C3 Framework for Social Studies
The C3 Framework lays out what K-12 social studies should look like across four disciplines: civics, economics, geography, and history. It's organized around an Inquiry Arc with four dimensions, and it's meant to sit under your state's social studies standards rather than replace them. The National Council for the Social Studies published C3 in September 2013 with 15 partner organizations, and there's been no national revision since. Roughly half of state social studies frameworks now reference C3 or borrow its structure.
- K-12 social studies
- Published 2013
- NCSS
- Free with attribution
Civic and political institutions, processes, and participation.
Economic decision-making, exchange, and markets.
Place, region, human-environment interaction, and spatial patterns.
Change, continuity, context, perspective, and historical sources.
C3 is built around the Inquiry Arc, a four-dimension structure that describes how a social studies investigation moves from a question to informed action.
Dimension 2 is where the disciplinary content lives. Each of the four disciplines has its own set of indicators across the four grade bands. Civics indicators describe what students should be able to do with civic and political institutions. Economics indicators cover economic decision-making and exchange. Geography indicators cover place, region, human-environment interaction, and spatial patterns. History indicators cover change, continuity, context, perspective, and historical sources. The C3 Framework does not provide a content list — that work belongs to state social studies standards and to district curriculum.
- Inquiry Arc dimensions (4)
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- Developing questions and planning inquiries
- Applying disciplinary tools and concepts
- Evaluating sources and using evidence
- Communicating conclusions and taking informed action
- Disciplines inside Dimension 2 (4)
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- Civics
- Economics
- Geography
- History
- Grade bands (4)
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- K-2
- 3-5
- 6-8
- 9-12
D2.His.3.6-8 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ └── grade band (K-2, 3-5, 6-8, or 9-12) │ │ └────── indicator number within the discipline │ └────────── discipline (His = History; also Civ, Eco, Geo) └────────────── dimension (D1 through D4; only D2 has disciplines)
D2.His.3.6-8 is the third History indicator in Dimension 2 for grades 6-8: classifying a source as primary or secondary and explaining how each kind informs historical understanding.
D3.1.6-8 │ │ │ │ │ └── grade band │ └───── indicator number within the dimension └──────── dimension (D1, D3, or D4)
D3.1.6-8 is the first indicator under Evaluating sources and using evidence for grades 6-8.
C3 is a national social studies content standard.
No. C3 does not specify what content students learn. It specifies how students should investigate social studies questions and which disciplinary tools they should bring. State social studies standards still set the content.
C3 replaces history, geography, civics, and economics.
C3 organizes those four disciplines under one inquiry-based architecture. Each discipline is still represented inside Dimension 2 with its own indicators. C3 asks teachers to weave the disciplines together inside a single inquiry, not to teach them in isolated silos.
C3 was created by a federal agency.
No. The National Council for the Social Studies is a professional association, not a government body. The federal government had no role in writing or releasing C3.
Taking informed action means political activism.
Dimension 4 asks students to take action consistent with their findings, but action does not mean protest or advocacy by default. It includes writing a letter to a city council, presenting findings to a peer group, drafting a budget, building a public-facing exhibit, and many other classroom-appropriate outputs.
- Inquiry Arc
- The four-dimension structure that organizes the framework.
- Dimension
- One of four big stages in a C3 inquiry: developing questions, applying disciplinary tools, evaluating sources, and communicating conclusions.
- Compelling question
- A broad, open question that anchors an inquiry. C3 expects every unit to have one.
- Supporting question
- A narrower question that students answer on the way to the compelling question.
- Disciplinary tools
- The concepts and methods of a discipline (Civics, Economics, Geography, History). They live inside Dimension 2.
- Grade band
- A two-or-three-grade span. C3 uses four bands: K-2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12.
- Inquiry Design Model (IDM)
- A unit-planning template, developed by the C3 Teachers network, that maps a C3 inquiry into a teachable unit.
- Informed action
- The student work in Dimension 4 that communicates conclusions or takes a concrete next step.
