Unit Curriculum Map
Map a single unit at the curriculum level, connecting standards, lessons, assessments, and resources in one visual overview that supports coherent instruction and easy curriculum review.
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- Structured PDF with guiding questions per section
- Print-friendly layout, works on screen or paper
- Includes Flip's pedagogical notes and tips
When to use this template
- Creating a unit overview document for curriculum review or department sharing
- When you need to verify that all standards within a unit are covered and assessed
- Coordinating with colleagues who teach the same unit
- When a guest teacher or coverage teacher needs a complete picture of what is being taught
- Documentation for curriculum audits or accreditation reviews
Template sections
A unit curriculum map is the most useful document for communicating what you teach to anyone who is not in your classroom. When it shows the connection between standards, lessons, and assessments clearly, it makes curriculum review straightforward and supports continuity when teachers change or coverage is needed.
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About the Unit Map framework
A unit curriculum map sits between the year-long map (which shows the full course arc) and the individual lesson plan (which shows a single day). It gives a complete picture of one unit: which standards are addressed, how lessons build toward them, what assessments are used, and how resources are organized.
Who uses unit curriculum maps: Unit maps are particularly useful for curriculum coordinators and department chairs who need to review what is being taught without reading individual lesson plans. They are also useful for substitute teachers, coverage teachers, and for communicating with parents and administrators about what a unit covers.
Unit-level coherence: A unit map reveals whether a unit is truly coherent: whether the lessons build toward common goals, whether assessments align to those goals, and whether the unit tells a learning story rather than just covering a list of topics.
Vertical alignment: Unit maps are powerful tools for vertical alignment conversations. When all teachers of the same course or subject create unit maps, they can compare them to check that expectations are consistent across classrooms and that prior learning is being built on appropriately.
Differentiation documentation: A unit map can document differentiation strategies at the unit level: which scaffolds are provided across the unit, where extension activities are planned, and how access for students with IEPs or ELL status is maintained throughout.
Pacing within the unit: While a unit planner documents the instructional approach, a unit map documents the relationship between lessons, standards, and assessments, showing whether the pacing within the unit is realistic and whether instruction is distributed appropriately across different standards.
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