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Homeschool Planners - a review.

Posted By Shannon On 7. August 2008 @ 11:48 In Curriculum Choices, General Homeschool | 2 Comments

We all know there are a gazillion planners out there, from buying a standard bound one at the local copy shop or Walmart to customized HOMESCHOOL planners available from many different sources (each with their own particular angle).  As school is FAST approaching (for those of us who follow the typical school year) I thought it might be a good time to do some planning (not a bad idea, eh? *grin*) and so I spent some time looking through the many planners I have here on my computer and at my fingertips… yes, I have several.  I’m kind of a Planner Junkie.. always looking for the “perfect” organizing tool.  Just like I believe that the real reason I’m disorganized is because I don’t have the right planner yet.. LOL!  Okay, that’s  my excuse, and I’m stickin’ to it! *wink*

Please note that although I have to list the planners in SOME KIND of order… as we are trapped in a linear world, I am not putting them in any particular order… just as I locate them on my hard-drive and refresh my memory (and take notes of my own of which sheets to use from which planners - yes, you read that right, I MIX-AND-MATCH! *gasp!*).   

1. One of my FAVOURITE planner for this upcoming year is more than just a planner, really, it’s a whole HOW to plan planner.  Not only does it include all the forms necessary to plan out your school year by the month, week and even day, it also includes an innovative way of planning your curriculum and how to figure out (legally) what resources you need to have to homeschool in confidence that you are meeting all state/provincial requirements.  It walks you through VERY THOROUGHLY a whole planning project, including taking a break because you deserve it!  I like a planner that remembers that planning is had work! *grin*  SO, my FIRST PLACE goes to the [1] Simply Charlotte Mason’s “Planning your Charlotte Mason Education in 5 Easy Steps” planner (can I recommend the “printed book and DVD” option as it cost me a LOT to have this book printed and bound at the local copy shop, and you really do need to have a printed copy of it to be effective - just my .02).  It is just so much more than just a collection of fill-in-the-blanks homeschool forms, it encourages and inspires… and dispite the name, it works very well for whatever “methodology” of school you use, including unschooling and strict school-at-home styles… just make it work for you. 

2. The Ultimate Homeschooling Mom’s Planner has some exceptionally refreshing forms such as a completely new (and imho, more in line with what we SHOULD be concerned about in our children’s education) twist on a “Yearly Evaluation” of our children, including such areas as “organization” (hahaha!) and “individual expression” and “character maturity”.  Yes, they include all the “standards” like yearly, monthly, and even Family Fitness (there’s a thought!) as well.  The pages are delightfully decorated, but for those on a budget all that colour might be restrictive (*hint* set your printer settings to “print images in greyscale” or something along those lines… that will keep your colour ink for more important printing projects).  You can find the Ultimate Planner at [2] www.homeschool-curriculum-for-life.com .

3. The Old Schoolhouse Magazine has come out with a planner that certainly has you covered, not only in an extensive forms section (covering everything from educational objectives to end of year evaluations and report cards) but it is also FILLED with facinating articles, important (US) lists and official documents (no more hunting around to find a copy of the Louisiana Purchase - I can hear the sighs of relief from across the border! *grin*).  Some of the neater forms are things like craft logs (including place to paste a photo - no more cluttered fridge or boxes of dusty kindergarten crafts filling up your storage space!), curriculum purchases organizer (not the kind where you list what you have, but rather list what you need and the cost involved - very handy!, and even (and this is the coolest!) a begining/end of year form… where you list such things like your child’s height/weight and get a copy of their signature… what a great way to remind you and your child how much they’ve GROWN this past year!  Of course there’s room for a picture from both the start and finish of the school year.  One really nice feature of this planner is that it includes the very convenient “Type-It-In” option.  You can type (AND SAVE) your information into the file, so  you can print off very professional looking forms later on, and earn organizational brownie points with The Powers That Be.  All in all a very thorough planner.  You can get the Schoolhouse Planner at [3] www.theoldschoolhousestore.com .

4.  Cindy Rushton’s “Brain in a Binder” planner is the most spiritual homeschool planner out there.  She has all the standard forms for planning your school year, but she includes MANY forms you don’t really find anywhere else, such as pages from her Discipleship Notebook, Bible Study Logs, and Discipleship Goals planning sheets.  Everything is in Cindy’s signature country style, clean and simple, with just a touch of southern charm.  The Discipleship Notebook pages are probably worthwhile getting, even if you are using a different Homeschool Planner.  I can’t believe how they have helped me in my study of God’s word, and Ev, my 14 year old son really loves them as he seeks to be a “man after God’s own heart”.  You can pick up the Brain-in-a-Binder OR just the Discipleship Notebook from [4] www.cindyrushton.com .

