Skip to content

What does a student learn in ?

This is the year American history clicks into a story students can follow from the first colonies to the years after the Civil War. Students trace how the colonies grew, why the colonists broke from Britain, and how the new country expanded west. Alabama runs through every chapter, from the Creek War to statehood to Reconstruction. By spring, students can explain why the Civil War happened and name a few people and events that shaped Alabama along the way.

  • Colonial America
  • American Revolution
  • Westward expansion
  • Civil War
  • Reconstruction
  • Alabama history
  • Slavery and abolition
Source: Alabama Alabama Course of Study
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

    Colonies take shape

    Students start the year learning how English, French, and Spanish settlers built colonies alongside Indigenous nations. They look at how land, climate, and trade shaped daily life, and how labor systems like indentured servitude and slavery took hold.

  2. 2

    Revolution and a new country

    Students follow the road from the French and Indian War to independence. They learn why colonists pushed back against British taxes, what happened at key battles, and how the Constitution and Bill of Rights set up the government we still use today.

  3. 3

    Moving west and Alabama statehood

    Students trace how the country pushed west after the Louisiana Purchase and the War of 1812. They study "Alabama fever," the Creek War, and the people who shaped Alabama as it became a state in 1819. They also look at how this growth pushed Native nations off their land.

  4. 4

    Civil War and rebuilding

    Students learn how arguments over slavery and states' rights split the country apart. They study major battles, Alabama's role in the Confederacy, the end of slavery, and what changed for Black Alabamians during Reconstruction.

  5. 5

    A changing nation after the war

    Students close the year looking at the late 1800s. They study Jim Crow laws, sharecropping, and the rise of new industries in Alabama. They also see how railroads and westward expansion changed life for immigrants and Native nations.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 4.
  • Colonial Regions

    SS24.4.CR

    Students compare the New England, Middle, and Southern colonies, looking at how geography, climate, and daily life differed from one region to the next.

  • American Revolution and Early Republic

    SS24.4.ARE

    Students learn how the American Revolution happened and what the country looked like in the years right after independence, from the first battles to the early shape of the new government.

  • Early Westward Expansion

    SS24.4.EWE

    Students learn why settlers moved west in the early 1800s, tracing the routes they traveled, the land they crossed, and how that migration changed life for the people already living there.

  • Civil War and Reconstruction

    SS24.4.CWR

    Students learn why the Civil War was fought, how it ended slavery, and what Reconstruction tried to do for the country afterward.

  • Post-Civil War Westward Expansion

    SS24.4.PCW

    Students learn how the United States grew after the Civil War, focusing on why settlers moved west and what that expansion meant for the people already living there.

Colonial Regions
  • Describe cooperation and conflict between the English, French

    SS24.4.1

    Students learn why English, French, and Spanish settlers and Indigenous people sometimes worked together and sometimes fought, focusing on who controlled the fur trade, the land, and the slave trade in early North America.

  • Map the locations of significant European settlements and major Indigenous…

    SS24.4.1a

    Students locate and label European settlements and major Indigenous nations on a map of North America and Alabama, showing where different groups lived and claimed land during the colonial period.

  • Compare and contrast the physical geography of the Northern, Middle

    SS24.4.2

    Students compare how the land and weather differed across the three colonial regions and explain why settlers chose certain areas over others. A rocky coast, a broad river valley, or a warmer growing season all shaped where and how people built their communities.

  • Explain the reasons for the establishment of the labor systems used in colonial…

    SS24.4.3

    Students learn why colonists used different systems to get work done, from apprentices learning a trade to indentured servants working off a debt to enslaved people forced to work without pay or freedom. The differences among these systems mattered enormously.

  • Describe the triangular trade system, including the Middle Passage of the…

    SS24.4.3a

    Triangular trade was a three-way shipping route that moved goods, and enslaved people, between Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Students learn what life was like for West Africans before they were kidnapped, and what they endured during the brutal ocean crossing known as the Middle Passage.

  • Describe how the contributions of various groups living in colonial North…

    SS24.4.4

    Different groups of people built colonial North America together. Students learn what farmers, artisans, women, children, Indigenous peoples, enslaved people, and indentured servants each contributed and how those contributions shaped the colonies.

  • Describe the contributions of key individuals who established and developed…

    SS24.4.4a

    Students learn about the real people who built early American colonies, including leaders, farmers, craftspeople, and others whose work shaped how those communities grew and survived.

American Revolution and Early Republic
  • Summarize the causes of the French and Indian War and describe how its outcomes…

    SS24.4.5

    Students explain why Britain and France fought over North American land in the mid-1700s, then trace how the debt and new taxes from that war pushed colonists toward revolution.

