History SOLs changing for Virginia students

Published 8:00 am Thursday, January 12, 2023

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The commonwealth’s K-12 History and Social Science Standards of Learning (SOLs) could be changing for students.

On Thursday, Jan. 5, Superintendent of Public Instruction Jillian Balow released a 68-page draft revision that Balow said incorporates content from earlier drafts and included new content to tell a more complete story about how the past has shaped the commonwealth, the nation and the world.

“These draft standards will build student understanding of the attributes, ideals and actions that have made America the world’s exemplar of freedom and opportunity,” Balow said. “At the same time, the standards are unflinching in their presentation of those times when Virginia and the nation failed to live up to our founding ideals.”

According to a release from the Virginia Department of Education (VDOE), the standards recommend a sequence of grade-level content and courses that begins in kindergarten with a focus on essential skills, state and national symbols, and communities and culminates in high school with World History, Virginia and United States History, and Virginia and United States Government.

Charlotte County Public Schools Superintendent Robbie Mason said he was excited to see the additional focus on the civics strand of the state history standards.

“While our teachers incorporate citizenship and an understanding of our system into their lessons, the additional prescribed civics standards should enhance instruction in citizenship,” Mason said.

The new draft includes input from more than 200 reviewers over the course of two years. It includes new content on events and historical figures the VDOE said were previously overlooked in the commonwealth’s history standards.

According to the draft, the new SOLs build students’ knowledge of their rights and responsibilities as citizens, the commonwealth and nation’s founding documents, and the separation of powers between the legislative, executive and judicial branches of state and national government.

“These draft standards are stronger because they reflect the contributions of subject-matter experts, thoughtful citizens, and a broad set of organizations across two administrations,” Secretary of Education Aimee Guidera said. “They better meet Governor Glenn Youngkin’s directive to teach all history—the good and the bad—and will prepare all of Virginia’s students to become informed and engaged citizens and members of our democracy, communities and economy.”

The VDOE will now work on developing detailed curriculum frameworks for each grade and course,” Balow said. “The frameworks used by teachers and division instructional staff to develop lesson plans and local curricula will include content from the framework documents presented last summer and will be ready for review by the Board of Education in August 2023.”

In 1995, the VDOE published Standards of Learning in English, mathematics, science, history, and social science for kindergarten through grade 12. Subsequently, Standards of Learning were developed for all academic content areas.

The SOLs are designed to raise the academic achievement of all students in Virginia by providing specific benchmarks for student success.