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Archive for Students

woman in black juggling blue balls

5 Strategies For Students to Manage Time Tasks

Posted by Carolyn on
 August 10, 2015
  ·  2 Comments

It’s early August.  One glance at the window of any office supply store will confirm the inevitable – the new school term is just around the corner.   Like many parents, you anticipate the new school year with trepidation: back to the pressure of projects, assignments and exams but your child, the student, is not very good at managing his/her time. It’s possible your student feels the same trepidation and has already suffered the stress caused by struggling to manage time commitments.

5 Strategies to Help Juggle Time

Time tasks are better managed than juggled.

Here are five strategies that will help  your student be successful at managing their time tasks. timeliness and success.

1. Modify your Perspective; Time Can Not Be Managed.

Time is time.  It ticks past at the same pace every second of every minute of every hour of every day. No matter how we try, no one has yet found a way to make it stop. Needless to say, the enduring state of time means we have absolutely no control over it. None. Zilch. Nada. You can’t control it, stop it, or manage it.

There, feel better?  You are off the hook to manage time. Insert sigh of relief.

What we do have control over is what we do with our time, how we use it.  Anything you commit to do, no matter how big or small, is a time task or time commitment. An assignment is a time task; so is taking out the garbage, going to hockey practice and eating supper.  Most of us don’t think of eating supper as a time task but just ask your stomach and the coach what happens if the school bus is late and your student can’t get supper until after hockey practice at 8 pm.  The better we are at managing our time tasks, the more successful we are at managing our relationship with time.

2. Identify Time Tasks

Help your student be really clear on all the things for which they have  time commitments. In most young people’s lives many there are lots, many of which can’t altered, modified or moved. There are 2 types of time tasks – the regular/routine (RR)and the irregular/occasional (IO). RR tasks are frequently the more obvious ones such as class schedules, hockey practice, dance class(es), Youth Group and piano lessons. IO tasks might include assignments, shopping for prom dress and hockey tournaments.  I consider exams to be RR since in most high schools the exam schedule is known well in advance and can be clearly planned for. Birthdays would be IO unless you can remember the dates of everyone’s birthday and are certain when the all the celebrations will be. Less obvious RR are sleep, meals and the orthodontist appointments (same time every month right?). More challenging are IO time tasks over which you have no booking control like the hockey games and  group projects. Driving time is both RR and IO as it is frequently attached to an activity.

3. Use a Day Planner/Calendar.

Using a day planner, in whatever form, is likely the most significant strategy for helping a student manage their time tasks.  Planners provide the opportunity to do just that – plan.  And then there are all the synonyms for planning. People who plan and are prepared, have an interesting relationship with luck.  Use whatever form of planner works for your student and is appropriate for their age.  In some cases this will be the calendar on their phone.  In others, it will need to be a wall calendar over which you still have some influence or even help them insert their time tasks.

Start by having the student fill in their RR tasks, remembering to leave space for meals, sleep and driving time.  Next have the student fill in whichever IO tasks they are aware of.  This is a great opportunity to fill in related tasks such as finding the shoes to go with the prom dress or sharpening the skates before the game.  Encourage them to write in all their friends’ and family members’ birthdays. Why? Often there will be parties booked around these dates and with the dates booked in the agenda a student can anticipate a gathering of friends or family around the birthday date. With the heads up on their agenda, they can also budget their funds if they wish to go out to celebrate a friend’s birthday.

If they are old enough, encourage your student to keep the agenda with them at all times in their back pack or hand bag.  It will then be available for reference when the opportunity to babysit comes up or a party invitation arrives.

4. Plan Tomorrow Today

Being prepared is still a good motto.  Teach your student to check their agenda at the end of the day and plan for the following.  If they are still young and using a wall calendar, teach them to check the calendar before bed to prepare their clothes, dance bag, hockey gear or homework books before the rush of the morning.

5. Verb-up the To Do List.

Developing a list of the time tasks associated with assignments and other school activities is a powerful tool for getting time tasks accomplished.  Unfortunately, these lists frequently become a list of nouns waiting for attention rather than actions requiring time e.g. Geography project, English outline, prom dress, new binder.

A more helpful list uses at least one verb to clearly indicate what needs to be done and includes a deadline.  Being more specific when writing the list also helps your student realize what the full time tasks actually involves and how they will know when it is completed.  For example:

Geography project becomes,

Review (teacher) Mr. Sanders topic list and choose a topic for geography project.  Submit to Mr. Sanders  by September 30.

Prom dress becomes,

Call BFF. Book shopping time this weekend. Set up FB page for prom dress for our grad year. (who knew dresses had their own FB pages?)

Each of these tasks has now become a more complete assignment by verbing-up the task statement.  Your student will know what needs to be done and when it is accomplished.

School may be just around the corner but you and your student can be armed and ready for the added pressures it brings.  These five strategies will set up your student to manage, not juggle, their time tasks with a straight A result.

