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Curriculum Audit: A 9-Week Review Process

June 9, 2026 by Valerie Leave a Comment

What To Check Every 9 Weeks

An educator reviewing documents and checking a checklist at a desk with educational materials and a calendar marked every 9 weeks.

A meaningful curriculum audit starts with knowing exactly what you’re looking at and why. Every nine weeks, you should check whether your goals, instruction, and assessments still line up, and whether gaps or overload have quietly crept in.

Define The Scope Before You Review

Before you open a single document, decide what you’re actually reviewing. Are you auditing a single grade level, one subject area, or an entire program?

Setting the scope keeps your review focused and prevents it from turning into an overwhelming project. Pick a narrow focus for your first cycle.

You might choose just your math curriculum for grades 3-5, or a single ELA course. Write down the boundaries so everyone on the team knows what’s included and what’s not.

You can always expand in future cycles.

Compare Goals, Instruction, And Assessment

The core question in any curriculum audit is simple: do your goals, daily instruction, and assessments actually connect? Pull out your stated learning objectives and check whether each one shows up in both your teaching activities and your assessment plan.

If a goal exists on paper but never appears in a lesson or test, that’s a red flag. If an assessment measures something you never explicitly taught, that’s another one.

Conducting a curriculum audit means tracing each goal from start to finish.

Look For Gaps, Overload, And Drift

Over nine weeks, curriculum drift happens easily. Maybe you spent three weeks on a topic that only needed one.

Maybe a key standard got skipped when a snow day or assembly reshuffled your calendar. Check for these patterns:

  • Gaps: Standards or skills that received little to no instructional time
  • Overload: Topics taught repeatedly across units without adding depth
  • Drift: Lessons that wandered away from your original pacing plan

Evidence To Gather Before The Review

A person reviewing documents and charts at a desk with a calendar and checklist, symbolizing a curriculum audit and progress review process.

Good decisions come from good evidence. Before sitting down for your nine-week review, gather three categories of information: your planning documents, your student performance data, and the curriculum materials teachers actually put in front of students.

Collect Curriculum Maps, Pacing Guides, And Syllabi

Start with the documents that outline what should be happening. Pull together your scope and sequence, pacing guides, unit plans, and any syllabi that describe the intended flow of instruction.

These documents serve as your baseline. You’ll compare them against what actually happened in classrooms.

If your pacing guide says Unit 3 should wrap up by week six, check whether that timeline held. If it didn’t, note why.

Review Student Work And Assessment Trends

Student work tells you what learning actually looked like. Collect a sampling of formative assessments, quizzes, projects, and exit tickets from the past nine weeks.

Look for patterns, not outliers. If 60% of students struggled with the same skill, the issue likely isn’t individual students.

It’s probably an instructional or sequencing problem. Track trends in scores across units to see where performance dropped or spiked unexpectedly.

Examine The Curriculum Materials Teachers Actually Use

There’s often a difference between the adopted curriculum materials and what teachers actually use in daily practice. Some teachers supplement heavily.

Others skip sections they find unhelpful. Ask teachers to share the resources they relied on most during the past nine weeks.

This might include worksheets they created, videos they pulled from outside sources, or textbook chapters they skipped entirely. As noted in the Curriculum Audit Tool from TeachQuill, teams get better results when they review what’s really being taught rather than relying on vague impressions.

Knowing the real materials in play helps you spot alignment issues faster.

How To Run The 9-Week Audit Cycle

A person reviewing documents and charts at a desk with a calendar showing a 9-week timeline and progress tracking visuals around.

Running the audit itself doesn’t need to be complicated. A structured process with clear questions, the right people in the room, and a simple way to record findings keeps the cycle efficient and repeatable.

Set Review Questions And Success Criteria

Before the review meeting, write out three to five specific questions you want to answer. Vague conversations lead to vague conclusions.

Strong review questions look like this:

  • Did students meet the proficiency target for the priority standards taught this quarter?
  • Were all planned units delivered within the pacing window?
  • Which assessments produced data we actually used to adjust instruction?

Define what “good enough” looks like for each question before you start reviewing. If your target is 70% proficiency on priority standards, write that down.

Clear criteria prevent endless debates about whether results are acceptable.

Involve Teachers, Coaches, And Academic Leaders

A curriculum audit shouldn’t be something done to teachers. It should be done with them.

Teachers hold the most accurate picture of what happened in classrooms, while coaches and academic leaders bring a broader perspective on patterns across grade levels or departments. Assign roles before the meeting.

One person facilitates. One person takes notes.

Teachers share their classroom-level observations, and coaches or leaders help connect the dots across teams. Keep the tone collaborative, not evaluative.

Document Findings In A Simple Audit Template

You don’t need fancy software. A shared document or spreadsheet with these columns works well:

Area Reviewed What’s Working What’s Not Evidence Next Step
Unit 2 Pacing Completed on time Assessment scores low 45% proficiency on Unit 2 test Reteach key skills in Week 1
Standards Coverage 8 of 10 standards taught 2 standards not addressed Pacing guide comparison Add standards to Unit 3

Save each cycle’s template. Over time, you’ll build a record that shows whether your changes are making a difference.

