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C3 Framework Alignment

How Civics 250 aligns to the College, Career, and Civic Life (C3) Framework and state standards

What is the C3 Framework?

The C3 Framework for Social Studies State Standards (College, Career, and Civic Life) is the national framework developed by the National Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) and adopted by most states as the foundation for social studies and civics education. The C3 Framework is organized around four dimensions: Developing Questions, Applying Disciplinary Concepts, Evaluating Sources, and Communicating Conclusions.

Civics 250 is fully aligned to the C3 Framework's Inquiry Arc and Civic Life standards. Every lesson, assessment, and civic action project maps directly to C3 indicators.

C3 Inquiry Arc β€” Civics 250 Alignment

D1

Developing Questions & Planning Inquiries

Students develop compelling and supporting questions about constitutional principles, civil rights, and civic responsibility using Senator Lieberman's life as a primary source.

D2

Applying Disciplinary Concepts & Tools

Students apply civics, history, and economics concepts to analyze documentary scenes, primary source documents, and contemporary civic issues.

D3

Evaluating Sources & Using Evidence

Students evaluate primary and secondary sources β€” including documentary footage, speeches, and legislation β€” to build evidence-based arguments about civic issues.

D4

Communicating Conclusions & Taking Informed Action

Students communicate their findings through structured discussions, written arguments, and civic action projects that address real community challenges.

State-by-State Alignment

Select a state to view specific alignment to that state's civics and social studies standards.

Florida β€” Civics & Government Standards Alignment

Civics 250 aligns to Florida's B.E.S.T. Standards for Social Studies, including the Civics & Government strand for grades 6–12.

StandardDescriptionCivics 250 Module
SS.7.CG.1.1Explain the principles of American democracyModule 1
SS.7.CG.1.2Describe the structure of the U.S. ConstitutionModule 1
SS.7.CG.2.1Analyze the role of citizens in a democracyModules 3 & 4
SS.7.CG.2.4Evaluate the importance of civic participationModule 3
SS.912.CG.1.1Evaluate the constitutional principles of American governmentModule 1
SS.912.CG.2.1Analyze the rights and responsibilities of citizensModules 2 & 3
SS.912.CG.3.1Evaluate the importance of civil discourseModule 2

"What is needed now...is leadership of the kind that is never easy or common but which we as Americans know we can summon in times of need."

β€” Senator Joe Lieberman, Farewell Address to the United States Senate