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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year social studies shifts from learning the story to building an argument about it. Students ask their own research questions, weigh whether a source can be trusted, and back up claims with evidence from primary documents. They look at history, government, and economics from more than one viewpoint, including Wabanaki perspectives on events in Maine. By spring, students can write a clear, evidence-based argument about a real issue or historical event.

  • Research questions
  • Primary sources
  • Evidence-based arguments
  • Maine and Wabanaki history
  • Government and citizenship
  • Economic decisions
  • Maps and regions
Source: Maine Maine Learning Results
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Asking questions and weighing sources

    Students start the year learning how to ask real questions about history, government, and current events. They practice telling a trustworthy source from a shaky one and back up what they say with evidence.

  2. 2

    Government and citizenship in Maine

    Students look at how local, state, federal, and tribal governments work, including the State of Maine and the Wabanaki Nations. They learn what rights and responsibilities citizens have and how to take part in a democracy.

  3. 3

    Money, markets, and personal finance

    Students study how people make choices when money and resources are limited, and how prices and competition shape what gets bought and sold. They also practice basics like saving, spending, credit, and investing.

  4. 4

    Places, people, and movement

    Students use maps and other tools to study regions, including Maine. They look at how land and climate shape the way people live and how migration and culture spread from one place to another.

  5. 5

    History and multiple perspectives

    Students trace how Maine, the United States, and the world have changed over time. They read history through more than one lens, including Wabanaki and other Indigenous voices, and build arguments backed by evidence.

  6. 6

    Sharing conclusions and taking action

    Students pull the year together by writing, presenting, and using other media to share what they found. They move from studying issues to taking informed action on something that matters to them.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 10.
Application of Social Studies Processes
  • Ask Questions and Plan Inquiries

    Grades 9-10

    Students write a central question worth investigating, then build smaller questions around it to guide research across history, civics, geography, or economics.

  • Use Sources and Evidence

    Grades 9-10

    Students decide which sources to trust, then pull specific evidence from those sources to back up a written argument.

  • Communicate and Take Action

    Grades 9-10

    Students pull together their research findings and share them through writing, speaking, or another format. Then they use what they learned to take a real position or action on the issue they studied.

Civics and Government
  • Civic and Political Institutions

    Grades 9-10

    Local city councils, state legislatures, tribal governments, and Congress each have different jobs. Students learn what those institutions do and why they exist at each level of government.

  • Rights, Responsibilities, and Participation

    Grades 9-10

    Citizens in a democracy have both rights (like free speech and voting) and responsibilities (like jury duty and staying informed). Students learn the practical skills it takes to actually participate, from reading a ballot to engaging with local government.

  • Maine and Wabanaki Governance

    Grades 9-10

    Students compare how Maine's state government is organized with how the Wabanaki Nations govern themselves, and look at where those two systems connect or overlap.

Economics
  • Economic Decision Making

    Grades 9-10

    Students look at a real choice, like buying a car or funding a school program, and weigh what it costs against what it gains. The goal is to explain why scarcity forces trade-offs and how that shapes the decision.

  • Economic Systems and Markets

    Grades 9-10

    Markets match buyers and sellers, and prices signal where resources go. Students study how competition shapes those prices at the local, national, and global level.

  • Personal Finance

    Grades 9-10

    Students learn how to make real money decisions: how much to save, how to use a credit card without falling into debt, and how to put money to work through basic investing.

Geography
  • Geographic Reasoning

    Grades 9-10

    Students read maps, photos, and data to figure out why places look the way they do and how patterns across regions connect.

  • Human-Environment Interaction

    Grades 9-10

    Students examine how geography affects where people settle, how they build, and how they make a living. They also look at how those same human choices change the land, water, and climate over time.

  • Movement and Migration

    Grades 9-10

    Students look at why people move, where they settle, and how their languages, religions, and customs spread from one region to another. They explain the patterns those shifts leave behind on a map or in a community.

History
  • Change, Continuity, and Context

    Grades 9-10

    History doesn't stand still. Students examine how societies, governments, and ways of life have shifted over time while identifying what stayed the same, drawing on events from Maine, the broader United States, and world history.

  • Perspectives

    Grades 9-10

    Students read about the same historical event from more than one point of view, including the perspectives of Wabanaki and other Indigenous peoples. The goal is to understand why different groups experienced and remembered events differently.

  • Causation and Argumentation

    Grades 9-10

    Students examine why historical events happened and what followed, then build an argument backed by sources. This is the foundation of how historians think: find the cause, trace the effect, and support the claim with real evidence.

No state assessments at this grade
Students take their next one in Grade 12.
National Monitoring

NAEP (National Assessment of Educational Progress)

Federally administered sample-based assessment in reading, mathematics, science, and writing. NAEP results inform state-by-state comparisons rather than individual student or school accountability.

When given:
biennial in winter
Frequency:
every two years
Official source
Common Questions
  • What does social studies look like at this level?

    Students study history, government, economics, and geography together. They learn to ask real questions, dig into sources, and back up what they say with evidence. A lot of the work involves writing arguments and discussing events from more than one point of view.

  • How can families help with social studies at home?

    Talk about the news at dinner. Pick one story and ask what happened, who is affected, and what the article leaves out. Ten minutes of real conversation does more than a worksheet, and it gives students practice weighing sources and forming an opinion.

  • What writing should students be able to do by the end of the year?

    Students should write a clear argument that takes a position and supports it with evidence from sources. They should name where the evidence came from and explain why it matters. Short essays of three to five paragraphs are common.

  • How do I sequence the year across so many topics?

    Most teachers anchor the year in history or civics and pull in geography and economics as those topics come up. Plan a few longer inquiry units rather than racing through every event. Build the source-analysis and argument-writing skills early so students can use them all year.

  • What about Maine and Wabanaki content?

    Students learn how Maine state government works and how the Wabanaki Nations govern themselves. They also look at events from Wabanaki and other Indigenous perspectives, not only the textbook version. Plan to weave this in across history and civics units, not as a single week.

  • How can a parent help when reading and sources feel hard?

    Read short pieces together and stop after each paragraph to summarize it in one sentence. Ask who wrote it and why. If a source feels confusing, look up one or two key words instead of pushing through the whole thing.

  • What personal finance should students know?

    Students should understand saving, spending, credit, and basic investing. At home, walk through a real bill, a paycheck stub, or how a credit card actually works. Letting students help plan a small purchase or budget makes the ideas stick.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Evaluating sources and writing a defensible claim are the two big sticking points. Students often summarize a source instead of judging it, or state an opinion without evidence. Short, repeated practice with these moves pays off more than another content unit.

  • How do I know students are ready for the next grade?

    By the end of the year, students should be able to ask a real research question, find sources, judge how trustworthy those sources are, and write or speak a clear argument backed by evidence. They should also explain how government, economies, and geography connect to events they study.