What Is a Lesson Plan in Fleedu?
A lesson plan in Fleedu is a structured record of the learning objectives, activities, and developmental focus areas you intend to address for a specific child over a defined period (typically a week or a month). It is attached to an individual student rather than to a class as a whole, which means you can tailor the pace and emphasis of each plan to the child’s current needs. Each plan is organized around development areas — for example, cognitive development, language and literacy, social-emotional skills, and physical/motor skills — and includes the specific objectives you want the child to work toward and the activities you’ll use to get there.Lesson plan templates, development areas, and milestone checkpoints can all be customized to match your school’s specific curriculum. You are not locked into any default framework. Contact your school administrator if you need to add or modify curriculum settings before creating your first plan.
Create a Lesson Plan
Navigate to Lesson Plans
From the main menu, tap Activities, then select Lesson Plans. You’ll see a list of existing plans sorted by student name and creation date.
Select a student
Search for or scroll to the student you’re creating the plan for and tap their name. Each lesson plan belongs to exactly one student, ensuring the record stays part of their individual profile.
Set the plan period
Choose the start date and end date for this plan. Weekly and monthly periods are the most common, but you can set any range that fits your program’s rhythm.
Choose development areas
Select one or more development areas that this plan will focus on. The available areas depend on your school’s curriculum configuration and may include:
- Cognitive — problem-solving, numeracy, early literacy, logical reasoning
- Language & Communication — vocabulary, listening, expressive language
- Social-Emotional — self-regulation, empathy, cooperative play
- Physical/Motor — gross motor coordination, fine motor skills, body awareness
- Creative Arts — imagination, artistic expression, music and movement
- Moral & Spiritual (Nilai Agama dan Budi Pekerti) — relevant for schools following Kurikulum Merdeka
Define objectives and activities
For each development area you’ve selected, enter:
- Objective — a concise statement of what you want the child to achieve or demonstrate by the end of the plan period. Example: “Child can sort objects by color and shape independently.”
- Planned Activities — the specific tasks, games, exercises, or experiences you’ll use to work toward the objective. You can add multiple activities per objective.
Link to milestones
For each planned activity, tap Link to Milestone to connect it to one or more milestones from your school’s milestone library. When you later log a milestone observation for this student, Fleedu will show you which lesson plan activities contributed to that milestone — closing the loop between planning and assessment.
Customizing Your Curriculum and Milestones
Fleedu is designed to adapt to your school’s curriculum, not the other way around. From the School Settings panel (accessible to administrators), you can:- Add, rename, or reorder development areas to match your framework.
- Create custom milestone checkpoints within each area.
- Build lesson plan templates that pre-fill common objectives, saving teachers time when creating plans for new students.
Schools following Kurikulum Merdeka can configure Fleedu to reflect the six core developmental domains (Elemen Capaian Pembelajaran) defined in the official framework. Schools using Montessori can organize development areas around the five areas of the Montessori curriculum. Custom or hybrid frameworks are also fully supported.
Linking Lesson Plans to Milestone Observations
The real power of lesson plans in Fleedu comes from connecting them to your ongoing milestone observations. When you log a milestone observation (see Milestone Tracking), you can reference the lesson plan activity that led to the observed behavior. This creates an evidence trail that shows:- Which planned activities were actually implemented.
- Which objectives were met, partially met, or still in progress.
- How each child’s development is progressing relative to the plan you set.
Reviewing and Updating Lesson Plans
Children develop at their own pace, and lesson plans should evolve to match. Fleedu makes it easy to revisit and update any plan:- Open the student’s profile and tap the Lesson Plans tab.
- Select the plan you want to update.
- Tap Edit Plan to modify objectives, add new activities, or extend the plan period.
- Tap Save to record your changes.
Can I copy a lesson plan from one student to another?
Can I copy a lesson plan from one student to another?
Yes. Open an existing plan, tap the three-dot menu (⋮), and choose Duplicate Plan. You’ll be prompted to select a different student as the new plan’s recipient. All objectives and activities are copied over, and you can then customize them for the new student before saving. This is a significant time-saver when you’re onboarding a new student at a similar development stage to an existing one.
Can parents see their child's lesson plan?
Can parents see their child's lesson plan?
Lesson plans are an internal teaching tool and are not automatically shared with parents. If you want parents to see the learning goals you’ve set for their child, you can discuss the plan contents during a parent meeting or share key objectives through the Daily Activities feed or a development report. A formal parent-facing lesson plan sharing feature is on the Fleedu product roadmap.
What's the difference between a lesson plan and a milestone observation?
What's the difference between a lesson plan and a milestone observation?
A lesson plan is forward-looking — it describes what you intend to teach and what you hope the child will achieve. A milestone observation is backward-looking — it records what you actually observed the child do. Together, they form a complete picture: you plan, you teach, you observe, and you document. Fleedu links these two records together so the evidence you collect during observations can be directly traced back to the plan that guided your teaching.