Organizing Students
Tags : Children, organizing strategies, organizing students, Students, Time Management, Time Tamers

Getting the Kids “To Do’s” into “Got Done”

Posted by Carolyn on
 October 19, 2009
  ·  No Comments

If you have school age children you are very familiar with agendas, projects, dictation, reading lists and the myriad of tasks that come home for the children to accomplish. You probably even monitor that your children sit down and do homework each evening in order to get through the list. Maybe you go as far as to check that they have the due dates in their agendas.

Have you ever taught them how to write the To List so that it gets done?

Try teaching your children to write their To Do’s with action verbs up front. For example:

“Project Outline” becomes
“Write rough copy of project outline”.

The task is clear and limited. You will both know what needs to be done and when it got accomplished.

Organizing Students
Tags : Children, homework, Lists, Students

First Term – Out

Posted by Carolyn on
 February 5, 2009
  ·  No Comments

Has your high school student just finished first term? Is his/her home workspace cluttered with the remnants of first term study?

Do everyone a favour, especially your student, and help them purge out the first term to make room for second term. The longer you leave the remnant clutter hanging around, the less likely it is to be sorted and purged before chaos sets in. Help your student sort through the notes for relevant material to keep such as key assignments and throw out the rest.

Helping students purge on a timely basis helps them learn sorting and prioritizing skills for their “office” before material becomes clutter. In addition, you will be teaching them the value of a clear, uncluttered space. They will be able to focus on the task at hand (second term’s material).

You’ll both feel better.

Organizing Students
Tags : purging, school work, Students, Teenagers

The (Dis) Organized Teenager – Exam Time!

Posted by Carolyn on
 January 13, 2009
  ·  No Comments

Here is comes folks. All us semestered families are heading for the last stretch of the semester and the big E word: Exams.

For some teenagers exams are just another opportunity to show off how much they know and how much fun they had studying. Not my teenager. She is having fun alright: at the swim meet, the ski hills and movie nights at a friend’s house. So how do we instill the discipline to study and review all that must know information in order to encourage the best opportunity for success in our teens?

Here are some tips for your teen to set themselves up for success:

Step 1 – Establish a list of all the material that will be covered in the exam. If you aren’t sure, check in with the teachers before the term is over. Once classes are out they are harder to find. Most curriculum is broken into units providing a natural way to organize and list the material. A term is likely about 10 – 13 units. Review the list and your notes. Do you have all the information you need to study? Do you need to pick up notes from a friend or teacher for classes you missed?

Step 2 – Break down the material into the time you have to review it. If you have 5 days to study for 4 exams and 4 hours a day, you may choose to use one hour a day per subject. For ten units that would be 2 units per day. Did I loose you on the math? Simplify: Break down the material into bite size chunks for which you have the time.

Step 3 – Remove all other distractions (cell phone, ipod), be rested, well fed and take frequent breaks. Most adults can concentrate for about 45 minutes. Expect your teen to get up and move at least every 45 minutes.

Step 4 – Review, repeat. Review, repeat. Familiarity will assist with recall.

Good luck!

Organizing Students
Tags : Students, Teenagers, Time Management

The (Dis) Organized Teenager – The Agenda

Posted by Carolyn on
 November 19, 2008
  ·  No Comments

When I was a student, no one carried an agenda. When I entered the business world, everyone carried a day planner. Nowadays, many school boards create day planners or agendas for the students in their schools. Many day planner publishing companies provide planners targeted specifically for students.

Trying to get a student to use a day planner is a much harder task than just finding one to use. If, however, a student can learn to use the tool on a regular basis they will also learn it is a powerful tool to stay organized and give their brain a break from having to keep a lot of schedule and due date information. Here’s some tips to help get your student on top of their agenda:

  • Have the student enter into the day planner all the regular activities in their week such as hockey practice, soccer, dance or band practice.
  • Have them enter in all the irregular schedule items such as holidays, band concerts or vacations. Most of these items are booked many months in advance and are available from the program organizer.
  • Encourage them to write in all their friends’ and family members’ birthdays. Why? Often there will be parties booked around these dates and with the dates booked in the agenda a student can anticipate a gathering of friends or family around the birthday date. With the heads up on their agenda, they can also budget their funds if they wish to go out to celebrate a friend’s birthday.
  • Encourage them to keep the agenda with them in their back pack or hand bag at all times. Then it will be available for reference when the opportunity to babysit comes up or when a party invitation arrives.
Organizing Students
Tags : day planners, planners, Students, Teenagers, Time Management

The (Dis) Organized Teenager – 2 Planning & Anticipation

Posted by Carolyn on
 September 23, 2008
  ·  No Comments

Just like the rest of us teenagers need to be able to anticipate the next step in theirs lives if they are expected to be prepared.

Avoid changing plans too quickly without giving your teenager time to shift gears. Help them use their agenda, day planner to other organizer to keep track of their upcoming activities, obligations and events. If you have to change/make new family plans, try and give them warning and give them the courtesy of asking what impact these changes/plans will have on their existing schedule.

