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 check whether a source is trustworthy before believing it.
This is the year social studies pulls back to show the whole sweep of American history, from colonial days to today. Students learn how local, state, and federal government actually work, with a close look at DC's own story in the nation. They weigh sources, ask harder questions, and back up their answers with real evidence. By spring, students can write a short argument about a historical event using quotes from at least two sources.
Students start the year learning how historians and citizens work. They ask sharp questions about the past and the news, then check whether a source is trustworthy before believing it.
Students look at how DC, state, and national government are set up and why. They learn what rules like separation of powers mean in real life and what rights and duties come with being a citizen.
Students see why people and families have to choose when they cannot have everything. They look at how prices and competition work, and pick up basics of saving, spending, and using credit.
Students read maps and photos to figure out how land shapes the way people live, and how people change the land back. They follow groups that moved, settled, and traded across regions.
Students walk through major chapters of US history, from colonial days to the present, with a close look at DC's own story. They notice what changed over time and what stayed the same.
Students pull the year together by writing and speaking like historians. They build a claim about a person, event, or issue, back it with evidence from real sources, and take action on something they care about.
Students write big-picture questions worth investigating and smaller follow-up questions that dig into the details, covering topics like how governments work, why places look the way they do, or how economies change over time.
Students use maps, timelines, charts, and other social studies tools to dig into real questions about how societies work, why events happened, and how people and places connect.
Students look at original documents and outside accounts of events, decide how trustworthy each source is, and then use details from those sources to back up their answers.
Students share what they learned from an inquiry by writing, speaking, or presenting, then use that knowledge to do something real, like speak up at a school meeting or contribute to a community effort.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Develop Questions | Students write big-picture questions worth investigating and smaller follow-up questions that dig into the details, covering topics like how governments work, why places look the way they do, or how economies change over time. | DC-SS.INQ.5.1 |
| Apply Disciplinary Tools | Students use maps, timelines, charts, and other social studies tools to dig into real questions about how societies work, why events happened, and how people and places connect. | DC-SS.INQ.5.2 |
| Evaluate Sources and Use Evidence | Students look at original documents and outside accounts of events, decide how trustworthy each source is, and then use details from those sources to back up their answers. | DC-SS.INQ.5.3 |
| Communicate and Take Action | Students share what they learned from an inquiry by writing, speaking, or presenting, then use that knowledge to do something real, like speak up at a school meeting or contribute to a community effort. | DC-SS.INQ.5.4 |
Students learn how city, state, and national governments are set up and what each level actually does. This includes how Washington, D.C. fits into that picture as both a city and the seat of federal power.
Students take real events from history or the news and explain how core democratic ideas, like the rule of law or separation of powers, shaped what happened and why.
Citizens have both rights (like free speech) and responsibilities (like following laws and staying informed). Students explore what it means to take part in a democracy, from voting to speaking up on issues that matter.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Government Institutions | Students learn how city, state, and national governments are set up and what each level actually does. This includes how Washington, D.C. fits into that picture as both a city and the seat of federal power. | DC-SS.CIV.5.1 |
| Foundational Principles | Students take real events from history or the news and explain how core democratic ideas, like the rule of law or separation of powers, shaped what happened and why. | DC-SS.CIV.5.2 |
| Citizenship and Participation | Citizens have both rights (like free speech) and responsibilities (like following laws and staying informed). Students explore what it means to take part in a democracy, from voting to speaking up on issues that matter. | DC-SS.CIV.5.3 |
Scarcity means there's never enough of everything, so people have to choose. Students learn why those choices happen, what pushes people toward one option over another, and how the same pressures that shape a family's budget also shape laws and government spending.
Markets are places where buyers and sellers meet to trade goods and services. Prices and competition shape who gets what, whether that happens at a neighborhood store, across the country, or between nations.
Students learn how money decisions work in real life: why saving matters, how credit means borrowing money you owe back, and how investing can grow savings over time.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Economic Decision Making | Scarcity means there's never enough of everything, so people have to choose. Students learn why those choices happen, what pushes people toward one option over another, and how the same pressures that shape a family's budget also shape laws and government spending. | DC-SS.ECON.5.1 |
| Markets and Exchange | Markets are places where buyers and sellers meet to trade goods and services. Prices and competition shape who gets what, whether that happens at a neighborhood store, across the country, or between nations. | DC-SS.ECON.5.2 |
| Personal Finance | Students learn how money decisions work in real life: why saving matters, how credit means borrowing money you owe back, and how investing can grow savings over time. | DC-SS.ECON.5.3 |
Students read maps, photos, and geographic data to understand what places look like, how regions differ, and how people shape and respond to their surroundings.
