture too.

  • Explain the impact of reapportionment and redistricting on elections and…

    9-12.GOV.53
    High School

    After every census, states redraw their congressional district maps. Students explain how those new boundaries can shift who wins elections and which communities hold political power.

  • Explain the role of state governments in administering elections and compare…

    9-12.GOV.54
    High School

    Students learn how each state runs its own elections and sets its own voting rules. They compare how states differ on things like voter ID requirements, early voting, and mail-in ballots.

  • Evaluate the challenges of the election process

    9-12.GOV.55
    High School

    Students look at real problems in how elections run, from long voting lines to campaign finance rules, and judge which issues matter most and why.

The United States and the International System
  • Compare the different forms of domestic and foreign political systems…

    9-12.GOV.56
    High School

    Students compare how different countries organize power and run elections. They look at systems like presidential versus parliamentary governments, federal versus unitary structures, and democracies versus autocracies.

  • Describe the characteristics of United States foreign policy and how it has…

    9-12.GOV.57
    High School

    Students learn what drives U.S. decisions on the world stage, from trade and treaties to military alliances, and how those decisions get made by presidents, Congress, and diplomats across different eras.

  • Identify and evaluate the role of the United States in international…

    9-12.GOV.58
    High School

    Students examine how the U.S. participates in global bodies like the United Nations, signs treaties, and sends aid after disasters. They weigh what those commitments cost and what they accomplish.

  • Evaluate the changing role of the United States in supporting democratic…

    9-12.GOV.59
    High School

    Students examine how the United States has supported (or failed to support) democracy in other countries over time, and weigh whether those efforts actually strengthened democratic governments abroad.

Economic, Political, and Social Reorganization 1974-1992
  • Evaluate the causes and impacts on public confidence and trust in…

    9-12.US2.36
    High School

    Starting in the mid-1970s, students examine why many Americans lost faith in the federal government's ability to fix the economy and social problems, and what that shift in public trust changed about politics and policy.

  • Deindustrialization

    9-12.US2.36.1
    High School

    Factories closed across the U.S. in the 1970s and 1980s as manufacturing jobs moved overseas or disappeared to automation. Students examine how those job losses reshaped communities, widened economic inequality, and shook public faith in the government's ability to respond.

  • Urban decline

    9-12.US2.36.2
    High School

    Students examine why American cities lost population, jobs, and tax revenue in the late 20th century, and what that collapse meant for the people left behind.

  • Migration

    9-12.US2.36.3
    High School

    Students examine why Americans moved between regions during the 1970s and 1980s, such as the shift from the Rust Belt to the Sun Belt, and what those population changes meant for jobs, politics, and city budgets.

  • Stagflation

    9-12.US2.36.4
    High School

    Students study why prices kept rising through the 1970s even as unemployment climbed and the economy stalled. They examine how that combination shook public confidence in the government's ability to fix economic problems.

  • Deficit spending

    9-12.US2.36.5
    High School

    Deficit spending is when the federal government spends more money than it collects in taxes. Students examine why this gap grew sharply in the 1970s and 1980s and how it shaped public debate over what government can and should pay for.

  • Energy crisis

    9-12.US2.36.6
    High School

    Students examine the 1970s oil shortages that caused gas lines, rising prices, and widespread frustration with how the government handled the crisis. They consider why those events shook public trust in Washington's ability to manage everyday economic life.

  • Racial tensions

    9-12.US2.36.7
    High School

    Students examine how racial tensions in the late 1970s and 1980s eroded public confidence in government, looking at events like urban riots, school busing conflicts, and policy debates over affirmative action.

  • Evaluate the factors that impacted relationships and policies with…

    9-12.US2.37
    High School

    Students examine what shifted U.S. foreign policy toward China, Russia, Latin America, and the Middle East between the mid-1970s and early 1990s. They weigh how trade, military pressure, and political change shaped each relationship differently.

  • Analyze the rise of the New Right and the Reagan Revolution including…

    9-12.US2.38
    High School

    Students study the political shift that brought Ronald Reagan and conservative ideas to power in the 1980s. They look at what drove that shift and what the policies that followed meant for taxes, social programs, and American culture.

  • Evaluate the factors that contributed to the end of the Cold War

    9-12.US2.39
    High School

    Students examine why the Cold War ended, looking at how economic strain, political reform in the Soviet Union, and shifts in U.S. policy combined to dissolve decades of superpower rivalry.

  • American diplomacy

    9-12.US2.39.1
    High School

    Students examine how U.S. foreign policy decisions, from arms negotiations to summit meetings with Soviet leaders, helped wind down the Cold War. The focus is on the specific moves American diplomats and presidents made to ease tensions between the two superpowers.

