Science Curriculum Map
Map your science curriculum for the year, organizing phenomena-based units, three-dimensional learning, and science practices across the school year with coherent connections between disciplinary core ideas.
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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
- Annual science curriculum planning for a full course
- Three-dimensional NGSS curriculum mapping across grade levels
- Department alignment for consistent science curriculum delivery
- When phenomena-based teaching needs explicit mapping across the school year
- New course development or NGSS adoption
Template sections
Science curriculum maps work when they make three-dimensional learning visible across the year, not just content coverage. This map shows which phenomena anchor each unit, how science practices develop with increasing independence, and which crosscutting concepts thread across multiple units as genuine analytical tools.
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For Science
Science Map pairs well with lab work: the structured phases keep inquiry focused while leaving room for student-driven investigation.
About the Science Map framework
Science curriculum mapping in a three-dimensional framework (NGSS or equivalent) requires thinking about curriculum differently than traditional content-coverage models. The question is not just "what do I cover?" but "what phenomena will students investigate, what science practices will they develop, and what crosscutting concepts will give their thinking coherence across units?"
Three-dimensional coherence: Every unit in a coherently mapped science curriculum should develop all three dimensions: disciplinary core ideas (content), science and engineering practices (investigation, reasoning, communication), and crosscutting concepts (patterns, cause and effect, systems). The curriculum map should show how these dimensions develop across the year, not just which content appears in which unit.
Phenomenon sequencing: Science curriculum units should be organized around anchoring phenomena, real observable events that students investigate to build understanding. The curriculum map should identify the phenomenon for each unit and show how investigation of successive phenomena builds an increasingly sophisticated understanding of core ideas.
Practice progression: Science practices should be developed across multiple units, with increasing sophistication and independence. A curriculum map should show when each practice is introduced, where it is developed, and where students are expected to use it independently. Students do not learn to design investigations in a single unit; they develop this practice across the year.
Crosscutting concept threads: Crosscutting concepts (systems, patterns, scale, cause and effect, etc.) are most effective when they recur across units as genuine analytical tools. A curriculum map should identify which crosscutting concepts thread through multiple units, so students develop them as durable ways of thinking about the natural world.
Safety and lab planning: A science curriculum map should include safety planning, identifying which units require lab safety instruction, what materials need advance preparation, and when and where lab experiences occur across the year.
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