Has C3 been revised since 2013?
Not at the national level. NCSS has published companion materials (notably the Inquiry Design Model and additional guidance documents) but has not revised the framework itself.
Why doesn't C3 specify content?
The writers decided that content selection is a state-and-local decision in U.S. social studies. A national content list would have run into immediate political objections. By keeping C3 to inquiry structure and disciplinary tools, NCSS made it portable across state standards that disagree sharply on content.
Where does C3 fit alongside state social studies standards?
State social studies standards usually live on top of C3. Many states adopt the Inquiry Arc explicitly and then list state-specific content under each dimension. A handful of states reference C3 informally and write content-first standards without the Inquiry Arc.
What is the difference between C3 and the NCSS National Curriculum Standards?
The NCSS National Curriculum Standards for Social Studies (most recent edition 2010) describe ten thematic strands of social studies content. C3 is the inquiry-and-disciplinary-tools layer that came in 2013. The two documents are complementary.
Does C3 cover ethnic studies, media literacy, or financial literacy?
C3 supplies the disciplinary tools that those topics draw on, but it does not name them as separate strands. Many states have added stand-alone ethnic studies, media literacy, or financial literacy standards on top of their C3-aligned social studies framework.
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2010-2012: The gap in social studies
The Common Core State Standards (2010) include literacy in history and social studies but do not cover social studies content. The NGSS work (2011-2013) does the same for science. NCSS and 15 partner organizations begin drafting a parallel framework so social studies will not be left out of the standards conversation.
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September 2013: C3 released
NCSS publishes the College, Career, and Civic Life (C3) Framework for Social Studies State Standards. The Inquiry Arc and the four disciplines (Civics, Economics, Geography, History) become the framework's signature.
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2014-2018: Adoption wave
States revising their social studies standards begin to incorporate C3 explicitly. New York, Kansas, Washington, and Connecticut are early adopters. By 2018, roughly half of U.S. state social studies frameworks reference C3 directly.
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2015-onward: Inquiry Design Model
The C3 Teachers network releases the Inquiry Design Model, a unit-planning template that turns a C3 inquiry into a teachable arc with a compelling question, supporting questions, sources, tasks, and informed action. The IDM is now the most common way teachers operationalize C3 in a classroom.
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Today
C3 is the dominant inquiry framework in U.S. social studies. NCSS continues to publish supporting materials. The framework itself has not been revised.
C3 was written to fill a specific gap. The Common Core arrived in 2010 with literacy expectations that crossed into social studies, but Common Core did not address social studies as a subject. The NGSS work (2011-2013) did the same for science. Social studies risked becoming the subject that nobody owned at the national level. NCSS convened 15 partner organizations to write a framework that states could use as a shared backbone for their own standards.
The decision to keep C3 content-light was deliberate. U.S. social studies has long been the most politically contested subject in K-12, with state-by-state disagreements about which figures, events, and perspectives belong in the curriculum. By focusing on inquiry structure and disciplinary tools instead of a national content list, NCSS made C3 portable across state standards that disagree on content. The Inquiry Arc has held up across more than a decade, and the Inquiry Design Model has given teachers a usable way to bring C3 into a real unit.
- Publisher
- National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS), with 15 partner organizations including the National Council on Economic Education, the National Geographic Society, and the Center for Civic Education.
- First released
- September 2013.
- Current version
- 2013. No national revision since release.
- Subjects covered
- Social studies inquiry across four disciplines: Civics, Economics, Geography, and History.
- Grade range
- K-12, organized into four grade bands (K-2, 3-5, 6-8, and 9-12).
- Adoption
- Used as the basis or reference for social studies standards in roughly half of U.S. states. The Inquiry Arc shows up explicitly in many state frameworks.
- Legal status
- Voluntary framework. States write and adopt their own social studies standards on top.
- Companion frameworks
- C3 Inquiry Design Model (the IDM) developed by the C3 Teachers network. NCSS National Curriculum Standards for Social Studies.
- License
- Published by NCSS. Free to download with attribution.