Standards
By the end of 3: Describe and define the rights, roles, and responsibilities of residents of Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe the responsibilities and powers of local, Tribal, and state leaders across branches of government.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe how civic virtues can be applied in school settings.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe procedures for making decisions at the local, Tribal, and state levels in Alaska, including the impact individuals can have.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Explore and describe various government structures within Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Recall core civic virtues that guide communities in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe how Alaska’s laws are created and changed at multiple organizational levels.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Identify key documents on which local and state laws are based and where to find them.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Discuss the importance of having processes for making decisions as a group.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Identify and participate in ways that people can influence the local community and organize solutions through action.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Identify the beliefs and values that underlie one’s own point of view about civic issues in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Illustrate historical and contemporary means of changing society in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how policies are developed to address public problems.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Explain the origins, functions, and structure of state and Tribal governments in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe ways in which people benefit from working together in families, households, and voluntary organizations.
Generate resourceExplain, compare, and participate in various rights, roles, and responsibilities of citizens.
Generate resourceDistinguish the responsibilities and powers of government officials at various levels and branches of government and in different times and places.
Generate resourceExplain how a democracy relies on people’s responsible participation and draw implications for how individuals participate in democracy.
Generate resourceExamine the origins and purposes of rules, laws, and key U.S. constitutional provisions.
Generate resourceExplain how groups of people make rules to create responsibilities and protect freedoms.
Generate resourceExplain the origins, functions, and structure of different systems of government, including those created by the U.S. and state constitutions.
Generate resourceDescribe ways in which people benefit from and are challenged by working together, including through government, workplaces, voluntary organizations, and families.
Generate resourceIdentify core civic virtues and democratic principles that guide government, society, and communities.
Generate resourceUse deliberative processes when making decisions or reaching judgments as a group.
Generate resourceIdentify the beliefs, experiences, perspectives, and values that underlie their own and others’ points of view about civic issues.
Generate resourceCompare procedures for making decisions in a variety of settings, including classroom, school, government, and/or society.
Generate resourceExplain how rules and laws change society and how people change rules and laws.
Generate resourceExplain and analyze the roles of government systems that influence and impact Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Examine Indigenous land ownership, rights, and acknowledgment in Alaska and in other areas.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Compare and contrast the responsibilities and powers of government officials and various levels and branches of the current federal government.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Describe procedures for making decisions at the federal level in the United States, including the impact individuals can have.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Examine Indigenous land ownership, rights, and acknowledgment in Alaska and other areas.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how democracies rely on responsible participation.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Determine core civic virtues and democratic principles that guide society in Alaska and the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how laws are created at the federal level in the United States, including how change is brought forth by voting in government elections.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Identify key civic documents at the local, state, and national levels, and describe their central principles.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: With teacher guidance, create a process for group decision‐ making.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how groups of people make rules to create responsibilities.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Recognize the beliefs, experiences, perspectives, and values that underlie another person’s point of view about a civic issue.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Illustrate historical and contemporary means of changing society in various regions of the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Describe the origins, functions, and structure of municipal and state governments in the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Describe ways in which people benefit from and are challenged by working together in workplaces.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Describe the rights, roles, and responsibilities of U.S. citizens and explain basic principles of American democracy.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Distinguish the responsibilities and powers of government officials at various levels and branches of government in the early days of American democracy.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Apply civic virtues and democratic principles in school settings.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Analyze and compare procedures for making decisions in a variety of settings, including classroom, school, government, and/or society.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Compare and contrast the three branches of national government along with their impact on Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Distinguish core civic virtues and democratic principles that guide government, society, and communities.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Evaluate how rules and laws change society and how people change rules and laws.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Identify and explain the importance of key national documents and determine their impact on governance.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Use deliberative processes when making decisions or reaching judgments as a group.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Research problems or issues and propose solutions using the appropriate public process.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain how groups of people make rules to create responsibilities and protect freedoms.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Examine the beliefs, experiences, perspectives, and values that underlie one’s own and others’ points of view about civic issues.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Summarize the historical origins of relevant rules and laws, and the formal and informal factors that shape(d) public policy.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Investigate the origins, functions, and structure of the U.S. federal government.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Describe ways in which people benefit from and are challenged by working together through government.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: [standard not addressed at this grade]
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: [standard not addressed at this grade]
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: [standard not addressed at this grade]
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: [standard not addressed at this grade]
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: [standard not addressed at this grade]
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: [standard not addressed at this grade]
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: [standard not addressed at this grade]
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Define and provide examples of human capital, physical capital, and natural resources in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Examine various ways that people in Alaska have met their needs for food, clothing, and shelter, and how they have changed over time.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: With support, generate a list of scenarios that may include borrowing money.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Explain how trade contributed to economic interdependence among Indigenous groups throughout Alaska’s history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Analyze how various Alaska Native groups use and have used several natural resources to meet their needs.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Explain what it means for an individual and/or business to specialize and/or trade.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: With support, generate a list of factors that influence the way people make a particular decision.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Define unemployment and explain why the number of unemployed individuals in a given area may increase or decrease.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Explain how geography, natural resources, climate, and available labor contributed to the exploitation of resources in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Explain the ways in which Alaska’s government pays for the goods and services it provides.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Define and illustrate examples of capital goods and human capital.
