Yes. One that, hopefully, the chief flight instructor wrote. I refused to use a commercially available syllabus (even though it would have gotten us our 141 certificate probably 6 months sooner). I wanted to write something relevant to our students and our operation.141 schools are run this way everywhere. You dont write your own, you follow the schools syllabus, right?
The hard part isn't writing the syllabus, it's writing the lesson plans. I assume you've got those.
Here's what I'd recommend (what I did).
Just go sit down tonight with a legal pad and part 61. Write down everything required to be taught for Part 61. Label the "pre solo" items separately. Now tape that piece of paper to your wall.
Now, start jotting down notes on the legal pad as to what you think should be taught first. As you write something down, you put a check mark next to it on the "required to be taught" sheet. You can repeat items as you wish, but you have to have AT LEAST the items/subject areas required by part 61.
Once you've done that, assign times for each lesson. "Lesson 1 should take an hour. Lesson 2, maybe 1.5..."
After that, total up your times. Make sure your instrument, night, cross country, etc. all equal or exceed those required by Part 61.
Double check it to make sure it's in the order you think it should be and staple it together (each "lesson" should have been a different sheet on the legal pad). Now, go to kinkos and have them make you 5 copies of the whole thing and staple it together.
You've now got a master copy and a bunch of other copies. Once you go through it a few times with a student, you'll see where it needs changed. Make the changes on the master copy and/or consider typing it out.
Rinse, repeat.
If you really want to have a good time, you can then dig into Part 141 and see if your syllabus fits the requirements of Part 141. If it does, when you're asked to do a 141 for someone...you're good to go! Just write up the TCO, add a few room diagrams, some safety procedures (which you should make for your students anyway...assuming your school doesn't have an SOP book for students), tail numbers and instructor qualifications and submit. Bada bing.
-mini