What does a student learn in ?
Alaska sets its own course in every subject rather than adopting a national framework. The state rewrote its English and math standards in the wake of the Common Core debates and kept ownership of science and social studies too. That independence reflects a practical reality. Schools here range from large urban districts to villages reachable only by plane, and the standards have to work in both.
- Alaska Standards
The shape of K-12
A plain-language read of how the state runs school.
- What students learn
- English and math follow Alaska's own standards from kindergarten through high school, with reading, writing, and number sense built up year by year. Science is taught as something students investigate, with Alaska's framework leaving room for the land, weather, and wildlife students actually see. Social studies runs through geography, history, and government, with Alaska Native history woven in alongside US and world content.
- How students are measured
- Alaska does not have a single statewide spring test listed on this page. Districts handle most measurement through their own benchmark assessments and classroom work tied to the state standards. Students in tested grades still sit for federally required checks in reading, math, and science, but the day-to-day picture of how a student is doing comes from teachers and local data rather than one big exam in May.
Frameworks adopted, by subject
The standards documents the state writes against in each subject.
Browse by grade and subject
Pick a cell to see exactly what students learn that year.
Kindergarten
Grade 1
Grade 2
Grade 3
Grade 4
Grade 5
Grade 6
Grade 7
Grade 8
Grade 9
Grade 10
Grade 11
Grade 12
- Subjects covered
- 4
- Grade levels
- 13
- Standards on file
- 2,924
- Assessments tracked
- 0
Sources
Every page link goes back to the state's own document.