Saturday, November 7, 2020

My Planning Tools for 2020-2021 :: Logbooks and Timetables

I have had some requests on Instagram to share a closer look at my logbook, so I thought I'd hop over here and pull together a post about my process this year. This is one of those topics it is much easier to blog about than to answer DMs about!

In the past, I have used different ways of organizing my plans, managing my days, and pre-reading. I have blogged about those strategies as well.

Here I'm going to share about what is working for us this year. Over the past couple years, I have changed my approach quite a bit -- and for the better! I have a few different tools I am using that have been very successful for us, even with seven students in three Forms and lots of littles alongside.

LOGBOOK

But for the past couple years, I have adopted the practice of a logbook, which is an idea straight from the PNEU that I have adapted for our family. Amy was the one who introduced me to the logbook -- she and I discussed the topic briefly over at Charlotte Mason Coast to Coast a couple years ago. (If you are a CMEC member, we went into logbooks in more depth during this year's Summer Planning Mini-Retreat, and we have plenty of examples on the Logbooks and Timetables page under Resources.)

Simply put, the logbook offers me a place to LOG the work we do in each lesson block and my reflections on that work (as needed).

This year, I am using two-page spreads for each 5-week session (half-term -- we do 10-week terms). Last year I tried to fit a full term on one spread and I didn't have enough room for notes, but the half-term seems to be just right.

I have spreads for Form 1 and 2 readings, Form 2 readings and work, Form 1 students, and family studies. This grid format allows me to see several weeks at a glance so that I can notice patterns, ongoing problems, and progress.





Here are a few filled-in examples from earlier this year:



I have my logbook open during the day so I can jot down notes as we go!

SCHOOL PLANNER

I also use my logbook for planning. I write up a weekly grid to work from based on each day's timetable, then sit down weekly to think through my plans for each slot.


blank and ready to go!

filled in for the week  (except special study -- I jot my plans there over the weekend)

I am doing less weekly pre-reading this year since I did so much over the summer. So I get out my pre-reading notebook to reference during this prep session, adding any important notes I have for myself and marking with a post-it any discussion points I want to bring up with my older kids during the week. (I just pull out my pre-reading notebook and work from there in those moments.)

My weekly prep time takes about an hour this year. I also do some related bedtime reading: the high school literature books, biographies, and religion reading that I didn't get to over the break.

At the end of each day, I look back over my plans and see what didn't get covered -- and I circle it. Sometimes I think we'll have time for an activity that we don't actually fit in the block. Sometimes we read a little less (or more!) than I had planned. I circle those things to remind me to consider them when I am making the next week's plans or to cover at Weekly Meeting, depending on what it is. (Sometimes I have a discussion point or side note I wanted to bring up with my high schoolers but forgot. That kind of thing I bring to Weekly Meeting on Friday to discuss there.)

This weekly grid is my brain during the week! I use it to direct my lessons for every Form, every day.

PRE-READING NOTEBOOK

I mentioned my pre-reading notebook above. I have shared about various ways I have kept my notes before.

This year, I had much more reading to do with the older kids in high school, so I decided to simplify my notebook practices. Instead of drawing and painting in my pre-reading commonplace and keeping another notebook with more logistical notes, I am just keeping one lined notebook this year for all of my notes. 

The first half has my book notes - main ideas, discussion points, ideas for lessons. 

The second half is a simple commonplace book -- just quotes.

I filled up most of this notebook over the summer, but there is still room for me to add for the books I am reading week by week or term by term.

This is now my reference book that I pull out weekly (at Weekly Meeting and my weekly planning time), whereas my logbook is my working notebook that I use daily.

In the past, my pre-reading notebook has been a creative project for me. But this year, I wanted to focus on commonplace-keeping and working in my Book of Centuries, so that is where I have been putting my reading-related notebook time.