Generate resourceIdentify examples of the variety of resources (human capital, physical capital, and natural resources) that are used to produce goods and services.
Generate resourceExplain the relationship between investment in human capital, productivity, and future incomes.
Generate resourceIdentify positive and negative incentives that influence the decisions people make.
Generate resourceExplain the ways in which the government pays for the goods and services it provides.
Generate resourceDescribe ways that people can increase productivity by using improved capital goods and improving their human capital.
Generate resourceExplain how trade leads to increasing economic interdependence among nations.
Generate resourceExplain the effects of increasing economic interdependence on different groups within participating nations.
Generate resourceExplain different economic systems used by groups of Alaskans across the state and across time.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Compare examples of human capital, physical capital, and natural resources in various U.S. regions.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how scarcity and abundance require a person to determine the benefits and costs of a particular choice.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain that interest is the price of using someone else’s money.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how trade contributes to economic interdependence among regions of the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explore the significance of various industries in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Provide examples, within and outside of Alaska, of individuals and businesses that specialize and trade.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Determine the difference between inflation and deflation.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how geography, natural resources, climate, and available labor contribute to the interconnected regional economies of the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Describe how people and businesses support federal government services through taxation.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain the relationship between investment in human capital, productivity, and future incomes using Indigenous and non‐ Indigenous examples from across the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain the importance of improving capital goods and human capital over time.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Compare and contrast past and current examples of human capital, physical capital, and natural resources and how they were/are used to produce goods and services.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Analyze the benefits and costs of personal choices that any person in U.S. history may have considered in order to meet their needs and wants.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain how trade leads to increasing economic interdependence among countries.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Examine economic systems that have impacted Alaskans throughout the state’s history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Summarize multiple reasons why individuals and businesses throughout U.S. history have specialized or traded.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Identify positive and negative incentives that influence the decisions people make.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Investigate ways that inflation, deflation, and unemployment have impacted the
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain the effects of increasing economic interdependence on different groups within participating nations.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Examine the differences between the current exchange system and the exchange system in place within the American colonies.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Compare the British taxation policies in Colonial America to the current taxation practices in the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain the relationship between investment in human capital, productivity, and future incomes using examples from throughout U.S. history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Describe ways that past and present peoples of the United States have utilized improved capital goods and human capital to increase productivity.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain how profits influenced sellers in early American markets.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Describe the role of other financial institutions in an economy.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4:
Generate resourceBy the end of 3:
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Discuss how culture influences the way people modify and adapt to their environments in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe why environmental characteristics vary among different regions in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Make maps of Alaska and accurately represent its northern position relative to the contiguous United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe how cultural and environmental characteristics affect the distribution and movement of people, goods, and ideas within Alaska.
Generate resourceIdentify and explain the relationship between the resources found in Alaska and becoming a state.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Discuss how the cultural and environmental characteristics of Alaska change over time.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe how the spatial patterns of economic activities in Alaska change over time because of interactions with nearby and distant places.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Use maps, satellite images, photographs, and other representations to explain relationships between the locations of places in Alaska and their environmental characteristics.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe how human settlements and movements relate to the locations and use of various natural resources in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe how environmental and cultural characteristics influence population distribution in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe how natural and human‐made catastrophic events in Alaska affect people living outside Alaska (earthquake of 1964, Exxon Valdez oil spill, etc.).
