Forensic Science, taught at the bench.
Eight units from the crime scene to the courtroom — lab-led, mastery-based, and built to AP-level rigor. A student doesn't pass this course by recognizing the right answer. They pass it by analyzing a piece of real evidence in person and defending the identification, the method, and how certain it actually is — hand lens in hand.
A full year of forensic science, built around what happens in the lab.
Most forensic science courses are a textbook full of terminology with a few demonstrations bolted on — or worse, an hour of CSI. This one is the reverse. Every week is built around a piece of evidence you actually work at the bench — a fingerprint to lift and compare, a fiber under a microscope, an ink separated by chromatography, a blood type to read — and the reading exists to support that work. That is what "lab-led, not textbook-led" means, and it is the single most important thing to understand about how this course runs.
The course is organized as a two-day rhythm: a Concept Day where the idea is introduced and worked through on paper, and a Lab Day where it becomes physical — observed, measured, documented — and gets written into a real case notebook. Real forensic work is slow, careful, and probabilistic, not the instant certainty of television; the pace of the course reflects that on purpose. Between the two days, the student works at home, and that gap is where retention actually consolidates.
Mastery is the progression rule. A student advances through a concept when they can reproduce, explain, and apply it — not when the calendar says so. "Not yet" is the honest, expected default; "mastered" is earned and demonstrated. The rubrics are the instrument that makes that judgment fair and repeatable.
Eight units, in the order they build.
The concept graph runs from the crime scene and the discipline of documentation up to the moment the evidence is presented in court. Each unit has its own mastery rubric; the full sequence, with the labs and the two-day rhythm, is on the course map.
A year at the bench, not behind a screen.
Three doors into the pack.
The course map
The full eight-unit sequence, the labs, and how the two-day rhythm plays out across a school year.
The resources
Every artifact you need to run the course: rubrics, study system, pre-lab checklist, AI-use guide, and more.
The lab notes
Six short essays on why forensic science is taught this way — the thinking behind the method, in plain language.