8.31.2017

Homeschool Bullet Journal Setup

It's been a while since my first and only post on this blog. Something I expect to remedy this year as I've missed blogging quite a bit. Life got a bit more busy than I had planned and some of the things I was trying to juggle had to be allowed to slide for the time being. C'est la vie.

This actually brings me to the reason for this post today. I have discovered what I believe to be the best way (at least for me) to keep all those things from piling up and sliding so often. 

Bullet journaling. 

If you've never heard of it, stop right where you are and go watch the video below. Be careful! You're stepping in a rabbit hole. Save the falling down it until after you finish my post. 


I've been bullet journaling for about a year and a half now and I just have to tell you that this is the ONLY planner I will ever use again.

As a creative, my brain is constantly hopping all over the place from topic to idea to question and back again and again all day long. 

Since high school, I've recognized the benefit of physically writing things down to get them sorted in my head and I've faithfully been a note-taker and a list-jotter ever since. The problem wasn't in my writing it down. It was in my ability to retrieve the info again later when I needed to. I found myself rifling through the dozens of notebooks I kept searching for that one thing I needed. Ugh. Only successful about half the time, I knew there had to be a better way. 

I've tried so many different planners searching for "THE ONE" that would answer all my quirky needs with a minimum of the extra things I didn't need or want to use.
No luck. Every planner I tried ended up shelved after only a few weeks because it just wasn't cutting it for me. 

Then one day I stumbled upon an article about a planner you make yourself. Skeptical, because goodness knows I've tried everything including trying to design my own to be printed, I watched the video.

Something clicked in my brain and I spent the rest of the day (and, if I'm honest, most of the evening) searching and reading everything I could about bullet journals and this crazy system created by that lovely Ryder Carroll. I could kiss the guy! This just might work.

Long story shorter, I started my regular every day bujo (that's how those of us converts lovingly refer to our bullet journals) and after only a month I was completely convinced.
There was no going back. 

I'd never been so organized. And it was FUN! My creative side flourished amid those first pages! Ahhh.... this was what I was looking for. If I got bored of one layout or spread, I just found another to try until I nailed down what worked best for me.

I knew I needed this for our homeschool too, so I started searching for lesson plan layouts and posts about how other homeschoolers were using this fabulous tool.

Not surprisingly, I didn't find any that were exactly what I thought I needed, so I started mixing up some of the elements I thought would work from the regular bullet journal layouts I had spent the last several months playing with. I worked it through our whole year of schooling and tweaked a couple things, but for the most part it worked beautifully.

This year, I put a new journal at the top of my list of supplies and counted the days until I could get my hands on it and draw out all those beautiful school spreads.

Here's how I did it: 

First of all, I chose to use the Leuchtturm 1917 Master Slim dotted notebook because I wanted enough room to record all the assignments each day and to fit one entire week's worth of information on one 2 page spread. I hate flipping back and forth. It's a thing. You may not care about that thing like I do. Suit yourself.


(This is my new one sitting on top of the one from last year that I used as inspiration for our set up)

So, first thing I do is set up the school year overview calendar in the front of the book.


 After that comes my year at a glance calendars where all the holidays and birthdays and special events are recorded. I got a little calendar crazy this year (as you will soon see) because I changed my mind after the fact. I decided I preferred just having the year at a glance and my monthly calendars so next year I will know better, but you just never know until you try it out sometimes, right?



Here are my monthly calendars up next. You'll notice I kept with the theme for each month in my decorations.




I love these because they give me much more room to write in details and help when I'm planning unit studies. You may also notice that I start my weeks on Monday. That's because I love having the school part of the week separated from our weekends. The little separator between the two in each month helps me quickly see the difference.

On the left page of the next spread is our current curriculum list on top and all the classes Bug has signed up for through our local homeschooling co-op called Navigators.
On the right page is our reading log sheet where we'll record all the books we read throughout the year and give them a rating. The three columns on the left say, "book, video, fave", because I'm a stickler for making him read the book before he gets to watch the movie.


Next up, we have the bones of the whole thing. The weekly spread. This thing is a powerhouse for keeping us on track all year and tracking all the extra stuff we need to remember.


Here's a peek at a filled in spread from last year so you can see how I use this baby.


The space on the bottom of each daily box is used to record any events, appointments, sports meets, or other things non-school related that are to occur that day. (As you may notice, this particular week was busy as we were in the middle of our cinnamon roll fundraiser.)

Some of the elements on this spread will move around a bit and some of them may not make it to the end of the year (like the lunch tracker), but that's the beauty of a bullet journal. If you need it to change, you have the freedom to change it. If something is not working, you take it out. If you find you need to track something specific, you add it in. This thing is totally flexible.

That's the key. That's why it works for me. I never get bored with the layouts because I can just tweak them. I am in love. Also, I will never need any other planner.  How do you beat making one yourself?

How about you? I'd love to hear how you do it. 

8.25.2012

It's coming....can you smell it?




It's nearly that time of year again. I can smell it coming. The morning air is crisp and sweet with the first hints of fall, but gently fades with the warmth of the sun as we relish the last few days of carefree summertime.

Ever since we returned from our lovely family reunion/summer vacation I've been pouring over all of my homeschooling plans and researching curricula and potential field trips. My brain is full nearly to overflowing with so many different ideas.



This is the second year of homeschooling for us (if you don't count the miserable failure we had when I thought it would be a great idea to attempt it for the first time with an online school....and three kiddos who needed the computer all day....ugh. What a mess I made of that one. It only lasted 4 months and they were promptly put back in public school as I asked myself what the heck I was thinking.) Anyway, this year has Bean in 7th grade and Bug in 3rd....and me feeling much more confident about the possibilities of more fun this year.

While I have decided on most of the curriculum we will use, I'm still up in the air about what to do with Bug and his math. We only made it about 3/4 of the way through his math book last year. Yes, that's right. I'm one of those moms who are learning to get over the fact that we don't usually finish the entire book. It drives me quite crazy. Gah! But I'm trying to let it be ok.

Anyway, since Bean had so much fun with Life of Fred math last year, Bug really wants to do Fred math, but I'm torn because he needs to test for the first time at the end of this year and I'm just wondering if Life of Fred is enough. I might have him do Saxon instead.........hmm....well, I better get it figured out here in the next week so I can get it ordered...whatever IT ends up being.

I'm drooling over the new Well Planned Day's planning software! Have you SEEN that thing?!! It does nearly everything except for make your toast in the morning! Wow. Only thing stopping me from buying it and going to town is the cost...yikes. I just don't have it this year, but I'm definitely putting it on my wishlist for next year.

This year I downloaded THIS downloadable and customizable planner from www.dragonfliesinfirst.com and am giving it a shot. 


So far, I think I like it, but there are soooooo many different planners out there to choose from and I am well known for not being able to decide when there are too many choices before me....Gah! Ok...breathe.......  I think I'll stick with the one I downloaded and see if it works for me.

What do you use to plan your yearly and/or weekly lesson plans?