
At MOOSE, we define learning progressions as the purposeful sequencing of teaching and learning expectations along which students move incrementally through stages of increasing competence across multiple developmental stages and grade levels.
Every incremental stage builds on and integrates the previous one as students accrue new levels of expertise with each successive step in the progression.
MOOSE Learning Progressions are a set of PreK-12 modules that are purposefully designed around a single topic. While the topics were chosen by the Department of Education, the progressions themselves were designed by teams of Maine educators. As Instructional Designers, these educators were tasked with creating modules that:
- Met the MOOSE Success Criteria for module development (e.g., interdisciplinary, project-based, aligned to Universal Design for Learning best practices, etc.)
- Provide topical and skill progressions from PreK-12
- Can stand alone and don't require students to have completed other modules
It is important to note that these modules are not intended to provide a comprehensive learning progression on each topic. The existing progressions will continue to grow through the work of additional Instructional Designers. We will also be adding more learning progressions in the coming years.
Explore Learning Progressions
African Diaspora in Maine
Explore identity, community, and Maine-based stories centered on the experiences of Maine’s descendants of the African diaspora, with an emphasis on joy, agency, and achievement.
History of Genocide and the Holocaust
An age-appropriate progression that builds from empathy and belonging to deeper exploration of historical context, resistance, human rights, and responsibility.
Wabanaki Studies
Learning designed collaboratively with Wabanaki advisors and Maine educators, supporting relationship-based learning and culturally responsive practice across grade spans.
Applied Ethics
Support dialogue, reflection, and critical thinking as students explore feelings, friendship, fairness, justice, values, and how to engage thoughtfully with others.
Cyber Security
Help students understand what it means to be online, how digital information is created, and how to navigate online spaces safely and responsibly.
Data Science
Students investigate authentic questions by collecting, analyzing, and communicating data—connecting math, humanities, arts, and sciences through place-based learning.
Career Readiness
A lifelong journey of self-exploration and skill-building—supporting students in resilience, collaboration, problem solving, and real-world readiness from early grades through high school.
Climate Education
Build data literacy, systems thinking, and communication as students explore the guiding question: How does climate influence us, and how do we influence climate?
Computer Science
Introduce computer science through real-world problem solving, emphasizing computational thinking, data, and the human impact of technology across disciplines.
Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, & Math (STEAM)
Deepen connected learning through investigation and design, highlighting patterns, cause and effect, and the influence of engineering, technology, and science on society and the natural world.
Numeracy Across the Curriculum
More than math skills—numeracy helps students use quantitative information for daily decision making, lifelong learning, and informed citizenship across content areas.
Contact
Jenn Page, PhD
MOOSE Project Manager
Phone: 207-530-2963
Email: Jennifer.Page@maine.gov