LOGBOOKS FOR HIGH SCHOOLERS

My high school kids are actually keeping their own logbooks this year, so although I do keep my plans for them in my weekly spread, I do not log their work daily. I bought planners from Target that are set up with blank categories so that they could dedicate a column to each day of the week and just work down their timetable of subjects in order. I have them make note of Afternoon Occupations at the bottom of each column, and they have space on the side for them to make note of things they want to discuss at Weekly Meeting, goals for themselves, notes for online classes, etc. They have this logbook, their timetable, and their program, and they work through their days very independently! It has worked so smoothly for us.


Any notes that I want to keep about my high schoolers go right on my weekly spread (that right column has room for my general reflections). Or if there is an issue I need to troubleshoot, I just turn the page and brainstorm there! The notebook is set up like a bullet journal in that I don't have it all laid out in advance. This allows me a lot of flexibility in my record-keeping.

FAMILY TIMETABLES

I used to schedule our days to be very flexible, just carving out school blocks and fitting in whatever fit on a given day. I felt like that worked very well for the season I was in at the beginning, with more littles than school-aged kids. It also fit my personality -- I am one that tends to push too hard rather than not hard enough, so even though I didn't have a strict line-up for the day, we were always getting it all done. It was a good system for us.

But the past two years I have worked with a formal timetable for our lessons time and I LOVE it. I don't think I could school this many kids, have this many good conversations, hit all the "books and things," and still keep my sanity without it! I put a lot of thought into what our schedule should look like during the summer and then just follow it week by week. If I need to make a change -- if something isn't working or we want to try something new -- I just adjust it, print a new one, and go from there. I also review the timetable after each five weeks to see if it needs a refresh.

Since I have multiple Forms, I have a family timetable for each weekday. The stack is hung on the fridge and we flip to the right day each morning. 

My high schoolers each have their own timetable in their notebook. Their timetables are personal to them because they share books, so I often have them flip-flop subjects to accommodate that. But I still have them on our family chart so that I know roughly where they are in their day at any given time. And they join us for afternoon lessons, so I can see at a glance what time that will happen on any given day.

All that said, we do not always follow this exactly as scheduled. Right now, Emilia is napping in the morning and late afternoon and Damien naps mid-afternoon. So occasionally, I will swap the Form 1 and 2 kids' lesson block (12:30-3pm) and outside time -- we begin their line-up of lessons whenever she goes out and work straight for two hours. Then we pick back up when the older kids are scheduled to join us at around 2pm for our last few family subjects each day. But even when we change our beginning time, we still follow the order and length of these lessons, which keeps us all on track and ensures we have variety and balance!

The timetable takes away the effort of decision, holds me accountable, gives me peace in the moment, and helps our days with multiple students run smoothly. I don't have to think through whether one of my students will need a book while another student is already using it, or if I'll be available to hear a narration. All of that has been accommodated! And I can adjust during my reflection time when needed.

So that's a tour through my tools this year. Have you tried a logbook? Where do you like to keep your notes and thoughts for lessons, or your reflections on the day/term/year? I'd love to hear what methods work for you. :)

(And because I know you are going to ask: the robin's egg blue and navy notebooks below are hardcover XL classic moleskines in lined for the pre-reading notebook and dot grid for the logbook. I use my very favorite mechanical pencil, a black ballpoint, and a set of Staedtler Triplus Fineliners in these notebooks. There is some ghosting with the markers, but since I only use those to draw my grids (and opt for light colors anyway), I am fine with that. Pencil and ballpoint work fine on these thin pages, though. The thinness of the pages allows for a LOT of pages in just one small notebook, which I really like for this purpose. Links above are affiliate links. Thanks for your support!)

26 comments:

  1. Thank you SO much for taking the time to share, especially when your days are already so full! I appreciate it so much. Sounds like our personalities are quite similar so I always LOVE seeing what you do, and I've learned so much from you. (But I only have six!)

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    1. Thanks, Lindsay! I'm glad you found it helpful. :)

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  2. Hello! I tried to comment earlier, but I don't think it went through. If it did and this is a double comment, sorry! Anyway, thank you so much for sharing your wisdom with posts like this. We are behind, and I am desperately trying to figure out how to get caught up. I am wondering if you would mind sharing how you schedule or plan to plan. HA! I find myself being able to stick to the actual homeschool schedule, but I am totally unprepared because all the rest of my non teaching time is spent maintaining the rest of life. How do you make time for pre-reading, log books, and just all the general organizing, preparing, and planning along with keeping up with the rest of life? Thanks again for all your time. Your posts are very inspiring!