  • Explain how the French and Indian War affected power, trade

    SS24.4.5a

    Students examine how the French and Indian War shifted which countries controlled land and trade in the region that became Alabama, and what those changes meant for Native American tribes living there.

  • Describe key events that caused tension and led American colonists to protest…

    SS24.4.5b

    Students learn how British taxes and laws, from the Stamp Act to the Intolerable Acts, pushed colonists toward open protest and, eventually, revolution.

  • Identify and describe key events of the American Revolution, including the…

    SS24.4.6

    Students learn the turning points that decided the Revolutionary War. They study three key battles, where each one was fought, and why each shifted the odds toward American independence.

  • Summarize the contributions of different groups and individuals to the American…

    SS24.4.6a

    Different people helped win the American Revolution in different ways. Students learn how soldiers, women, free and enslaved Black Americans, and foreign allies each played a part in the fight for independence.

  • Describe events that took place in Alabama during the Revolution, including the…

    SS24.4.6b

    Students learn that Alabama played a role in the Revolution too. Spain captured the British fort at Mobile, and Native American groups took sides in the conflict.

  • Summarize the principles of the Declaration of Independence

    SS24.4.6c

    The Declaration of Independence explained why the American colonies were breaking from Britain. Students summarize its core ideas: that people have basic rights, and that government exists to protect those rights.

  • Explain how the Treaty of Paris

    SS24.4.6d

    Students learn how two peace agreements signed after the Revolution drew the borders of the new United States on a map, including the land that eventually became Alabama.

  • Summarize the key factors leading to the ratification of the Constitution…

    SS24.4.7

    Students learn why the Articles of Confederation left the new government too weak to function, how events like Shays' Rebellion pushed leaders to act, and what deals were struck at the Constitutional Convention to get the Constitution approved.

  • Describe the system of government established by the Constitution, including…

    SS24.4.7a

    Students learn how the U.S. government is divided into three branches: Congress makes the laws, the President carries them out, and the Supreme Court decides if they hold up. Each branch has its own job so no single person or group holds all the power.

  • Explain why the Bill of Rights was added to the Constitution and how the…

    SS24.4.7b

    The Bill of Rights lists specific freedoms the government cannot take away, like freedom of speech and religion. Students learn why the founders added it to the Constitution and how Americans can still change the Constitution when new protections are needed.

Early Westward Expansion
  • Explain how the Louisiana Purchase and the actions of the Corps of Discovery…

    SS24.4.8

    The Louisiana Purchase doubled the size of the U.S. overnight, and Lewis and Clark's expedition mapped the new land and showed settlers a path west. Students explain how both events pushed Americans to move beyond the Mississippi River.

  • Summarize how the Federal Road increased access to Creek Territory for settlers…

    SS24.4.8a

    The Federal Road cut through Creek Nation land, making it easier for settlers and enslaved people to move into the region. Students explain how that flood of newcomers changed life for the Native Americans already living there.

  • Outline the major causes and events of the War of 1812

    SS24.4.9

    Students learn what started the War of 1812 and how it unfolded. They trace the key disagreements between the United States and Britain, then map out the major battles and turning points that shaped the conflict's outcome.

  • Describe the causes of the Creek War within the context of the War of 1812 and…

    SS24.4.9a

    The Creek War grew out of conflicts between Creek Nation leaders and American settlers pushing onto their land during the War of 1812. Students learn what started the fighting, how it ended, and what changed for the Creek people, Alabama, and the United States afterward.

  • Identify significant battles and leaders of the Creek War

    SS24.4.9b

    Students learn about the Creek War, a conflict fought during the War of 1812 era between U.S. forces and Creek Nation warriors in the American South. They identify key battles and the leaders who commanded each side.

  • Explain how “Alabama fever” influenced Alabama's settlement, economic growth

    SS24.4.10

    "Alabama fever" was the rush of settlers pouring into Alabama in the early 1800s, drawn by cheap land and good cotton-growing soil. Students explain how that flood of new people shaped the state's economy, its government, and eventually its path to statehood in 1819.

  • Identify contributions of Alabama’s early political leaders, including William…

    SS24.4.10a

    Early Alabama politicians helped shape how the new state was governed. Students identify what leaders like William Wyatt Bibb and William Rufus King actually did to build Alabama's government after statehood in 1819.

  • Outline political and geographic reasons for changing the location of Alabama’s…

    SS24.4.10b

    Students learn why Alabama moved its state capital, looking at how geography and political disagreements pushed leaders to choose a new location for the seat of government.