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Use maps of different scales to describe the locations of cultural and environmental characteristics in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Discuss the effects of catastrophic environmental and technological events on human settlements and migration in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Use maps of different scales to identify and describe the locations of cultural and environmental characteristics in each region of the United States.
Generate resourceExplain how culture influences the way people modify and adapt to their environments.
Generate resourceExplain how the cultural and environmental characteristics of places change over time.
Generate resourceDescribe how environmental and cultural characteristics influence population distribution in specific places or regions.
Generate resourceExplain why environmental characteristics vary among different world regions.
Generate resourceDescribe how the spatial patterns of economic activities in a place change over time because of interactions with nearby and distant places.
Generate resourceExplain how natural and human‐made catastrophic events in one place affect people living in other places.
Generate resourceConstruct maps and other graphic representations of both familiar and unfamiliar places.
Generate resourceUse maps, satellite images, photographs, and other representations to explain relationships between the locations of places and regions and their environmental characteristics.
Generate resourceUse maps of different scales to describe the locations of cultural and environmental characteristics.
Generate resourceExplain how cultural and environmental characteristics affect the distribution and movement of people, goods, and ideas.
Generate resourceExplain how human settlements and movements relate to the locations and use of various natural resources.
Generate resourceAnalyze the effects of catastrophic environmental and technological events on human settlements and migration.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how culture influences the way people modify and adapt to their environments in each region of the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Discuss why environmental characteristics vary among different world regions.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Construct maps and other graphic representations of the various regions around the world.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Discuss how cultural and environmental characteristics affect the distribution and movement of people, goods, and ideas in and among the regions of the United States.
Generate resourceIdentify how each region of Alaska has grown through various economic activities.
Generate resourceExplain how the ge5ographic resources of Alaska led to the state’s economic development.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how the cultural and environmental characteristics of the United States change over time.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Discuss how the spatial patterns of economic activities in parts of the world have changed over time because of interactions with nearby and distant places.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Use maps, artwork, and other representations to examine relationships between the locations of places in the world and their environmental characteristics.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Discuss how human settlements and movements relate to the locations and use of various natural resources in the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Discuss how environmental and cultural characteristics influence population distribution in the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Discuss how natural and human‐made catastrophic events in one region of the world affect people living in other regions of the world.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain the effects of catastrophic environmental and technological events on human settlements and migration in and among the regions of the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Analyze how culture influences the way people modified and adapted to their environments in the early American colonies.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain why environmental characteristics vary among different regions in the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Create various types of maps and other graphic representations of each U.S. region.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain how cultural and environmental characteristics affected the distribution and movement of people, goods, and ideas in the early American colonies.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Analyze how Alaska has been a strategic position for the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Analyze how the cultural and environmental characteristics of the early American colonies changed over time.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain how the spatial patterns of economic activities in the United States change over time because of interactions within the United States and between the United States and other countries.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Use maps, satellite images, photographs, and other representations to analyze relationships between the locations of places and regions in the United States and their environmental characteristics.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain how human settlements and movements related to the locations and use of various natural resources in the early American colonies.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Examine how environmental and cultural characteristics influenced population distribution in the early American colonies.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explain how natural and human‐made catastrophic events in one region of the United States affect people living in other regions.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Use maps of different scales to examine the locations of cultural and environmental characteristics in the early American colonies.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Analyze the effects of catastrophic environmental and political events on human settlements and migration in the early American colonies.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: [standard not addressed at this grade]
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: [standard not addressed at this grade]
Generate resourcePerspectives
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Reflect upon why individuals and groups in Alaska differ in their perspectives of events in the state’s history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Use a variety of primary and secondary sources to explain significant historical events in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Create timelines to show how events of Alaska history can be organized into time periods/eras.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Identify and describe probable causes and effects of events and developments in Alaska history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Explore the cultures of Alaska, including why and how Indigenous and non‐Indigenous groups first came to Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Explain how the events of Alaska history contributed to the differing perspectives of Indigenous and non‐Indigenous peoples.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Gather information from multiple historical sources about major events in Alaska’s history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Explain how life in various eras of Alaska history compares to life today.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Identify and gather relevant evidence in support of a claim about an event in Alaska history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Describe how people’s perspectives shaped the historical sources they created in Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Generate questions about multiple historical sources surrounding a single historical event or development in Alaska’s history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Generate questions about individuals and groups who have shaped Alaska history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 3: Identify the maker, date, and place of origin of sources about a historical topic.
