PlannerGrid · Printable Academic Calendars Updated for the 2025–2026 school year
PlannerGrid · Semester Schedules · Week-by-week grid

2029 Spring semester — Week-by-week grid (2028–2029 school year)

A printable Week-by-week grid for the Spring semester of 2029 (inside the 2028-2029 school year) — every instructional week laid out with unit, assessment, and parent-event columns and federal holidays overlaid.

2028–2029Spring semesterWeek-by-week gridPacing guide

About this semester schedule

This is a printable Week-by-week grid semester schedule for the Spring semester of 2029, inside the 2028-2029 academic year. The Spring semester opens after winter break in January and closes with end-of-year exams in May, and this template gives you a single sheet to lay out instructional units, assessments, professional-development days, and parent communication events for the entire term.

It is built for teachers writing a syllabus in late summer or early winter, for instructional coaches planning department-wide pacing guides, and for homeschool parents who want a clear view of how a term breaks into weeks before they pick a curriculum order.

What's on the page

The Week-by-week grid version of the semester schedule is structured around the rhythm of a U.S. school term, not a calendar quarter.

  • All instructional weeks of the Spring semester, numbered W1 through the final week
  • A column or row for the unit or chapter title so the term reads as a story rather than a list of dates
  • A column for the major assessment of each week — quiz, project milestone, lab, paper draft, or none
  • A column for parent-facing events: conference week, progress report dates, mid-semester check-in
  • Federal-holiday overlays from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management list, marked at the row edge so a holiday week reads as four planning columns instead of five
  • A footer row reserved for buffer days, snow days, and unplanned re-teaching time
Advertisement

Why a semester view matters

At the start of a term it is tempting to plan week by week and trust that the math will work itself out. It rarely does. The single most common cause of a rushed final unit is spending three weeks on the opening unit because the calendar was never laid out in front of you. Printing a semester schedule on a single sheet, then walking through each unit and asking whether the unit fits in the available weeks, surfaces the squeeze early — when there is still time to cut a week or move a project rather than rush an assessment.

Recommended workflow

Block out the major events first — first day of school or first day after the break, holiday weeks, the testing window, and the last day of the semester. Next, drop in the units in pencil with a generous estimate of weeks. Add a one-week buffer somewhere in the second half of the term; you will use it. Then walk through your colleagues' schedules and look for overlapping due dates that would crush a student in a single week. Finalise in pen.

Re-print the schedule once at mid-semester and re-baseline the second half — one of the most useful habits a department can adopt is a five-minute re-baseline meeting in the week after a major holiday.

How holidays affect the term

For the Spring semester, the federal holidays you'll see on the page are the ones that fall inside that window. Fall terms typically include Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans Day, and Thanksgiving. Spring terms typically include MLK Day, Presidents' Day, and Memorial Day; spring break, although nearly universal, is a district-specific date and is left blank for you to write in. Summer terms include Juneteenth and Independence Day, both of which sit inside compressed sessions and tend to truncate the available instructional time.

Tips for printing

Print at 100% scale — semester schedules use small type by design and any reduction will compress the assessment column to the point of illegibility. If you intend to fold the page into a desk planner, print on lighter 20-lb paper; if the page lives on a department wall, print on heavier stock and trim the white margin to fit a poster frame.

Pairs well with

These printable templates from PlannerGrid are commonly used alongside the 2029 Spring semester — Week-by-week grid (2028–2029 school year). Open any of them, print together, and clip into the same binder.

About PlannerGrid templates

Every template on PlannerGrid is built for the U.S. school calendar — an August-to-July cycle that lines up with how teachers, students, and homeschool families actually plan their year. We overlay U.S. federal holidays from the Office of Personnel Management list so school breaks and observed days never collide with planned instruction. The grid is the same across every page so you can print, hole-punch, and mix layouts in one binder.

More from Semester Schedules

Keep browsing

All Semester Schedules →