  • Describe events and factors that led to the United States' expansion prior to…

    SS24.4.11

    Students learn why Americans moved west before the Civil War, covering the trails settlers followed, the 1849 Gold Rush, and the conflicts and new technologies that made expansion possible.

  • Locate states admitted to the United States between 1812 and 1860 and…

    SS24.4.11a

    Students find states that joined the country between 1812 and 1860 on a map and sort each one by whether it allowed slavery or banned it.

  • Explain how the growth of the United States from 1812 to 1860 changed economic…

    SS24.4.12

    Students learn how Alabama changed between 1812 and 1860 as the country expanded west. They look at how cotton farming, slavery, and new towns shaped who lived here, how people worked, and how wealth moved through the state.

  • Identify different trades and occupations of Alabamians in the period from 1812…

    SS24.4.12a

    Students identify the jobs and trades common in Alabama between 1812 and 1860, such as farming, blacksmithing, or river trading, and learn how people made a living before the Civil War.

  • Describe the living and working conditions and the cultural practices of…

    SS24.4.12b

    Students learn what daily life looked like for enslaved people in this period, including those who worked in fields, in homes, or in skilled trades. They also study how being bought and sold within the country tore apart families and shaped every part of enslaved people's lives.

  • Explain how the Indian Removal Act

    SS24.4.12c

    Students learn how federal laws and conflicts in the 1830s forced the Muscogee Creek, Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Seminole peoples off their lands, and what that loss meant for their communities and rights.

  • Describe the development of educational institutions in Alabama from statehood…

    SS24.4.12d

    Students learn how schools and colleges were built in Alabama from the time it became a state in 1819 up to the Civil War. They look at who started those schools, where they were, and who got to attend.

Civil War and Reconstruction
  • Describe how slavery contributed to sectional disagreements, divisions over…

    SS24.4.13

    Slavery pushed the North and South apart on nearly every major question before the Civil War. Students explain how disagreements over slavery, states' rights, and the economy grew so deep that the country split into conflict.

  • Identify and describe how key events from the Missouri Compromise

    SS24.4.13a

    Key events between 1820 and 1860 pushed the North and South further apart on the question of slavery. Students trace those turning points, from the Missouri Compromise to Lincoln's election, to explain why the country split.

  • Describe the influence of abolitionists, including enslaved persons and…

    SS24.4.13b

    Abolitionists fought to end slavery in America. Students learn how enslaved people, those who freed themselves, and other activists pushed the country toward ending slavery, and why their efforts mattered to the larger conflict that led to the Civil War.

  • Describe the significance of the Clotilda’s delivery of kidnapped people to…

    SS24.4.13c

    The Clotilda was the last known ship to bring enslaved Africans to the United States, arriving in Mobile Bay in 1860, decades after the international slave trade was banned. Students learn why this illegal voyage matters as a symbol of how far some people went to keep slavery alive.

  • Summarize Alabama’s role in the formation of the Confederate States of America…

    SS24.4.13d

    Students learn why Montgomery, Alabama became the first capital of the Confederacy and how the state became a flashpoint for the secession debate. Not every Alabamian agreed on leaving the Union, especially in the northern counties.

  • Evaluate how key figures contributed to events that shaped the United States’…

    SS24.4.14

    Students study leaders like Lincoln, Grant, and Frederick Douglass to understand how specific decisions and actions pushed the Civil War toward a Union victory.

  • Identify Alabama’s economic and military contributions to the Civil War…

    SS24.4.14a

    Students learn how Alabama supported the Confederacy during the Civil War, including the weapons it produced, the soldiers it sent, and how enslaved people were forced into war work while many resisted.

  • Locate and describe the impact of significant Civil War battles, including…

    SS24.4.14b

    Students locate key Civil War battles on a map, including battles fought in Alabama, and identify which states sided with the Confederacy, which stayed with the Union, and where each side set up its capital.

  • Describe how the Civil War affected the people of Alabama, including the end of…

    SS24.4.14c

    Students learn how the Civil War changed everyday life in Alabama: slavery ended, roads and railroads were destroyed, the economy collapsed, and women took over running farms and households while men were away at war.

  • Summarize events that marked the conclusion of the Civil War, including the…

    SS24.4.14d

    Students learn what ended the Civil War: Confederate armies surrendered, President Lincoln was assassinated, and enslaved people were finally freed. They also look at how Juneteenth and other emancipation celebrations spread across Alabama and the country.