Generate resourceExplain why individuals and groups during the same historical period differed in their perspectives.
Generate resourceExplain connections among historical contexts and people’s perspectives at the time.
Generate resourceDescribe how people’s perspectives shaped the historical sources they created.
Generate resourceSummarize how different kinds of historical sources are used to explain events in the past.
Generate resourceCompare information provided by different historical sources about the past.
Generate resourceGenerate questions about multiple historical sources and their relationships to particular historical events and developments.
Generate resourceInfer the intended audience and purpose of a historical source from information within the source itself.
Generate resourceUse information about a historical source, including the maker, date, place of origin, intended audience, and purpose, to judge the extent to which the source is useful for studying a particular topic.
Generate resourceCreate and use a chronological sequence of related events to compare developments that happened at the same time.
Generate resourceGenerate questions about individuals and groups who have shaped significant historical changes and continuities.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Recognize the multiple individual and group perspectives relating to important or major events in history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Use a variety of primary and secondary sources to summarize key events in history from cultural regions across the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Use a timeline or other representation of related events to compare developments that happened at the same time.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Describe and explain probable causes and effects of an event or development in the United States, including its effect on Alaska.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how national and global events impact Alaska, both in the past and present.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Explain how the events of U.S. history contributed to the differing perspectives of Indigenous and non‐Indigenous peoples across the United States, including Alaska Native groups.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Gather different kinds of historical sources and summarize how they are used to explain events in the past.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Compare similarities and differences between a historic local cultural practice and a historic cultural practice from another region of the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Gather evidence from multiple sources to support a claim about how contributions made by various cultural and ethnic groups have shaped the history of Alaska and the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Describe how people’s perspectives, both Indigenous and non‐Indigenous, shaped the historical sources they created.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Analyze the relationships between multiple historical sources surrounding a single event or development in U.S. history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Generate questions about individuals and groups who have shaped history across the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 4: Use information about the maker, date, and place of origin of a source to determine whether a source is useful for studying a particular historical topic.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Summarize the perspectives of multiple individuals and/or groups when considering one or more major events in early U.S. history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Comparing and contrasting a variety of primary and secondary sources, analyze significant historical events in the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Create and use a chronological sequence of related events to compare developments that happened at the same time in early U.S. history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Analyze and explain probable causes and effects of events and developments in early American history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Explore inequality throughout the history of Alaska and its connection to current issues.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Analyze connections among historical context and people’s perspectives in the American colonies.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Gather and compare information provided by different historical sources about early American history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Analyze life in early American time periods as it compares to life today.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Use evidence from multiple sources to develop a claim about how individuals and groups shaped early American history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Compare how people’s perspectives shaped the historical sources they created, including the foundational documents of the United States.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Formulate questions about multiple historical sources and their relationships to particular historical events and developments in U.S. history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Generate questions about individuals and groups who shaped significant historical changes and continuities in early American history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Summarize the central claim in a secondary work of early American history.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Using an early American historical source, infer the audience and purpose of the document.
Generate resourceBy the end of 5: Use information about a historical source, including the maker, date, place of origin, intended audience, and purpose, to judge the extent to which the source is useful for studying a particular historical topic.
Generate resourceCommunicate and Critique Conclusions
Generate resourceDevelop Claims
Generate resourceEvaluate Sources and Evidence
Generate resourceDevelop Questions and Plan Inquiries
Generate resourceConstruct compelling questions and explain the importance of the questions to self and others.
Generate resourceGather relevant information from multiple credible sources to address compelling questions or research.
Generate resourceCite evidence that supports a response to supporting or compelling questions.
Generate resourceDevelop claims in response to compelling questions and identify specific evidence that supports the claims.
Generate resourceDevelop claims in response to compelling questions and identify evidence that draws information from multiple perspectives and sources in response to a compelling question.
Generate resourceRespectfully ask and answer questions about the opinions shared by others and the underlying facts supporting them.
Generate resourcePresent opinions and explanations using a variety of print, oral, and digital technologies.
Generate resource