What California’s DRDP says about social studies and community understanding
California’s Desired Results Developmental Profile (DRDP) addresses social studies as an interconnected set of competencies that help children understand themselves, their families, their communities, and the world. Administered by the California Department of Education, the DRDP recognizes that social studies in early childhood is not about memorizing historical facts, but about developing a sense of identity, community belonging, and civic awareness.
Under the DRDP, social studies development is addressed across multiple domain areas, including the Self and Social Development measures (identity, community membership), Relationships and Social Interactions (understanding roles and social rules), and cognitive development measures related to understanding the social world. These measures capture children’s growing understanding of community roles, family structures, cultural practices, and civic participation.
California is a richly diverse state, and the DRDP explicitly emphasizes culturally responsive practices. Programs are expected to reflect children’s home cultures and languages, affirm diverse family structures, and help children understand their place in a broader, diverse community — goals deeply embedded in the DRDP’s social studies-adjacent measures.
Children’s sense of cultural identity and community belonging is formed in the earliest years. Research from the National Council for Social Studies confirms that children who develop positive cultural identities and a sense of belonging in early childhood demonstrate greater empathy, civic engagement, and social competence throughout their lives. In California’s diverse childcare settings, culturally affirming social studies content is both an equity imperative and a developmental one.
Developmental milestones
Social studies milestones by age group
Understanding where children are developmentally helps educators plan meaningful activities and document DRDP progress accurately. These milestones align with California’s DRDP levels and nationally recognized frameworks including NAEYC’s Developmentally Appropriate Practice and the CDC’s Milestone Moments.
| Age group | Key DRDP milestones | What educators can do |
|---|---|---|
| Infants Birth–18 months | Recognizing familiar caregivers and family members; responding differently to familiar vs. unfamiliar people; beginning awareness of routines and predictable social patterns | Use photos of family in the classroom; maintain consistent caregiving relationships; narrate social routines; reflect home culture in classroom materials |
| Toddlers 18–36 months | Identifying self and others by name; beginning awareness of family roles; parallel play alongside peers; interest in community helpers and jobs; noticing differences and similarities among people | Books with diverse families and community helpers; dramatic play with community roles; simple discussions of feelings and fairness; home culture celebrations |
| Preschool 3–5 years | Understanding community helper roles; awareness of rules and their purposes; respect for different cultures and traditions; beginning civic concepts (fairness, responsibility, voting) | Community helper dramatic play; class rules creation; multicultural celebrations; field trips or virtual community tours; class meetings; cultural artifact explorations |
Curriculum alignment
How Experience Curriculum supports California’s DRDP social studies standards
Experience Curriculum weaves social studies into every monthly theme through content that reflects diverse family structures, community roles, cultural traditions, and civic values. Monthly themes regularly feature community exploration, cultural celebrations, and opportunities to understand the world beyond the classroom — all connected to DRDP social development measures.
Every Experience Curriculum kit ships with a verified alignment to California’s DRDP. The downloadable California Alignment PDF maps each curriculum activity and skill to the specific DRDP measure and developmental level it targets — saving teachers significant documentation time.
Social studies skills covered
- Cultural identity and self-awareness
- Family structures and community roles
- Civic understanding (rules, fairness, responsibility)
- Diversity, equity, and inclusion concepts
- Community mapping and geography basics
- Historical thinking and family traditions
How it’s delivered
- Monthly kits with community and culture-themed activities
- Diverse books and materials reflecting multiple cultures
- Dramatic play invitations for community role exploration
- Family involvement activities for cultural sharing
- Brightwheel digital documentation tied to CA DRDP social development measures
- Community helper theme kits with props and activities
California’s DRDP specifically emphasizes the importance of culturally and linguistically responsive practice. Experience Curriculum materials include culturally diverse imagery, multilingual support resources, and activities designed to be adaptable to the specific cultural community of each program — supporting compliance with California’s culturally responsive practice expectations.
Skills spotlight
Key social studies skills in the 35-skill framework
Experience Curriculum’s 35-skill framework maps directly to the DRDP domains. Here are four skills that feature prominently in every age-band kit.
Identity
Understanding oneself as part of a family, cultural group, and community. Developed through self-portraits, family studies, home culture sharing, and affirming representation in classroom materials.
Community
Awareness of community roles, interdependence, and civic responsibility. Built through dramatic play, community helper studies, field explorations, and class meetings.
Respect & Inclusion
Valuing diversity in people, families, and cultures. Taught through diverse books, cultural celebrations, perspective-taking activities, and teacher modeling of inclusive language.
Cooperation
Working together toward shared goals and resolving conflicts fairly. Reinforced through group projects, classroom jobs, peer collaboration, and conflict resolution practices.
Implementation guidance
Practical tips for embedding social studies into your California program
1. Reflect children’s home cultures in the classroom
California’s DRDP places strong emphasis on cultural identity development. The most powerful social studies content in early childhood comes from honoring the specific cultures present in your classroom. Display photos of families, include books and materials that reflect your community’s languages and traditions, and invite families to share cultural practices and celebrations.
2. Build community through classroom routines
Classroom meetings, jobs, and shared decision-making are living social studies — children experience civic participation, fairness, and community responsibility in real time. DRDP observers assess children’s understanding of rules and community roles; these authentic practices generate the strongest evidence.
3. Use dramatic play for community role exploration
Dramatic play is the primary vehicle through which preschoolers process social understanding. Community helper themes — doctor, firefighter, teacher, chef — give children rich opportunities to explore roles, relationships, and community interdependence. Experience Curriculum kits include dramatic play props and scenario cards for this purpose.
4. Connect social studies to family engagement
When families share their cultural traditions, occupations, and community knowledge with the class, social studies comes alive. Invite family members as community helper guests, send home cultural sharing invitations, and create class books documenting the diverse families in your program.
Frequently asked questions
Common questions about California’s DRDP and social studies curriculum
Related resources
California DRDP alignment PDF
Full mapping of Experience Curriculum to California’s DRDP framework across all domains
California early learning standards
Overview of California’s DRDP framework and all 8 domain alignments
CA Social-Emotional standards
California’s DRDP Social-Emotional domain and Experience Curriculum alignment
CA Creative Arts standards
California’s DRDP Creative Arts domain and Experience Curriculum alignment
California DRDP resource guide
Official DRDP implementation resources from the California Department of Education