C Curriculum Explorer

Curriculum map

Find a topic. See what it builds on.

Search and explore the learning network in one place. Select any topic to open its complete record below—without leaving the map.

Topics
1,590
Links
3,221
Standards
3,261
Reset filters

Search updates automatically.

Loading map…
Map contentsTopics in this view Showing 80 of 1590 matching topics · narrow your search to see different results

This complete list mirrors the map and remains available for keyboard and screen-reader navigation.

History·Ancient Egypt·conceptual

Egyptian Social Hierarchy

Describe the social structure of ancient Egypt as a pyramid-shaped hierarchy: the pharaoh at the top, then priests and nobles, followed by scribes and soldiers, then craftworkers and merchants, and farmers and labourers at the base — understanding that a person's position was usually inherited and determined their whole way of life

Suggested ages 7–9

Open direct link

Learning journey

Your child is discovering the fascinating world of ancient Egypt — learning about pharaohs and pyramids, gods and mummification, hieroglyphs and daily life along the Nile River over 3,000 years of history.

Evidence of understanding

  • Draw or describe the social pyramid with at least four levels correctly ordered
  • Explain that most people were farmers and had very different lives from the pharaoh
  • Give an example of how social position affected someone's daily life (e.g., only scribes could read)

Assessment prompt

If Egyptian Social Hierarchy is asked who was more important in ancient Egypt — a scribe or a farmer — can they explain the social pyramid and where each person fitted?

Standards alignment

No external standards are linked to this topic.