Scheduling the Easy Way! A 5 Step Plan
July 19, 2008 by Guest
It’s that time of year. Everyone is gearing up for school. All of the stores are having “back to school” sales on everything from school supplies, clothing and even furniture. Parents are anxious, students are feeling dread, and everyone’s pocketbooks are getting thinner. BUT this need not be the case!
We can keep our spending under control and we can be prepared and confident for a new school year. We can even pass that enthusiasm onto our kids so that the sense of dread is replaced by a sense of anticipation and excitement. So let’s get started.
But first, take a moment to read an archived article on the subject of How Not to Overspend on Curricula if you still have some purchasing to do and then click right back here to get your scheduling plans in place.
Step 1: Plan Your Subjects
Consider the ages and grades of your school children and decide which subjects they need to study this year. Obviously, you want to cover the basics primarily when your kids are still young – reading, writing and arithmetic. As they get older, you will eventually drop formal reading lessons and even handwriting assignments and begin to focus more on what they are reading and how they express themselves. Most students are ready for grammar and spelling by 3rd grade, if not earlier. Arithmetic will one day be replaced by algebra and higher math and science and history will become of greater significance to their studies as they progress through the years. At some point during your children’s education, you may want to add in other subjects such as foreign language, logic, fine arts, debate, and geography. Did I miss anything?
But I hope that it is obvious that you do not want to try to cover all of these subjects with all of your students every year. It is just too overwhelming. Pick 5 or 6 subjects that your students are most in need of and let the rest go. These are the subjects that my children study at these grade levels:
- Grades K-2 – Reading, Handwriting, Math, and History (w/narration)
- Grades 3-6 – Math, Grammar, Spelling, History and Science
- Grades 7-8 – Math, Grammar, Spelling, History, Science and Logic
- Grades 9-12 – Well, lets just say that it gets to be quite a bit more! We’ll cover higher math, literature, grammar, history, science, health, fine arts, debate, government, foreign language and various electives. But not all in one year!
By the way, we do our writing assignments across the curriculum so we do not separate it out as a separate subject. I hope that makes sense.
Step 2: Purchase Your Materials
Hopefully, you have already purchased the majority of the curricula, books and other materials that you plan on using this upcoming year, especially if you intend to start school sometime this month. If you have not, then you might want to hurry up and do so and perhaps even request expedited shipping. I am not your stellar example as I just placed all of my orders last week, but I also do not intend to start school until mid-September, so I should have plenty of time still to review the materials that will begin to arrive over the next 2-3 weeks and get my scheduling done before we start school.
If you have not decided on what curriculum you want to use, or have it narrowed down to 2 or 3 choices, then this is the time to ramp up your online and offline research and make some decisions.
Your online research includes checking out the websites of the curriculum providers that you are considering (do a Google search), reading reviews that have been posted online and asking questions on homeschool chat boards. Your offline research will include asking your friends’ opinions, visiting your local homeschool bookstore and browsing through your favorite catalogs.
Some curriculum companies offer a “trial run”, meaning if you don’t like it after 30 or 60 days then you can return it for a full refund. You may want to consider this if you are still unsure which program to use for your children.
Step 3: Set Aside Some Time
Ideally, I would suggest that you find a weekend between now and when you start school to get away with your husband and get your final preparations in order. This is not exactly a cheap option, but priceless when it comes to the time that you will have to strategize with your spouse and get your goals and schedule out on paper. The place you would choose would need to fall somewhere between boring and exciting. Let me explain… if you just pick a motel down the road to “get away”, most likely the view will not inspire you nor the surroundings intrigue you when you need to take a break and get out for a walk.
On the other hand, if you choose to head for the lake with your ski boat in tow, you might not get anything accomplished because who wants to think and strategize when you can be out waterskiing! My husband and I often head for a quaint inn on the Oregon coast which has breathtaking views, fantastic restaurants and not a whole lot to do but sit on the beach or take a walk through the foaming surf. It’s an ideal place for us to talk, to dream, to set goals and to get our thoughts out on paper.
If you absolutely cannot get away for a weekend or even an overnighter, then consider scheduling an afternoon or two at the library. This will give you the time you need to focus without the constant interruptions of family life (as charming as those interruptions can be!).
Step 4: Open the Books
Bring all of the core books that you will be using this year with you on your scheduling day or weekend, as well as any teacher’s manuals that came with your chosen programs. Bring, also, any books that you will be using for the first month or so of school. The tools that you have chosen for your children’s education will help you to determine your daily and weekly schedules. Here’s how…
Let’s use a grammar book for our example. Let’s say that there are 120 lessons in the grammar book. Take 120 and divide that by 36 weeks in the school year. Your answer is 3.33 and that means that your student will have to cover 3 and 1/3 lessons per week to finish the book in one school year. What this means to me is that I will need to schedule grammar for this child at least 3x per week. Perhaps a goal that you have for this child is that they catch up from last year. Then you might want to schedule 4 lessons per week. Or maybe you honestly don’t care if you finish every last lesson in the book, then 3 days should suffice. You get the idea.
How about math? Let’s say that the book only has 90 lessons. Well, 2 1/2 lessons per week may not be enough mathematical stimulation for this particular child. You may decide that you do not mind if your student gets ahead in this subject, so you bump it up to 4 lessons per week. These are decisions you will want to make for each student and each subject as you look through each of the core books and teacher’s manuals that you will be using with your children this year.
Here are some suggestions for how many lessons to cover each week, but by no means are these hard and fast rules, so make your own decisions and feel confident about them based on your own goals that you have set for your children and the books that you have chosen to use this year.
