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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year social studies shifts from learning what happened to arguing about why it mattered. Students weigh different sides of historical events and back up their claims with primary sources like letters, speeches, and photographs. They study how governments work, how maps reveal patterns of movement and settlement, and how prices and trade-offs shape everyday choices. By spring, students can write an evidence-based argument about a historical or current issue using sources they evaluated themselves.

  • Primary sources
  • Government and civics
  • Historical arguments
  • Maps and regions
  • Personal finance
  • Markets and trade-offs
Source: Rhode Island Rhode Island Core 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

    Citizenship and civic life

    Students look at how governments work in Rhode Island, the country, and around the world. They practice respectful debate, weigh different viewpoints, and back up their ideas with evidence.

  2. 2

    Reading the past

    Students dig into history by asking what caused major events and what changed because of them. They read letters, speeches, and articles from the time and from later, and notice that people often saw the same event very differently.

  3. 3

    Places and people on the move

    Students use maps and photos to study how land, climate, and cities shape daily life. They trace how people, products, and ideas spread from one region to another and how that movement changes both sides.

  4. 4

    Money, markets, and choices

    Students learn why every choice has a trade-off and how prices and competition move goods around the world. They also practice the basics of personal money: saving, spending, credit, and investing.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 10.
Civics and Government
  • Civic Virtues and Democratic Principles

    Grades 9-10

    Acting on civic virtues means following the rules that make a community fair, treating others with respect, and taking responsibility for your role in school and public life.

  • Civic Participation and Deliberation

    Grades 9-10

    Students work through real disagreements on public issues by listening to opposing views and backing their positions with evidence, not just opinion.

  • Civic and Political Institutions

    Grades 9-10

    Civic and political institutions are the formal bodies, like legislatures, courts, and agencies, that make and enforce rules for a society. Students study how those bodies are organized, why they exist, and what they actually do at the state, national, and global level.

History
  • Continuity and Change

    Grades 9-10

    Students examine why some parts of society stay the same across generations while others shift dramatically. They look at the conditions, like war, trade, or new ideas, that push history in a new direction.

  • Perspectives

    Grades 9-10

    Students read accounts of the same historical event from people on different sides, then explain how each viewpoint shaped what we remember and believe about that event today.

  • Causation and Argumentation

    Grades 9-10

    Students dig into what caused a major historical event and what happened as a result, then back up their conclusions with real sources like firsthand accounts, letters, or historians' writing.

Geography
  • Geographic Reasoning

    Grades 9-10

    Students use maps, photos, and data to study how places are laid out, why regions look the way they do, and what patterns show up across different locations.

  • Human-Environment Interaction

    Grades 9-10

    Students study how geography influences where people build cities, farm land, or avoid certain areas, and how those human choices then change the landscape over time. The focus runs from local neighborhoods to global patterns.

  • Movement and Diffusion

    Grades 9-10

    Students study why people move, where they settle, and how ideas, products, and cultural practices spread from one region to another. They look for patterns in that movement across history and across the map.

Economics
  • Economic Decision Making

    Grades 9-10

    Scarcity means there is never enough of everything, so people and governments have to choose. Students study how limited resources, rewards, and trade-offs push those choices in different directions.

  • Economic Systems and Markets

    Grades 9-10

    Markets match buyers and sellers, and prices rise or fall based on how much of something is available and how many people want it. Students study how that competition shapes what gets made, who gets it, and at what cost.

  • Personal Finance

    Grades 9-10

    Students practice real money decisions: how much to save, how to use credit without falling into debt, and where investing fits into a long-term financial plan.

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, geography, and economics together. They read primary sources like speeches and letters, weigh different points of view, and back up their arguments with evidence. They also learn how money, jobs, and credit work in real life.

  • How can I help with social studies at home?

    Talk about the news at dinner and ask what caused something and who is affected. When students mention an opinion, ask where they heard it and what evidence supports it. Ten minutes of real conversation does more than a worksheet.

  • My teen does not like history. What can I do?

    Try a podcast, documentary, or historical film tied to something they already care about, like music, sports, or a place the family has lived. History sticks better when it connects to a real person or question. Keep it short and let them pick the topic when possible.

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

    Students should be able to read a primary source, figure out the author's point of view, and use it as evidence in a written argument. They should also explain how a current event connects to history, geography, or economics.

  • How do I sequence the year across four strands?

    Pick a few big questions and let history carry the spine, then pull in geography, civics, and economics as each unit needs them. Teaching the strands in isolation makes them feel like four separate classes. Anchor units in primary sources from the start so source work builds all year.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Sourcing and corroboration are the hardest. Students can summarize a document but struggle to ask who wrote it, when, and why, and to compare it against another source. Build short sourcing routines into most weeks instead of saving them for big projects.

  • How much should personal finance take up?

    Plan a focused unit on saving, spending, credit, and investing, and then revisit those ideas inside economics and current events. Two to three weeks of direct teaching plus regular callbacks tends to stick better than one long block. Use real numbers from paychecks, loans, and credit cards.

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

    They are ready when they can build a written argument from two or three sources, name a counterargument, and respond to it. They should also be able to read a map or chart and explain what it shows about people, places, or money.

  • Does my child need to memorize a lot of dates and names?

    Some dates and names matter as anchors, but the bigger goal is explaining why events happened and what changed because of them. If students can tell the story and back it with evidence, the dates tend to stick on their own.