  • Military build-up

    9-12.US2.39.2
    High School

    Students examine how a massive surge in U.S. defense spending during the 1980s pressured the Soviet Union to match it militarily, straining an economy that could not keep up and pushing the Cold War toward its end.

  • Treaties

    9-12.US2.39.3
    High School

    Students examine the arms-control and diplomatic agreements the U.S. and Soviet Union signed in the 1970s and 1980s, such as SALT and INF, and weigh how those treaties helped reduce military tension and push the Cold War toward its end.

  • Iran-Contra affair

    9-12.US2.39.4
    High School

    Students examine the secret deal where the U.S. government illegally sold weapons to Iran and used the money to fund rebels in Nicaragua, a scandal that damaged trust in the Reagan administration and sparked a major congressional investigation.

  • Strategic Defense Initiative

    9-12.US2.39.5
    High School

    Students examine how President Reagan's proposed missile-defense system in space pressured the Soviet Union to spend money it didn't have, helping push both sides toward negotiating an end to the Cold War.

  • Support of Afghanistan

    9-12.US2.39.6
    High School

    Students examine how U.S. funding and arming of Afghan fighters against the Soviet invasion in the 1980s drained Soviet resources and helped push the USSR toward collapse.

  • Fall of the Berlin Wall

    9-12.US2.39.7
    High School

    Students examine why the Berlin Wall came down in 1989 and what that moment revealed about the collapse of Soviet-controlled governments across Eastern Europe.

  • Collapse of the USSR

    9-12.US2.39.8
    High School

    Students examine why the Soviet Union fell apart by 1991, looking at economic failure, political pressure from within, and the independence movements that broke the country into 15 separate nations.

  • Explain the causes and consequences of the American response to…

    9-12.US2.40
    High School

    Students learn why the U.S. and its allies went to war against Iraq in 1991 after Iraq seized Kuwait. They look at what drove that decision and what changed in the Middle East and in American foreign policy once the fighting stopped.

Globalization, Information Technology, Terrorism, Political and Social Polarization 1992-Present
  • Analyze the effects of globalization, free trade agreements, financial…

    9-12.US2.41
    High School

    Students examine how global trade deals, deregulated financial markets, and the rise of personal computers combined to fuel the economic growth the United States experienced through most of the 1990s.

  • Describe some effects of key changes on United States society and labor

    9-12.US2.42
    High School

    Key shifts in technology, trade, and global events reshaped how Americans work and live after 1992. Students describe what those changes actually did to jobs, wages, communities, and daily life.

  • Outsourcing

    9-12.US2.42.1
    High School

    Outsourcing moved many U.S. factory and service jobs to countries where labor costs less. Students examine how those shifts changed which industries thrived, which workers were displaced, and how American communities responded.

  • Robotic automation

    9-12.US2.42.2
    High School

    Robots and automated machines now handle jobs once done by human workers. Students examine how this shift changed which skills employers want, which industries shrank or grew, and how American workers adapted.

  • Income disparities

    9-12.US2.42.3
    High School

    Students examine how the gap between high earners and low earners in the U.S. has widened since the 1990s, and what that shift means for wages, opportunity, and everyday economic life.

  • Shift toward a service-based economy

    9-12.US2.42.4
    High School

    The U.S. economy moved away from making physical goods in factories toward jobs in healthcare, finance, retail, and tech. Students examine how that shift changed the kinds of work Americans do and which workers gained or lost economic ground.

  • Evaluate the motivations behind domestic and non-state aligned…

    9-12.US2.43
    High School

    Students examine why domestic and foreign terrorist groups act, how the U.S. government responded after September 11, 2001, and what the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq actually achieved and left behind.

  • Evaluate how the rise of alternative media, social media

    9-12.US2.44
    High School

    Students look at how smartphones, social media, and online news sources changed the way Americans get information, form opinions, and participate in politics.

  • Examine United States policy on environmental issues

    9-12.US2.45
    High School

    Students examine how the U.S. government has responded to environmental problems like climate change, pollution, and energy use. They look at laws, treaties, and political debates that shaped those responses from 1992 to today.

  • Evaluate the progress of civil rights and immigration issues in recent…

    9-12.US2.46
    High School

    Students look at how civil rights protections and immigration policy have changed since 1992, then weigh how much progress has actually happened. They consider court decisions, laws, and real-world outcomes for different groups of Americans.