How To Judge Alignment And Quality

A person at a desk reviewing documents and charts with folders, a calendar, and educational materials around them.

Alignment and curriculum quality aren’t the same thing, but they’re closely related. A well-aligned curriculum that lacks rigor still falls short.

A rigorous curriculum with poor sequencing confuses students. You need to evaluate both.

Check Mission, Standards, And Sequence Coherence

Start by asking whether your curriculum reflects your school’s or district’s mission. If your mission emphasizes critical thinking but your assessments only test recall, there’s a disconnect.

Next, trace your standards through the sequence. Each standard should build logically from one unit to the next.

Look for places where students are expected to apply a skill they haven’t been taught yet. That’s a sequencing problem, and it shows up as student confusion in the classroom.

Spot Missing Content, Redundancy, And Bias

Use your evidence to flag three specific issues:

  • Missing content: Skills or topics your standards require but your curriculum doesn’t address.
  • Redundancy: Activities that look different on the surface but teach the same skill at the same depth. Repetition for mastery is fine. Accidental repetition wastes time.
  • Bias: Materials that consistently center one perspective or exclude the lived experiences of your student population.

Use Findings To Measure Curriculum Quality

Pull your findings together and score your curriculum quality using simple categories: strong, adequate, or needs attention. Rate each unit or course on alignment, rigor, engagement, and accessibility.

A straightforward rating system helps your team prioritize where to focus improvement efforts during the next nine-week cycle.

Turning Findings Into Action

An educator reviewing a curriculum chart in a classroom, holding a clipboard and surrounded by educational materials and a calendar.

An audit that produces findings but no changes is just paperwork. The real value of your nine-week review comes from what you do next.

Keep your action steps focused, realistic, and directly tied to what the evidence revealed.

Prioritize Fixes For The Next 9 Weeks

You will almost certainly find more issues than you can fix in one cycle. That’s normal.

Pick two to three high-impact changes and commit to those. Ask yourself: which fix will affect the most students?

Which one addresses a problem the data showed most clearly? Start there.

Save lower-priority items for future cycles. Trying to fix everything at once leads to burnout and half-finished improvements.

Update Plans Without Creating Curriculum Creep

When you adjust your plans, resist the urge to keep adding. Every time you insert a new lesson or activity, ask what you’re removing to make room for it.

Curriculum creep happens when well-meaning additions pile up without anything being taken away. Keep your pacing guide realistic.

If a reteach block takes up a week, something else needs to shift. This discipline protects your teachers from an impossible workload and keeps instruction focused.

Feed Audit Results Into Ongoing Curriculum Development

Each nine-week audit should inform your larger curriculum development process. Over three or four cycles, patterns emerge that individual reviews might miss.

Maybe a particular unit consistently underperforms. Maybe teachers always supplement the same chapter with outside resources.

These recurring findings signal that a deeper revision is needed, not just a quick fix. Store your audit templates where curriculum leaders can access them during annual planning.

When it’s time for a full curriculum revision, you’ll have a year’s worth of evidence instead of starting from scratch.

Frequently Asked Questions

A person reviewing a curriculum progress chart with a calendar, notebooks, and a laptop in a study space.

What should I include in a 9-week progress review to make it truly useful?

Include your original learning goals, student assessment data, pacing guide comparisons, and teacher observations about what actually happened in classrooms. The review becomes useful when you compare planned instruction against delivered instruction and measure student outcomes against clear proficiency targets.

How can I tell if my current lessons are actually helping me reach my learning goals?

Look at whether your assessment results align with the skills and standards your lessons were designed to teach. If students consistently score low on a specific standard despite completing related lessons, the lessons may need restructuring.

Match each lesson to a measurable outcome and check whether students are meeting it.

Which data or evidence should I collect over nine weeks to measure real progress?

Gather formative assessment scores, student work samples, pacing guide completion records, and notes on which curriculum materials teachers actually used. Attendance patterns and assignment completion rates also help paint a fuller picture of whether instruction reached students as intended.

What are the best signs that it’s time to adjust or replace parts of my curriculum?

Consistent low performance on specific standards, teachers regularly supplementing or skipping sections, and student disengagement with particular units are strong signals. If the same problems appear across two or more audit cycles, a surface-level fix likely won’t work, and a deeper revision is needed.

How can I set clear, measurable goals for the next nine weeks without overcomplicating it?

Limit yourself to two or three priority goals tied directly to your audit findings. Write each goal with a specific metric, such as “75% of students will score proficient on the Unit 4 assessment.”

Fewer, clearer goals are more actionable than a long list of vague aspirations.

What’s a simple way to turn my review findings into an action plan for the next cycle?

Use a basic template with columns for the issue found, the proposed change, who’s responsible, and the deadline.

Pick only two to three changes per cycle.

Review the template at the start of your next audit to check whether the changes were implemented and whether they made a measurable difference.

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