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    1. Hi there -- sorry for the delayed reply. :) I really have three times I plan: (1) I get as much pre-reading and prep done as I can in the summertime. (2) Each term, I take a couple hours to lay out some of the things I don't get to earlier, like making goals for our Italian lessons, collecting supplies for special study, printing artist and composer study guides for that term, etc. (3) Weekly I sit down and look over what is up for that week's work and pre-read a couple texts I didn't have time to get to over the summer. Right now, that takes about an hour weekly, sometimes two. I also fold in other household related prep during this time: menu plan, grocery list, catching up on emails, making appts, etc. I am flexible about when this block happens. Right now, Friday nights are usually a good time. At other times, I have done it Thursday nights or Saturday mornings, or have broken into two shorter blocks to fit it in. It takes some effort to form the habit, but it's really worth it to my sanity. :)

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  3. Thanks for taking the time to write it out and include pictures! I don't think you have, but have you ever written about what sort of discipline or consequences you use, especially in a mostly screen-free home or where kids do so much together that it's hard to "punish" one without punishing all? I imagine the key to keeping your well oiled machine running is kids who mostly do what they are supposed to do when they are supposed to do it. It might not be something you want to blog about, but before I give up on such an ambitious effort as yours, I figured I'd ask. My kids are mostly on track but there's just enough questioning or deferring or negotiating among them to drain much needed mom-energy and make the day too inefficient to get a full day's work in.

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    1. We mostly assign extra chores for any discipline issues. It helps to keep it from being emotional, doesn't drain my energy with decisions or negotiating, gives me much-needed help around the house, and gives the kids a chance to "work off" their attitude/negative energy/etc. I have a simple system in place for assigning extra work. It seems to deescalate issues when they arise. That's as much detail as I want to go into -- especially with older kids in the home, I'm always cautious about how much depth I go into online. :)

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  4. Thank you for sharing! This was very helpful. I track what we get done in a school day similar to your log book, but I don’t think I could fit a week in one column. It’s an interesting concept. I like the notebook aspect of it.

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    1. I actually have it set up as a column per day -- the week takes up a one-page spread. But one of the nice things about this kind of logbook is how flexible it is! :)

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  5. Could you please direct me to where the PNEU introduces logbooks? Is it a specific article? I would love to further pursue this topic by reading more. Thank you for sharing the practical aspects of these ideas through your examples!

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    1. Hi there! Sorry for the late reply -- Blogger was moderating comments without telling me. :) The logbook was described in a pamphlet sent to PNEU families -- I don't have a public link for it, but we have it accessible on the CMEC website (just mentioning that in case you are a member). Amy and I did talk about it more in a short video on CM Coast to Coast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=529g967KX9k :)

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  6. Celeste, I love looking at your timetables but am wondering how you’ve handled lessons not completed within the assigned timeframe. Do you let time dictate vs a reading or grammar/math lesson? Do you ever spill into the summer as a result?
    I’d much prefer to keep a strict schedule, especially for my oldest for whom school seems to drag on and on, but we would not finish everything in a given year.

    How do you prioritize: time vs lessons?

    Also, do you plan to continue to share your Catholic reading selections? I’ve gleaned so much from those over the years and am hoping you will still share those selections with your readers!

