Semester Curriculum Map
Map a single semester of instruction with realistic pacing, organizing 18 weeks of units, standards, and assessments so you start the term with a clear plan and finish with everything covered.
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- Structured PDF with guiding questions per section
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When to use this template
- Planning a semester-length course (high school)
- Beginning-of-semester planning when a full year-long map feels like too much
- Second-semester replanning based on first-semester experience
- When you need to coordinate pacing with colleagues teaching the same course
- Any time you want to see 18 weeks of instruction at a glance
Template sections
A semester map works when it is realistic from the start, accounting for all the non-instructional days before you allocate weeks to units, not after. This template builds in time for disruptions, review, and mid-semester adjustment so the plan survives contact with the actual school calendar.
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About the Semester Map framework
A semester curriculum map covers approximately 18 weeks of instruction, the standard half-year in most school systems. It is more detailed than a year-long map and more strategic than a unit plan, sitting between them in the planning hierarchy.
When semester maps are most useful: Semester maps are essential for semester-length courses (common in high school), for teachers who plan one semester at a time (a reasonable approach for newer teachers), and for second-semester planning after revising based on first-semester experience.
Realistic week allocation: Eighteen weeks of instruction is not eighteen weeks of teaching. Account for standardized testing, school events, student holidays, review days, and assessment weeks. Most teachers find they have closer to 15–16 weeks of genuine instructional time per semester when all disruptions are counted.
Mid-semester review: A semester map should include a mid-semester review and adjustment point, usually after 8–9 weeks. This is when you compare actual progress against the plan and make adjustments for the second half. Units that went longer than planned compress those that follow, and a mid-semester review makes these tradeoffs visible before they become crises.
Second semester considerations: Second-semester maps often need to account for the realities of spring term: spring standardized testing, senior transitions, increased absences, and motivational challenges. Building these into the map from the start, rather than discovering them as disruptions mid-semester, produces more realistic plans.
Coherence across semesters: If you teach the same students two semesters in a row, your semester maps should connect. The second semester's first unit should explicitly build on where the first semester ended. This connection is most visible when you look at both maps together.
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