  • Evaluate the causes and consequences of the 2008 financial crisis and…

    9-12.US2.47
    High School

    Students examine what caused the 2008 financial collapse, from risky mortgage lending to bank failures, and what followed: job losses, home foreclosures, and a prolonged economic slump that reshaped American life.

  • Evaluate the causes and impact of increasing political polarization…

    9-12.US2.48
    High School

    Students examine why American political divides have grown sharper since the 1990s and what that split has meant for elections, Congress, and everyday public life.

Historical Thinking Skills
  • Evaluate how historical events and developments were shaped by…

    6-12.HT2.1
    High School

    History doesn't repeat itself exactly. Students study why a specific event happened when and where it did, looking at the local conditions and the bigger forces at play to explain why the same event couldn't have unfolded the same way somewhere else.

  • Analyze change and continuity in historical eras

    6-12.HT2.2
    High School

    Students look at a stretch of history and explain what shifted over time and what stayed the same, showing how change and continuity existed side by side.

  • Use questions generated about individuals and groups to assess how…

    6-12.HT2.3
    High School

    Students ask questions about real people and groups from the past, then weigh whether their actions mattered more or less depending on when and where those actions happened.

  • Analyze complex and interacting factors that influenced the perspectives of…

    6-12.HT2.4
    High School

    Students examine why people in the past thought and acted the way they did, looking at the religion, politics, economics, and culture shaping their world. Then students trace how those viewpoints echoed into later events.

  • Analyze how current interpretations of the past are limited by the extent to…

    6-12.HT2.5
    High School

    Historians can only tell us what their sources say, and most old sources reflect a narrow slice of people. Students examine whose voices are missing from the record and what that gap means for how we understand the past.

  • Evaluate historical sources, considering authorship, strengths…

    6-12.HT2.6
    High School

    Students learn to question where a source came from, who wrote it, and why it might be one-sided. They weigh what each source can and cannot prove, then combine several sources to build a fuller picture of what actually happened.

  • Analyze multiple and complex causes and effects of events in the past

    6-12.HT2.7
    High School

    Students dig into why a historical event happened and what it set in motion afterward. The goal is to see past the single easy answer and trace several causes and consequences at once.

  • Construct historical arguments distinguishing the differences…

    6-12.HT2.8
    High School

    Students learn to separate the slow-building conditions that made an event likely from the single moment that set it off. They build that argument using sources that offer different perspectives on what actually happened and why.

  • Evaluate the central arguments in secondary works of history on related topics…

    6-12.HT2.9
    High School

    Students read or watch historical accounts made by historians and journalists, then judge whether the arguments hold up against the actual evidence. The focus is on spotting weak claims and checking what the sources really say.

Common Questions
  • What does this year of social studies actually cover?

    Students work through United States history from the late 1800s to today, the structure of American government, basic economics, and personal finance. Expect units on world wars, the Cold War, civil rights, the Constitution, Supreme Court cases, budgeting, and credit.

  • How can a parent help with so much reading and so many dates?

    Pick one topic a week and talk about it at dinner for ten minutes. Ask what caused an event and what happened because of it. Watching a short documentary clip together and comparing it to the textbook also builds the source-comparison skill students are graded on.

  • My student says history is just memorising. Is that right?

    Memorising names and dates is only part of it. Most assignments ask students to weigh causes, compare sources, and build an argument with evidence. Ask to see a recent essay or short response and the rubric that goes with it.

  • How should the year be sequenced across so many standards?

    Most teachers run US history chronologically from the late 1800s forward and weave the government and economics standards into the matching era. Constitution and founding ideas pair well with early units. Personal finance often lands as a focused block in the second semester.

  • Which standards usually need the most reteaching?

    Three branches and checks and balances, the Electoral College, Federalist 10 and 51, and the difference between fiscal and monetary policy. Supreme Court cases also need repeated practice, since students remember the names but not the holdings or why they still matter.

  • How does the personal finance piece fit with everything else?

    Personal finance is its own block of standards covering budgets, checking and savings accounts, credit scores, insurance, and taxes. At home, walk through a real bill, a paystub, or a bank statement together. That ten-minute conversation does more than a worksheet.

  • What should students be able to do with a primary source by the end of the year?

    Identify who wrote it, when, and why. Spot bias and missing perspectives. Use it as evidence in a written argument alongside a second source. If a student can do that with a speech, a court opinion, and a political cartoon, the historical thinking standards are in good shape.

  • How do parents know a student is ready for the next step after high school social studies?

    A ready student can explain how a bill becomes law, read a news article and name the bias, build a monthly budget, and write a short argument backed by two sources. If those four things feel solid, the year did its job.