- Math – 4-5 days per week
- Reading/Phonics – 5 days per week
- Handwriting/Copywork – 4-5 days per week
- Grammar – 3-4 days per week
- Writing – 2-3 days per week
- History – 3-5 days per week
- Science – 2-3 days per week
- Foreign Language – 2-4 days per week
- Logic – 1-2 days per week
i>Spelling – 2-3 days per week
Step 5: Write it Out!
Now, by this time, you have invested some significant thinking time. You want to get your ideas out on paper so that you can continue to use this information all year long. You don’t want to have to go through this process again this year unless you change your program or curriculum at some point during the year.
On a piece of paper, draw out boxes for a typical school week. You may not want to schedule your subjects for specific times of the day but prefer to simply schedule the order of the subjects. Either way is fine. Personally, I choose a start time for school, but after that we just keep plugging along until all of the scheduled subjects are completed for the day. We take breaks when necessary!
You can keep this schedule solely for school subjects or you may want to include chores and other weekly events on your schedule as well. Rework the schedule until you are satisfied with it and then type it up on the computer. Post your schedule once completed in a prominent place and place one in each child’s school notebooks as well. You can’t follow a schedule that you don’t see!
Here are some examples of schedules from previous years. I don’t know if they will be helpful to you at all because we are all so different and operate within our families differently, but I wanted to post them in case you can glean anything of use from them.
- General School Schedule – list of subjects and order to be tackled
- Specific Time Schedule – initials represent different children
- Specific Week Schedule – for one child only
On this last schedule, I set time aside every Sunday evening to look ahead through the books and determine exactly what each child would be doing during that particular week. I typed in page numbers and specific activities onto the individual schedules that I kept for my two school children that I had at that time. I now have four children in school along with a toddler and a baby on the way. I will not be making these specific schedules for the children every Sunday night this year, but I will be looking ahead each Sunday to see what we’ll cover during the week ahead to determine if I need any supplies, library books, etc.
Well, I hope that I haven’t overwhelmed you and that you can appreciate how scheduling your school year in advance will alleviate most of your worrying and wondering about whether you are covering all that you should be this year. But please remember that your schedule and your plan are only tools to help you. You are not a servant to them, they are servants for you. If it’s not working, revise it or ditch it altogether and start over. You are the teacher. Modify your schedule or your books to make them work for you.
Have a great school year and enjoy the process,
Terri Johnson
Knowledge Quest, Inc.
www.knowledgequestmaps.com – try our maps free!
www.bramleybooks.com – we are looking for authors for our new book
www.homeschoolblogger.com/knowledgequest – see what we’re up to.
www.kqbusiness.com – our business helping your business to succeed!

Terri Johnson and her husband Todd operate Knowledge Quest, Inc., a company which specializes in the publishing of maps, timelines and historical biographies. Their mission for the company is to help make the subjects of history and geography enjoyable for both teacher and students. They have created and published over 25 history and geography resources. Terri’s Blackline Maps of World History have been widely recommended in the homeschool community and beyond. Knowledge Quest, Inc. won the “Excellence in Education” award granted by The Old Schoolhouse magazine for best geography company two years in a row. Terri resides in Oregon with her husband Todd and their five children whom she teaches at home.
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Kysha on Sat, 19th Jul 2008 12:28 pm
Thanks, Terri! Very helpful post!
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Lorraine on Sat, 19th Jul 2008 1:12 pm
Link to that archived article would be nice. Otherwise, great tips!
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Anonymous on Sat, 19th Jul 2008 2:50 pm
Very helpful tips for scheduling and planning ahead! Just curious, what curr. would you recommend for Spelling and Logic? I have a 3rd and 7th grader.
thanks!
sheryles@earthlink.net
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Christine on Sun, 20th Jul 2008 1:48 am
We’re in the midst of the “set aside some time and figure out what we’re doing when” stage. This post was great to list and describe the stages of the crazy planning that has to happen between now and the end of our “break”. Thanks!
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Sallie on Wed, 23rd Jul 2008 11:57 am
Thanks for everything in this post… very helpful!!
God bless,
Sallie
http://www.angelfire.com/sc/anderklan/seasidetales
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40winkzzz on Wed, 23rd Jul 2008 9:37 pm
It is funny that I happened to read this now, as I was just reminding Hubby today that we need to schedule the “school planning weekend” soon! My “school planning getaway” is a bit different from yours, as I do it at home where all my stuff is, and it is the children, accompanied by hubby, who get away! His mom lives out of town, so he usually takes them there. (A long day trip to a beach or museum works in a pinch.)
I’ve occasionally had a teen or two stay home during this time, which still works b/c they are happy to have “cave time” and let me have mine, and then when I need a break I can spend some younger-kid-free time with them. But usually, it is just me and my brain, alone in the house.
Whether it’s a day or (preferably) a weekend, this time provides me an opportunity to focus with fewer distractions. While I never complete all I need to do during this time, it sure provides a good head-start. Some years I have already done some “thinking” and choosing and ordering and can get right into the scheduling stage, but most years this weekend is when I actually make myself get back into “school mode” and start the thinking-through and choosing process, and I have to follow through with the rest afterwards. Either way, it really helps to set aside this time.
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Karin Katherine on Thu, 24th Jul 2008 3:48 pm
This year I did the hotel room planning session and it was the BEST. I can see how it might be easier to have the kids go somewhere so I can be home w/ all of my supplies—loading up the car was tough, but still worth it.
what a great planning article. In this month’s downloads you can find some forms to help you plan out your year—courtesy of me! lol
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Sharilyn Beasley on Wed, 18th Feb 2009 11:49 am
Wow! I just started this adventure and oh, what an adventure it is. I never thought to do a planning weekend to as my 15 yo autistic son puts ” get my head on” lol:)Thank you so much for this. Now I know what to do to have quite long enough to plan my ADHD son’s schedule and curriculum. What an awesome idea.
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