Students examine how the natural world, such as rivers, mountains, and climate, influences where and how people live, and how people in turn change those same landscapes through farming, building, and industry.
Students study why and how people moved between regions, where they settled, and what they traded or shared along the way. They look for patterns across those movements rather than treating each one as a separate event.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Geographic Representations | Students read maps, photos, and geographic data to understand what places look like, how regions differ, and how people shape and respond to their surroundings. | DC-SS.GEO.5.1 |
| Human-Environment Interaction | Students examine how the natural world, such as rivers, mountains, and climate, influences where and how people live, and how people in turn change those same landscapes through farming, building, and industry. | DC-SS.GEO.5.2 |
| Movement and Connections | Students study why and how people moved between regions, where they settled, and what they traded or shared along the way. They look for patterns across those movements rather than treating each one as a separate event. | DC-SS.GEO.5.3 |
Students learn the story of Washington, D.C. by studying the people and events that shaped the city, and how decisions made there rippled across the whole country.
Students follow the thread of American history from the first colonies to today, looking for what changed over time and what stayed the same across major turning points.
Students look at major civilizations and historical turning points from around the world, then trace how those events and societies shaped the world we live in today.
Students read primary sources (like letters or diaries) and secondary sources (like textbooks) to build an argument about a historical event. They also consider how different people at the time may have seen the same event differently.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| District of Columbia History | Students learn the story of Washington, D.C. by studying the people and events that shaped the city, and how decisions made there rippled across the whole country. | DC-SS.HIST.5.1 |
| United States History | Students follow the thread of American history from the first colonies to today, looking for what changed over time and what stayed the same across major turning points. | DC-SS.HIST.5.2 |
| World History | Students look at major civilizations and historical turning points from around the world, then trace how those events and societies shaped the world we live in today. | DC-SS.HIST.5.3 |
| Historical Reasoning | Students read primary sources (like letters or diaries) and secondary sources (like textbooks) to build an argument about a historical event. They also consider how different people at the time may have seen the same event differently. | DC-SS.HIST.5.4 |
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 study four big areas: civics and government, economics, geography, and history. They learn how DC and the country are run, how money and trade work, how maps explain places, and how the past shapes the present. A lot of the year asks students to back up what they say with evidence.
Tie it to something real. Walk past a monument and ask who it honors and why. Watch a short documentary together, or read a kid's biography from the library. Ask what they would have done in that situation. Ten minutes of curiosity at home does more than an hour of memorizing dates.
Most teachers anchor the year in United States history from colonial times to the present, then weave civics, geography, and economics into each era. DC history fits naturally when teaching the founding, the Civil War, and civil rights. Inquiry skills should run through every unit, not sit in a separate week.
Students ask a real question, gather sources, decide which ones are trustworthy, and then explain what they found. It is the social studies version of showing your work. By spring, students should be writing short pieces that use quotes or facts from a source to back up a claim.
Pull up an old photo, a letter, or a speech online and ask three questions: Who made this? When? What were they trying to say? That is the same thinking students do in class. The Library of Congress and the National Archives both have kid-friendly collections that are free to browse.
Source evaluation and writing with evidence. Students can usually summarize a source, but struggle to judge whether it is reliable or to pull a specific quote that supports a claim. Build in short, repeated practice with paired sources rather than saving it for one big research project.
Some memorizing helps, but the goal is understanding. Students should know what Congress, the president, and the courts each do, and why rights like free speech matter. Quiz the basics in the car, then ask why those rules exist. The why is what shows up in writing.
Keep it concrete. Students learn about scarcity, choices, prices, and saving by thinking through everyday decisions, not abstract theory. A lesson on supply and demand can start with why concert tickets cost what they do, or why a snack costs more at the airport.
By June, students should be able to read a short primary source, pull evidence from it, and write a paragraph that answers a question using that evidence. They should also be able to explain how the three branches check each other and locate major regions on a map without help.
Map skills grow fast with practice. Keep a globe or a paper map of the United States somewhere visible. When a place comes up in the news or a show, find it together. After a few weeks of this, most students get sharper without ever sitting down to study.