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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year social studies zooms in on the home state and how it works. Students learn how town and state government make decisions, and how maps show why people settled where they did. They start backing up what they say with evidence from real sources like documents, photos, and articles. By spring, they can pick a question about their community, gather information from a few sources, and explain their answer in writing.

  • State government
  • Maps and regions
  • Local community
  • Primary sources
  • Research questions
  • Money basics
Source: Connecticut Connecticut 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

    Asking questions like a researcher

    Students learn how to start an investigation by asking a real question and figuring out where to look for answers. They practice telling the difference between a strong source and a shaky one.

  2. 2

    Mapping our state and region

    Students use maps, photos, and landmarks to study where people live and why. They look at how rivers, coastlines, and cities shape daily life and how people change the land around them.

  3. 3

    How government works

    Students learn what towns, the state, and the country actually do, from the mayor to Congress. They practice the habits of good citizens, like following fair rules and speaking up on issues that matter to them.

  4. 4

    Money, choices, and trade

    Students look at how people decide what to buy, save, and trade, and why prices go up or down. They start thinking about saving and spending in their own lives.

  5. 5

    People on the move

    Students study why people settle in some places and move to others, and how cultures travel with them. They trace how food, language, and traditions spread from one region to another.

  6. 6

    Looking back to understand today

    Students dig into events from the past using letters, photos, and other firsthand records. They learn that the same event can look different depending on who is telling the story, and they build arguments using evidence.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 4.
Inquiry Arc Practices
  • Develop Questions and Plan Inquiries

    Students come up with a big question worth investigating, then break it into smaller questions that guide a deeper look at a history, geography, or civics topic.

  • Apply Disciplinary Concepts and Tools

    Students pull from what they know about government, money, maps, and history to find and make sense of information that helps answer a question they are investigating.

  • Evaluate Sources and Use Evidence

    Students decide whether a source can be trusted, then use details from it to back up a point they're making. They practice telling the difference between firsthand accounts and secondhand ones.

  • Communicate Conclusions and Take Informed Action

    Students pick a real issue at school or in their community, then share what they learned and why it matters through writing, a speech, or another format.

Civics
  • Civic and Political Institutions

    Students learn what governments actually do and how they're organized, from the town hall down the street to the U.S. Congress to international bodies. They compare how local, state, and national leaders make rules and decisions that affect everyday life.

  • Participation and Deliberation

    Students practice habits like fairness, respect, and responsibility in classroom decisions and school or community situations. They see how those same habits shape the way neighborhoods and governments work together.

  • Processes, Rules, and Laws

    Students look at a real issue in the news or their community and work through how rules, laws, or civic steps apply to it. They practice the kind of reasoning citizens use to make decisions together.

Economics
  • Economic Decision Making

    Students weigh the pros and cons of a choice before deciding, thinking about what they gain and what they give up. This is how economists think through everyday decisions.

  • Exchange and Markets

    Markets are places where buyers and sellers set prices by competing for goods. Students learn how those prices signal what gets made, bought, and sold in a free-market economy.

  • The National and Global Economy

    Government decisions, bank policies, and trade with other countries all shape how much things cost and whether jobs are available. Students look at how these forces connect and affect everyday life.

  • Personal Financial Literacy

    Students learn how money decisions work in real life: why saving matters, what it costs to borrow money, and how putting money into something now can grow it over time.

Geography
  • Geographic Representations

    Students read maps, photos, and other geographic sources to study how places look, how regions differ, and how people interact with their surroundings.

  • Human-Environment Interaction

    Students study how a place's land, water, and weather affect the way people live there, and how people in turn change that place by building, farming, or settling.

  • Movement and Migration

    Students look at why people moved to new places, where they settled, and how their food, language, and traditions spread to neighboring regions.

  • Global Interconnections

    Students look at how two places in the world affect each other through trade, shared traditions, or government ties. They explain why what happens in one place can change everyday life in another.

History
  • Change, Continuity, and Context

    Students look at how life changed over time and how some things stayed the same, comparing places and periods around the world. They ask why a shift happened when it did and what came before it.

  • Perspectives

    Students read about the same historical event from different people's points of view, then explain how each viewpoint changes what we think really happened.

  • Historical Sources and Evidence

    Students look at primary sources like letters, photos, and maps from the past, then use what they find to back up a claim about what happened and why.

  • Causation and Argumentation

    Students look at why a historical event happened and what changed because of it, then back up their conclusions with facts from real sources. This is the foundation of thinking like a historian.

Assessments
The state tests students at this grade and subject take.
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 fourth grade social studies actually cover?

    Students study how communities, states, and countries work. They look at maps and regions, how people earn and spend money, how governments make decisions, and how the past shapes the present. A lot of the year is built around asking good questions and finding evidence to answer them.

  • What can I do at home to support social studies?

    Talk about the news at dinner and ask what students think and why. Pull out a map when a place comes up in a book or a show. When students make a claim, ask where they heard it and whether the source seems trustworthy. Ten minutes of real conversation goes a long way.

  • My child does not like memorizing dates. Is that a problem?

    Not really. Fourth grade focuses more on how and why things happened than on memorizing dates. Students should be able to put a few key events in order and explain what caused them, but recalling exact years matters less than explaining the story.

  • How should I sequence the year across civics, economics, geography, and history?

    Most teachers anchor the year in geography and history, then weave civics and economics into those units rather than teaching them as separate blocks. An inquiry question for each unit keeps the four strands connected and gives students a reason to use sources.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Source evaluation and supporting a claim with evidence. Students can often summarize a text but struggle to say why a source is trustworthy or to pick the best quote to back up a point. Plan short, repeated practice with two sources side by side across the year.

  • How can I help my child read maps and charts?

    Use real ones. Look at a road map before a trip, read a weather chart together, or check a bus schedule. Ask questions like what does this symbol mean, what is missing, and what would change if the map were bigger. Students get better at this through use, not worksheets.

  • What is an inquiry, and why is it such a big deal this year?

    An inquiry is an investigation built around a real question, like why did people settle here or is this rule fair. Students gather sources, weigh evidence, and share what they found. It is the main way students practice thinking like a historian, geographer, or citizen.

  • How do I know students are ready for fifth grade?

    By spring, students should be able to ask a researchable question, find evidence in two or three sources, and write or speak a short claim backed by that evidence. They should also use a map with confidence and explain how a basic rule, law, or economic choice affects daily life.

  • How much should I worry about current events at this age?

    Bring them in, but keep them age appropriate. Local stories about a new park, a town vote, or a community problem work better than national politics. The goal is for students to see that the ideas they study in class show up in real life every week.