Fitting Islamic Studies inside an NGSS-shaped school
On Monday, my Grade 6 Islamic Studies class compared two accounts of the Hijra, and three students immediately asked, “Which one is right?” That’s my cue to borrow NGSS habits: we frame a guiding question, gather evidence, and model possibilities before drawing claims. It’s not science content, but the structure mirrors NGSS Science and Engineering Practices—asking questions, analyzing data (texts, timelines, maps), and arguing from evidence.
Here’s the fit issue: most Islamic Studies resources are rich in narrative yet thin on inquiry moves. They rarely cue students to model systems (e.g., how lunar observations, geography, and community practice interact) or to make claims using a clear evidence–reasoning chain. In our American setting, administrators also expect consistent vocabulary—words like “phenomenon,” “model,” “claim,” and “evidence” show up on walk-through notes. When I hunt for on-topic pieces that also fit that rigor, I start in social studies collections and then layer in NGSS-style prompts. If you want a starting shelf, I skim the social studies area here and adapt forward.