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Guide

What are learning standards?

A clear explanation of what learning standards are and how they shape what students are expected to know and do.

A learning standard is a short statement of what a student should know and be able to do by the end of a grade or course. In the United States, states write and adopt their own standards, usually starting from shared frameworks like the Common Core (2010) or the Next Generation Science Standards (2013). Standards are not lesson plans. They are the goals. Curriculum and assessment are how teachers get students there.

  • A learning standard is a one-paragraph goal that says “By the end of this grade, a student should be able to do this.”
  • Standards are owned by states. The federal government can require that standards exist and be challenging, but it cannot legally write them.
  • Most states anchor ELA and math in Common Core. NGSS predominantly anchors science. Social studies is often state-specific.
  • Standards are outcomes, not lesson plans. A standard tells you the what. Teachers and districts decide the how.
  • Every standard names a noun (the content), a verb (the cognitive demand), and a grade-level expectation (the rigor).

A useful standard does four things at once:

  1. Names a domain or discipline (for example reading informational text).
  2. Describes a cognitive performance (cite, model, evaluate, design, explain).
  3. Sets a level of rigor for the age and grade.
  4. Is observable in real student evidence.

What standards do, and what they do not do

Section titled “What standards do, and what they do not do”

This trips up a lot of people. Here is what standards actually do.

Standards do:

  • Define the destination for a grade level or course.
  • Make expectations transparent to students and families.
  • Provide a shared vocabulary across classrooms.
  • Anchor assessments and report cards.
  • Support equity audits when instruction is uneven.

Standards do not:

  • Pick textbooks or materials.
  • Set a pacing guide.
  • Specify a teaching method.
  • Create a single national U.S. curriculum.

A short history of U.S. learning standards

Section titled “A short history of U.S. learning standards”

The United States has no national curriculum. Education is state-owned, so each state writes or adopts standards documents.

  1. 1989: Early national subject goals

    The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics publishes influential math standards. Other subjects follow in the early 1990s.

  2. 1994: Goals 2000

    Congress encourages states to develop academic content standards, without mandating a single federal set.

  3. 2001: No Child Left Behind

    NCLB requires every state to maintain standards in reading and math and test against them yearly.

  4. 2010: Common Core

    A state-led consortium releases Common Core for ELA and math. Adoption is voluntary.

  5. 2013: NGSS

    The Next Generation Science Standards are released by a multistate effort.

  6. 2015: ESSA

    ESSA keeps the requirement that states have challenging standards and explicitly limits federal control over standards content.

Type of authorExamplesWhat they produce
State departments of educationNYSED, TEA, CDEThe legally adopted standards districts must follow.
State-led consortiaNGA + CCSSO (Common Core), Achieve + lead states (NGSS)Shared frameworks states can adopt or adapt.
Subject-area associationsNCTM, NCSS (C3), ISTE, NCTEDiscipline-specific frameworks that shape adoption.
Nonprofits and research centersCASEL, CAST, WIDACross-cutting frameworks adopted with academic standards.

Every U.S. standards system uses letter-number codes. Four patterns cover most of what teachers see.

CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.5.NF.B.3

Read this as: grade 5, Number and Operations: Fractions domain, cluster B, standard 3.

CCSS.MATH.PRACTICE.MP3

MP3 is “Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.”

HS-LS1-1

This is a high-school life science performance expectation in topic LS1.

Write arguments to support claims in an analysis of substantive topics or texts, using valid reasoning and relevant and sufficient evidence.

CCSS.ELA-LITERACY.W.9-10.1

PartWhat it doesIn this example
The verbNames the cognitive performance.Write arguments
The objectNames the content domain.Claims and analysis of topics or texts
The criteriaSets rigor.Valid reasoning and sufficient evidence
The grade bandSets expected maturity.Grades 9-10

Standards vs curriculum vs assessment vs rubric

Section titled “Standards vs curriculum vs assessment vs rubric”

These are stacked layers, not synonyms:

  1. Standard: what students should know and do.
  2. Curriculum: what gets taught, in what order.
  3. Instruction: how it gets taught day to day.
  4. Assessment and rubric: how evidence is collected and scored.

Dozens of curricula and rubrics can sit on top of the same standard. That is by design.

How standards show up in a teacher’s week

Section titled “How standards show up in a teacher’s week”
WhenWhat you doThe standard’s role
Planning a unitPick 3-6 priority standards.The unit’s north star.
Designing an assignmentRequire students to do the standard’s verb.Sets the cognitive bar.
Building a rubricTranslate language into proficiency levels.Defines grading criteria.
Giving feedbackUse standard language in comments.Creates shared vocabulary.
Reporting gradesAggregate evidence by standard.Keeps reporting meaningful.
DifferentiatingAdjust the path, not the goal.Keeps expectations stable.
Common Core is a federal curriculum.

No. Common Core is a set of standards created by a state-led consortium, not by the federal government.

Standards tell me exactly what to teach every day.

Standards define the destination. Curriculum and instruction define the daily route.

Covering standards means students mastered them.

Coverage is not mastery. The level of evidence and rigor still matters.

Standards reduce teacher creativity.

Standards fix the outcomes. Teachers still control the methods and materials.

Learning objectives and standards are the same thing.

A standard is a year-end outcome. Learning objectives are weekly or lesson-level slices of that outcome.

TermWhat it really means
Anchor standardA broad K-12 goal grade-level standards build toward.
ClusterA small group of standards in one domain.
DomainA major topic area within a subject and grade.
StrandA major slice of a subject (for example reading or writing).
Performance expectationNGSS term for an individual standard.
Vertical alignmentHow a skill grows from grade to grade.
Horizontal alignmentConsistency across classrooms in one grade.
CrosswalkMapping one framework’s standards to another.
Mastery / proficiencyIndependent, repeatable performance of the standard.
Are learning standards only a U.S. concept?

No. Most countries publish national standards or curriculum frameworks. The U.S. differs because standards are state-owned.

How often do standards change?

Usually slowly. Major frameworks update on multi-year cycles, often 7-10 years.

Who legally owns the standards in my classroom?

The state board of education once the document is officially adopted.

Do private schools have to follow state standards?

Often not legally required, but many still align to shared frameworks for clarity and comparability.

In the United States, individual states adopt learning standards that describe what K-12 students should know and be able to do by the end of each school year. States write and approve those documents themselves, often using shared frameworks like Common Core and NGSS. Federal law requires standards to exist, but does not permit federal control over their content. Standards set the goal. Curriculum, instruction, and rubrics are how schools help students get there.