New York State Grades 9-12 Social Studies Framework



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The State Education Department

The University of the State of New York



New York State

Grades 9-12

Social Studies Framework

Revised February 2017

Contents


Social Studies Practices Grades 9-12 4

A.Gathering, Interpreting, and Using Evidence 4

B.Chronological Reasoning and Causation 4

C.Comparison and Contextualization 4

D.Geographic Reasoning 4

E.Economics and Economics Systems 5

F.Civic Participation 5

Grades 9 and 10 6

7

Reading Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies 7



Key Ideas and Details 7

Craft and Structure 7

Integration of Knowledge and Ideas 7

Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity 7

Writing Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science and Technical Subjects 8

Text Types and Purposes 8

Production and Distribution of Writing 8

Research to Build and Present Knowledge 9

Range of Writing 9

Speaking and Listening Standards 9

Comprehension and Collaboration 9

Presentation of Knowledge and Ideas 11

Global History and Geography 12

Grade 9: Unifying Themes Aligned to Key Ideas 13

Key Ideas 13

9.1 13


9.2 13

9.3 13


9.4 13

9.5 13


9.6 13

9.7 13


9.8 13

9.9 13


9.10 13

Grade 9: Global History and Geography I 14

The First Civilizations, ca. 10,000 B.C.E. – ca. 630 C.E. 14

Classical Societies, 600 B.C.E. – ca. 900 C.E. 15

An Age of Expanding Connections, ca. 500 – ca. 1500 16

Global Interactions, ca. 1400 – 1750 18

Grade 10: Unifying Themes Aligned to Key Ideas 23

Grade 10: Global History and Geography II 24

The World in 1750 24

1750–1914: An Age of Revolutions, Industrialization, and Empires 25

1914–Present: Crisis and Achievement in the 20th Century 28

Contemporary Issues 30

Grades 11–12 34

Reading Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies 35

Key Ideas and Details 35

Craft and Structure 35

Integration of Knowledge and Ideas 35

Range of Reading and Level of Text Complexity 35

Writing Standards for Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects 36

Text Types and Purposes 36

Production and Distribution of Writing 37

Research to Build and Present Knowledge 37

Range of Writing 37

Common Core Standards Speaking and Listening 37

Comprehension and Collaboration 37

Presentation of Knowledge and Ideas 38

Grade 11: Unifying Themes aligned to Key Ideas 39

Grade 11: United States History and Government 40

11.11 THE UNITED STATES IN A CHANGING WORLD (1990 – present): 50

Grade 12: Participation in Government and Civics 52



Grade 12: Economics, the Enterprise System, and Finance 56

Social Studies Practices Grades 9-12

  1. Gathering, Interpreting, and Using Evidence


  1. Define and frame questions about events and the world in which we live, form hypotheses as potential answers to these questions, use evidence to answer these questions, and consider and analyze counter-hypotheses.

  2. Identify, describe, and evaluate evidence about events from diverse sources (including written documents, works of art, photographs, charts and graphs, artifacts, oral traditions, and other primary and secondary sources).

  3. Analyze evidence in terms of content, authorship, point of view, bias, purpose, format, and audience.

  4. Describe, analyze, and evaluate arguments of others.

  5. Make inferences and draw conclusions from evidence.

  6. Deconstruct and construct plausible and persuasive arguments, using evidence.

  7. Create meaningful and persuasive understandings of the past by fusing disparate and relevant evidence from primary and secondary sources and drawing connections to the present.



  1. Chronological Reasoning and Causation


  1. Articulate how events are related chronologically to one another in time and explain the ways in which earlier ideas and events may influence subsequent ideas and events.

  2. Identify causes and effects using examples from different time periods and courses of study across several grade levels.

  3. Identify, analyze, and evaluate the relationship between multiple causes and effects

  4. Distinguish between long-term and immediate causes and multiple effects (time, continuity, and change).

  5. Recognize, analyze, and evaluate dynamics of historical continuity and change over periods of time and investigate factors that caused those changes over time.

  6. Recognize that choice of specific periodization favors or advantages one narrative, region, or group over another narrative, region, or group.

  7. Relate patterns of continuity and change to larger historical processes and themes.

  8. Describe, analyze, evaluate, and construct models of historical periodization that historians use to categorize events.



  1. Comparison and Contextualization


  1. Identify similarities and differences between geographic regions across historical time periods, and relate differences in geography to different historical events and outcomes.

  2. Identify, compare, and evaluate multiple perspectives on a given historical experience.

  3. Identify and compare similarities and differences between historical developments over time and in different geographical and cultural contexts.

  4. Describe, compare, and evaluate multiple historical developments (within societies; across and between societies; in various chronological and geographical contexts).

  5. Recognize the relationship between geography, economics, and history as a context for events and movements and as a matrix of time and place.

  6. Connect historical developments to specific circumstances of time and place and to broader regional, national, or global processes and draw connections to the present (where appropriate).





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