5.  The Master Planner from Westvon Publishing is a VERY complete planner.  I like that all the pages on the CD come as separate files, so in my computer I put my settings to “view thumbnail” and can QUICKLY find the form I was looking for… a little thing, but a nice thing.  They’ve also labeled their forms very well, so even if you can’t “see” it, you can still “read” it and aren’t obliged to flip through pages and pages of a file to find the One Form that will change your life.  LOL!  They include all the basics, of course, but also many little tools to encourage your student to set goals and meet them.. like their acheivement certificates and Reading Goals sheets.  They include many notebooking pages in their planner as well, for things like weather recording, timelines and venn diagram sheets.  One of our favourite sheets is the Babysitter Information sheet, which my daughter brings to all new babysitting jobs and fills out with the parents and files in a binder of her own… and this upcoming year I plan to extensively use the “Monthly (something)” charts.  They have a Monthly Bird, Animal, Fish, Planet, Dinosaur, Biography, etc… all set up nice and simply to print off and embark on a little learning adventure with your child.  This is a really exceptional product… some of my most used forms come from this planner.  Find Westvon’s Master Planner and also their FABULOUS History Scribe series of notebooking pages at [5] CurrClick .

6.  My dear friend, Heidi Jo, has some really useful household planners, which most of the time (when planning such things as menus and to do lists) are the first thing I print off.  She also has a Lesson Planner which although is not as fancy as some, is very simple to navigate and probably the most effective one to have printed up at a local copyshop and bound.  Although Heidi Jo says she uses one for all her children, I think for myself (being as OCD as I am) I would want one for each child.  It is clean, clear and very Charlotte Mason in it’s layout… so maybe that will be my choice for my weekly planning for the Littles which I want to start on a personalized CM Education this upcoming year.  Heidi Jo lives in the BREATHTAKING Bahamas (lucky duck!) and you can find her planning forms at [6] CurrClick .

7. Knowledge Box Central also has a Charlotte Mason Planner (are you getting the impression I might be a closet Charlotte Mason Fan? LOL!) called The Image Bearer (the name implying our children are bearers of the image of Christ).   This Planner also has the desireable Type-It-In feature, making it another one of my favourites for presenting a professional image to the World.  One of the nicest things that I find different from this planner and most of the others is the inclusion of a “Term Planner” (the other one that has it is the Simply Charlotte Mason planner at the top of this list)… another neat thing is the Field Trip AND Evaluation guide, a handy way to not only record where and when you went, but what everyone thought of the trip and whether it was worth repeating (and unfortunately some are not).  As with the bigger KBC documents (like the Ages and Stages Timeline Notebook, the best out there) there is a easy reference bookmark list on the side, which acts similarly to the way the Master Planner does in letting you find the page you are looking for easily.  You can also find The Image Bearer at [7] CurrClick (one of my favourite one stop shopping spots for all things homeschool, can you tell?! *grin*).

and last but in no way least (at least for today because I think this is one of the longest blog posts in history! LOL!):

8. The Homeschool Tracker is a software planner… meaning you enter in the lesson plans and the software does the sorting for you.  You can create and print whatever “reports” you want (reports are anything you’ve entered, really).  The nice thing about this is that when you enter in the “grades” your child gets, the software keeps track (hence the name Tracker?) and you can print out VERY professional looking report cards at the end of the year, as well as book used lists, assignment lists, field trip logs, etc.  VERY versatile, but has a bit of a learning curve to get the hang of it.  *hint* use “copy assignment” freely, you can always delete it later if you’ve put too much! LOL!  Find it at [8] www.homeschooltracker.com .

So, I guess instead of babbling about planners, maybe I should start actually PLANNING, eh?

Blessings!


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URL to article: http://littlehomeschoolonthehill.com/2008/08/07/homeschool-planners-a-review/

URLs in this post:
[1] Simply Charlotte Mason’s “Planning your Charlotte Mason Education in 5 Easy Steps” planner: http://simplycharlottemason.com/books/planning-your-charlotte-mason-education/
[2] www.homeschool-curriculum-for-life.com: http://www.homeschool-curriculum-for-life.com/
[3] www.theoldschoolhousestore.com: http://www.theoldschoolhousestore.com/
[4] www.cindyrushton.com: http://www.cindyrushton.com/
[5] CurrClick: http://www.currclick.com/index.php?manufacturers_id=90&filters=0_0&affil
iate_id=14370

[6] CurrClick: http://www.currclick.com/index.php?filters=0_0&manufacturers_id=144&affi
liate_id=14370

[7] CurrClick: http://www.currclick.com/product_info.php?manufacturers_id=70&products_id=16
805&it=1&filters=0_0&manufacturers_id=70&affiliate_id=14370

[8] www.homeschooltracker.com: http://www.homeschooltracker.com/

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