Send the trip overview
Share the date, times, trip purpose, cost details if needed, and what students should expect.
Teacher Planning Checklist
Planning a Gettysburg field trip is much easier when you have a simple checklist to follow. This page helps teachers, school trip planners, and group organizers stay on top of the most important details before departure day.
Use this checklist to organize the trip timeline, prepare students, communicate with chaperones, and avoid last-minute stress. It works well for both one-day and two-day Gettysburg visits.
Best for middle school and high school field trips that need a realistic, organized trip plan.
These first planning steps help make sure the trip has a clear purpose and a realistic schedule.
Decide what you want students to understand from the trip, such as battlefield strategy, leadership, major turning points, Civil War memory, or the Gettysburg Address.
A one-day trip can work well, but a two-day trip allows more time for major stops, student reflection, and a less rushed experience.
Instead of trying to see everything, narrow the trip to the most meaningful locations for your students and grade level.
Know how many students, teachers, and chaperones are likely attending so transportation and supervision plans are realistic.
Strong communication ahead of time prevents confusion and helps the trip run more smoothly.
Share the date, times, trip purpose, cost details if needed, and what students should expect.
Make sure forms, emergency contacts, and deadlines are all clearly communicated.
Review behavior, bus procedures, participation expectations, and appropriate conduct at historic sites.
These are the behind-the-scenes items that make the day feel organized instead of rushed.
Build a realistic itinerary that includes travel time, major stops, restroom breaks, lunch, and buffer time between transitions.
Decide how students will be divided and which adults are responsible for each group.
Gather rosters, schedules, worksheets, maps, and any reflection materials you want students to use.
Gettysburg field trips often involve walking, so students should be reminded about shoes, layers, and weather-appropriate clothing.
Use this final review before your group leaves for the trip.
Keep these easy to reach throughout the day.
Every adult should know which students they are monitoring and what the schedule looks like.
These practical details matter more than people expect during a long field trip day.
Students should know where to meet, when to return to the bus, and what to do if separated.
Even a short discussion or written response can make the trip far more meaningful.
These pages help teachers turn the checklist into a complete Gettysburg field trip plan.
Use this page to build the overall trip structure.
A practical plan for shorter student visits.
A better format for overnight school trips.
Choose the best stops for your group.
Find answers to common planning questions.
Extra ideas for making the trip smoother and stronger.