  • Identify major events of Reconstruction and evaluate the outcomes of…

    SS24.4.15

    Students learn what happened in the South after the Civil War ended, including new laws and rebuilding efforts, then weigh what those changes actually accomplished for formerly enslaved people and the country.

  • Explain political changes in Alabama during Reconstruction, including new state…

    SS24.4.15a

    After the Civil War, Alabama rewrote its laws, restricted Black Americans through Black Codes, and shifted which political parties held power. Students learn how those changes shaped voting rights and citizenship for Black Alabamians.

  • Describe the effects of Reconstruction on education and social institutions in…

    SS24.4.15b

    Students learn how Alabama's schools, churches, and communities changed after the Civil War, including what new opportunities appeared for Black Alabamians and what obstacles remained.

  • Explain how Africatown was established, describing the challenges its founders…

    SS24.4.15c

    Students learn how a group of enslaved Africans, freed after the last known slave ship illegally brought them to Alabama, built their own town called Africatown. The lesson covers the obstacles they faced and how they created a lasting community together.

  • Recount the contributions of Alabamians who helped shape their state during…

    SS24.4.15d

    Students learn about real Alabamians, including formerly enslaved people and Black legislators, who worked to rebuild the state after the Civil War. They study what those people did and why it mattered.

Post-Civil War Westward Expansion
  • Describe how political and social changes of the late 1870s to 1900 affected…

    SS24.4.16

    After the Civil War, life changed sharply for Black Alabamians as new laws limited where they could go, how they could vote, and what work they could do. Students study Jim Crow laws, sharecropping, and the violence that shaped everyday life in Alabama from the 1870s through 1900.

  • Describe how industry, trade, farming

    SS24.4.16a

    After the Civil War, Alabama changed fast. Students learn how new factories, farms, railroads, and a growing political movement called Populism reshaped the way Alabamians worked and lived through the late 1800s.

  • Describe the social, political

    SS24.4.17

    Students examine how wars, laws, and treaties after the Civil War pushed U.S. borders west, and what those changes meant for the people already living there and those who moved in.

  • Explain how territorial expansion and the construction of the transcontinental…

    SS24.4.17a

    Students learn how building the transcontinental railroad and pushing settlement westward pushed Native Americans off their land, including tribes from Alabama who had already been forced to relocate to Indian Territory.

  • Locate states admitted to and territories acquired by the United States between…

    SS24.4.17b

    Students find states and territories the U.S. added between 1865 and 1900 on a map, then explain how the country got each one, whether through purchase, treaty, or conflict.

Common Questions
  • What does fourth grade social studies cover this year?

    Students walk through American history from the colonies to about 1900, with a strong focus on Alabama's place in that story. They study the Revolution, the Constitution, westward settlement, the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the years after. Alabama statehood, the Creek War, and Africatown all show up.

  • How can I help at home if my child is learning about the colonies?

    Pull up a map and find the thirteen colonies together. Ask which ones had cold winters and which had long growing seasons, then talk about how that shaped what people grew, built, and traded. Five minutes with a map sticks better than a worksheet.

  • How should I sequence the year so Alabama content fits in?

    Teach Alabama alongside the national story instead of saving it for the end. Tie the Creek War to the War of 1812, Mobile and Montgomery to the Civil War, and Africatown to Reconstruction. Students remember the connections better than isolated state units.

  • My child has to learn a lot of dates and names. Do they need to memorize all of them?

    The point is the story, not flash cards. Students should know why events happened and what changed because of them. If a child can explain why colonists were angry about the Stamp Act in their own words, the date matters much less.

  • Which topics usually need the most reteaching?

    The causes of the Revolution, the three branches of government, and the road to the Civil War give students the most trouble. Build in extra time for cause-and-effect work, and use short timelines students can draw and label themselves.

  • How do I talk with my child about slavery and the Civil War?

    Use honest, age-appropriate language and let students ask questions. Read a short picture book or a kid-focused article together, then talk about what enslaved people did to resist and to build community. Children handle hard history well when an adult sits with them through it.

  • What does mastery look like by the end of the year?

    Students can tell the story of how the United States grew from thirteen colonies to a country spanning the continent, and can place Alabama inside that story. They can name causes and effects for major events and explain how slavery, removal, and Reconstruction shaped people's lives.

  • How do I know my child is ready for fifth grade history?

    Ask them to tell the story of the Revolution, the Civil War, or Alabama statehood in a few sentences. If they can name a cause, an event, and a result without prompting, they are ready. Strong fourth graders also start asking their own questions about fairness and power.