This approach will assist your teen in learning to anticipate, plan and be prepare for whatever is coming down the pipe.

Organizing Students
Tags : Students, Teenagers, Time Management

Tips for Managing Dyslexia

Posted by Carolyn on
 July 30, 2008
  ·  No Comments

Individuals coping with dyslexia are often looking for strategies to support them both in the workplace and at home. As a professional organizer, I am often asked about organizing strategies for managing varies learning disabilities. This knol, recently written by Sandra Crux, may be helpful to those of you who are managing with dyslexia. The knol, or bit of knowledge, is designed to be an authoritative article on a subject. Ms. Crux provides a comprehensive collection of strategies for managing dyslexia both for adults and childrens. I hope you find it helpful.

http://knol.google.com/k/sandra-crux/dyslexia-4-using-organizational/8d8s0hdum67q/5#

Organizing Challenges Organizing Strategies
Tags : Dyslexia, Students

My Favourite Colour is – Organized!

Posted by Carolyn on
 May 31, 2008
  ·  No Comments

Here is a quick follow up post from two days ago, after I received several questions from clients.

Yes, I really did mean for everyone in the family to pick a colour to be their colour for family organizing. You’d be surprised how successful this can be. Use everyone’s favourite colour to help pick out all kinds of household items from toothbrushes to tote sacks to calendering.

My husband grew up in a family of 10: M&D, 6 children, one maid and her son. His colour was green. There was green thread on his socks so they could be identified in the wash. Naturally, when we picked colours for ourselves and the children for our family calendar – his colour was green!

Home Organizing
Tags : calendars, Children, Colour, Professional Organizer, Schedule, Students, Time Management

Anticipation – The Greatest Time Management Tool

Posted by Carolyn on
 December 4, 2007
  ·  No Comments

When it comes to time management, there is nothing more valuable than the ability to anticipate an event or events. Isn’t that what our organizers, calendars, day timers, and PDA’s are all about. The multi million dollar industry of calendars is based on the notion that we like to anticipate what is coming in our lives. With anticipation comes the ability to schedule both our time and our resources – like the car for example. When you look to next Tuesday and see that you have four family members going in four different directions at the same time by 4:30 in the afternoon, having a whole week to work on those back up resources like a car pool is very, very helpful.

Children learn to anticipate at a very young age – does birthday party excitement for a whole week sound familiar to you? Young students are now learning in school to use their school issue “agenda” to record their homework.

By the time the kids hit their teens, they have learned to anticipate excitement, record their homework and use their lockers. Unfortunately as adults, we don’t teach them the time planning that goes along with being able to anticipate events. Even as a professional organizer, I have been slow to teach my own teenager how to use her time wisely. Here’s the process that I went through with her to get her back on track with time. It’s a relatively easy organizing task and they will thank you for the time management skill later in life.

1. Find a calendar that works for you: electronic, PDA, puppy dogs, whatever. The size, style and platform are really only relevant in terms of what works and what looks good.

2. Enter in all the fixed dates over which you have no control: music lessons, swim practice, band practice, year book committee etc. Put them in for the whole term or year until the known completion date.

3. Enter in all the regularly scheduled flexible time such as piano/instrumental/voice practicing time. If it is scheduled, the intention moves from a 1 (would like to do) to an 8 (really intend to do) and has half a chance to get to 10 (will absolutely make sure this happens) at which point after 28 days it becomes a habit.

4. Enter into the calendar the activities that lead to what you would like to accomplish by year’s, month’s, week’s, day’s end e.g. On Saturday afternoons I will go to the library so that I have books for my English class on Monday.

Have fun anticipating your wonderful life!

Office Organizing Organizing Time
Tags : calendars, Planning, Students, Teenagers, Time Management

Back to School Tips

Posted by Carolyn on
 October 25, 2007
  ·  No Comments

Back to schoool time has come and gone but organization for the students, be they primary, elementary or high school, is an ongoing challenge. As the Wellrich Organizers website is undergoing a redesign, and the tips pages are being archived, I though I would republish some of the favourite tips from this fall.

Keep the Family Calendar Public
To help keep the family organized with schedules, a posted, public calendar is helpful. There are several wall/refrigerator calendars available from special Family Organizing ones to white boards. Whichever style suits your families needs, make sure it is posted where everyone can see it. Schedules are best not kept as a secret. Try using an alligator clip on a hook to keep all time sensitive information i.e. Birthday party invitations, curriculum night close at hand. If necessary, use binder dividers to separate the information by family member.

Label, Label, Label
Children are most likely to lose items that they don’t recognize as their own – like all those new back to school clothes, binders and lunch bags. Label everything possible that doesn’t normally stay attached to your child. Label lunch bags on the outside so that they can see their name clearly. Try to have the children wear their new clothes several times before school so that the items are very familiar to them. If you don’t have access to iron on labels, a pen or laundry marker on the tag will serve the purpose.

Home Organizing Organizing Students
Tags : calendars, Children, School, Students
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