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    1. Hi Rachel! Yes, I let time dictate our grammar and math lessons. I am not overly worried about "finishing" a math curriculum in a given year, though I do try to be sure we are diligent and consistent in our work. Things seem to work out over time -- a child may be progressing slowly through a given section but then jump ahead on a concept that comes naturally/easily for them. I occasionally will do some lessons with one student or another who needs some extra time/practice with math over the summertime. But we don't start and finish our math books in the course of a school year -- we just pick up where we left off. :)

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  7. Hi Celeste! I know I told you I'm trying to breathe as I plan my next year, and I keep coming back to your posts. I get a sense of peace that you've managed to achieve, so I'm gleaning all I can. ;) One thing that jumped out at me this evening: Fesole Club drawing? I googled it and came across "Bestowing the Brush", which included a link to that book. Can I ask, is this something your older student does alone? We have been very inconsistent with forma l art instruction, but I really like the look of this book and the website I found. Is this something you would recommend or know about? Thanks, sorry if this is off topic for the post. :)

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    1. I have not used Bestowing the Brush since we have the CMEC's resources for art to use. Fesole Club Papers is a really neat book that is written directly to the older student, and yes, my high schoolers do it on their own. :)

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  8. Hi, Celeste! Is there any chance that I could see these images close up? When I try to zoom in, it is blurry. It wold be so helpful to me if I could see the details. Your blog is so helpful and so inspiring - thank you!

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  9. Celeste, I have to ask. How do you make the colored sheet spreadsheet work for you? I'm trying to do some colors because I need to see at a glance where *I* am supposed to be, but I can't figure out a color system! What do your colors mean?

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    1. In these examples, the colors PURELY refer to who I am working with. :) This year, I have used the colors for particular subjects instead. Both ways have benefits, but I think it would be hard to do both!

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  10. Dear Celeste, I am really wanting to try using a more formal logbook this year. But I just can't imagine writing out sheets for for 3 different forms (plus kinder and common) every single week! Can I ask how much time you put into CREATING your spreads each week? Thank you!

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    1. I only create one spread per week for my whole family, so it doesn't take much time at all -- less than five minutes to write the actual spread out on the page with the books listed (and then obviously some time to fill in as I look through the work and books, etc.). I often make several blank spreads at once so the next week's blank spread is ready for me as I work through the week. Hope that makes sense! :)

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  11. Celeste, do you "forecast?" (as in make notes/a table of daily page breakdowns, which are estimates, by doing a breakdown of recommended page counts from the term?) Or do you have a goal time you spend for reading in that subject's timetable, with remaining time for narration (oral or written), notebooking, and the other "things?" I am coming from a program in which the lesson breakdowns have been make for me, and as I am making changes I find myself finding it hard to know how to plan! From my understanding, the CMEC gives term page goals (I am not a member yet - I will join in February, woo-hoo!)

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    1. I just realized I totally missed the point and format of your logbook!!! I set mine up identical to my weekly routine (planbook) instead of by book and week - I am going to re-do that!

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    2. Yes, that's right -- my planning pages I set up according to my timetable, but my logbook I set up according to Form/book/week so I can see patterns, etc. It seems a little confusing but makes sense to me that way as I'm using it. :)

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  12. Hi Celeste Thanks for sharing how you set up all of these notebooks! Can you share which logbooks you purchased from Target for your high schoolers?

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    1. This year I bought them from Amazon because I couldn't find the layout we wanted at Target. I got this one for my daughter: https://amzn.to/3C1Ms0F (It was $17 when I bought it) and this one for my son: https://amzn.to/3C1Mupj The "teacher weekly" layout seems to be what to look for if you want the kind that has the nice boxes for each subject across the line.

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  13. Hello! Thanks so much for your posts like this. I am desperately attempting to get the CMEC rolling with a big family, and stuff like this is SO incredibly helpful. Quick question, I didn't see a logbook for Form 3, do you group that form in with high school? In other words, are they mostly managing their own day? Do you still make any use of a personal daily list for your students aside from the program? Sorry for the questions. I appreciate everything!

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  14. Hi! This post is actually from a couple years ago -- I currently have two in each Form, including Form 3. My Form 3 students work mostly independently day to day and they keep a simple logbook, but I do keep a logbook for them as well since they are in that transition phase. :) My Form 3 kids work from their timetable with guidance from me given at the beginning of each day (looking at what subjects they have that day, looking at the chapters and amounts they will read, recapping what they read last time, etc.). They also have a set of subjects they do with me like Shakespeare, Plutarch, Old Testament, etc., so they have check-ins during the day as well. It's a good combo! Hope that helps.

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