A Learning Roadmap forthe New School Year 2026/2027
The 2026/2027 school year has just begun, and the first weeks are the best time to set a learning direction. This page lays out a roadmap for every level from primary school to university, a first-week checklist, and a free AI Study Planner. For parents guiding a child, for high schoolers chasing their own targets, and for university students shaping the new semester.
The consultation is free, with no obligation to enroll.
Odd-Semester Roadmap by Level
Every level carries its own challenge at the start of an academic year, from primary school to university. Use this timeline as a rough map for 2026/2027, then adjust it to your child's rhythm, or your own.
Starting Primary (Grade 1)
Routine and early literacy foundations
July - August
Settle the routine
Build a steady school-and-study rhythm. Focus on 20-30 minute study sittings, reading aloud together, and playful arithmetic.
September - October
Strengthen literacy
Work toward fluent syllable reading, tidy handwriting, and basic addition. Watch how comfortably your child follows classroom instructions.
November - December
Independence and review
Let them attempt homework before helping, then review the end-of-semester assessment together in a relaxed way.
Private tutoring helps when reading is still halting by October, or when counting is met with avoidance.
Starting Junior High (Grade 7)
A jump in subjects and teachers
July - August
Learn the new pattern
One classroom teacher becomes a dozen subject teachers. Help build a weekly study schedule and a per-subject note system.
September - October
Secure the foundations
Grade 7 mathematics and English are the foundation of the next three years. Make sure early algebra and grammar truly land.
November - December
The first finals
The first end-of-semester assessment in junior high tends to surprise. Start structured practice three weeks before the schedule.
A tutor helps most in mathematics and English, the two subjects that most often dip in the first junior-high semester.
Starting Senior High (Grade 10)
Independent study habits and direction
July - August
Change how they study
Senior-high material demands independent study, reading ahead before class. Build the habit of summarizing and asking early.
September - October
Spot the strengths
Early marks in maths, physics, chemistry, and economics begin to sketch a direction. Note which subjects feel light and which drain energy.
November - December
Review the direction
Toward semester end, discuss subject choices and early university ideas based on one full semester of evidence.
Private sessions are most useful for science subjects that fall behind, before second-semester material stacks on a shaky base.
Grade 12
The decision year: grades, UTBK, campus choices
July - September
Material + report grades
Semester 5 is the last report card counted for the achievement track. Protect grades while lightly reviewing grade 10-11 material.
October - December
UTBK foundations
Begin regular mathematical-reasoning and literacy practice, two to three sessions a week, while mapping campus and major options.
January onward
Regular tryouts
Enter a steady tryout rhythm, review mistakes per topic, and refine time strategy.
The grade-12 roadmap is the most personal: every child has a different target campus. A free consultation helps map the distance between current grades and the target.
University Students
The campus calendar: GPA, hard courses, and the thesis
August - October
Course plan and rhythm
Build the semester plan with load in mind, lock an independent study schedule per course, and learn each lecturer’s grading style before midterms.
November - January
Projects and finals
Chip away at big assignments well before deadlines, tidy notes for finals, then review the semester GPA to reset strategy.
February - June
Second semester and endgame
Repair the courses that stalled, and for final-year students start the thesis proposal; leave room for TOEFL/IELTS or LPDP preparation if further study is the plan.
University tutors help most in quantitative courses (calculus, statistics, accounting), programming, and thesis methodology mentoring.
School Year Planner
Build a One-Year Learning Plan
For your child, or for yourself as a school or university student. Answer a few short questions and our AI drafts a quarter-by-quarter 2026/2027 plan aligned to the Indonesian academic calendar. Free, and the result is yours.
1Who For2Level3Subjects4Targets
Who is this plan for?
A Parent Checklist for the First Week
Seven small things in the first week of the school year that set the rhythm of the whole semester. All of them are free to do.
Agree on a fixed study hour
30-60 minutes at the same time each day. Consistency matters far more than duration.
Check the schedule and supplies
Timetable, textbooks, and stationery ready before Monday. A prepared child feels more confident.
Meet the homeroom teacher
Save their contact and let them know you welcome updates. That channel becomes valuable the moment something needs attention.
Write semester targets with your child
Two or three realistic targets your child agrees to, pinned above the desk. Targets owned by the child work better than targets owned by the parent.
Set up a study corner
A tidy desk, good light, away from the television. The same spot every day helps the brain enter study mode.
Agree on gadget rules
Devices out of reach during study time, returned afterward. Agreed up front, before it becomes a negotiation.
Observe for two weeks first
Note which subjects spark enthusiasm and which get avoided, then decide whether extra support is needed.
Programs Families Pick at the Start of the Year
Four common entry points when building a new school year roadmap. Every program is private, one teacher one student, on the family’s schedule.
When is the best time to start private tutoring in a new school year?
Two to four weeks after school starts is the healthiest window. Use the early weeks to observe which subjects spark enthusiasm and which get avoided. Once the pattern shows, support can be aimed precisely at the need, before semester material piles up.
Is the roadmap consultation really free?
Completely free, with no obligation to enroll. You share the situation over WhatsApp or the AI chat, and our team helps map the odd-semester learning sequence. The roadmap draft is yours to keep, with or without one of our tutors.
How does EduPoint build a 2026/2027 school-year roadmap?
We start from three things: your child’s level and curriculum, last semester’s results, and the family’s targets. Our academic team then drafts a subject priority order and a realistic session rhythm, and suggests a suitable tutor if one is needed.
What if the tutor is not a good match for my child?
You can request a replacement at no extra cost. A comfortable child-teacher match is the foundation of good learning, so the tutor-replacement guarantee applies to every program.
Is this page only for parents, or also for high schoolers and university students?
For all of them. Parents can build a roadmap for their child, junior and senior high students can plan for themselves (pick "Myself" in the AI Study Planner), and university students get their own track: a plan that follows the campus calendar, from course planning and exams to the thesis. EduPoint’s university programs cover quantitative courses, programming, thesis mentoring, and TOEFL/IELTS/LPDP preparation.
Does tutoring have to run all semester?
It follows the need. Some families use a steady weekly session to guard the rhythm; others use short packages before assessments. The consultation roadmap helps decide which pattern makes sense for your child and your budget.
Build the Learning Roadmap, Free
Tell us how things are going, for your child or for yourself. Our team helps map the next steps. The consultation is free and carries no obligation to enroll.
Step 1
Share the situation
Which grade or university year, which subjects feel heavy, and the targets for this semester.
Step 2
Receive a roadmap draft
Our team drafts an odd-semester learning sequence that fits your child.
Step 3
Decide calmly
If support is needed, we suggest a suitable tutor. If not yet, the roadmap is still yours to keep.