This planner is for students from 6 years to 18 years old. It is a black and white pdf you can print your self. Have it bound at a copy shop or put it in a 3 ring binder. 147 pages.
- Undated
- For students of all ages
- Black & white
The planner is divided into four sections: Intro pages, weekly planner, grades & records, and references.
Intro Pages
Students draw a self portrait and write down their favorites. This page can be cut out and saved each year as a keepsake of your child’s growth.

Then the entire calendar year from August through July can be scheduled out showing major holidays, family birthdays, school vacations and other important dates in your family.

Finally, write your daily schedule for a typical day and the order you plan on doing school subjects on the “Our School Rhythm” list. There is also a space to write down daily chores. This page helps kids understand expectations and feel security over knowing what to expect from a typical day.

Weekly Planner
This section contains four weeks of planning with a month calendar at the beginning and a weather graph at the end. Start each month of your homeschool by filling in the dates, holidays, and events on the monthly calendar.

You can add printable “stickers” indicating the month, holidays, and events.

Then a two-page spread lays out the homeschool week with a calendar across the top where you can write in park days, music lessons, sports practice, library trips, and other events and activities. There is a little to-do list for things the child wants to accomplish but that don’t need to be scheduled.

A daily work checklist allows students to work at their own pace, checking off their work as they go. Colorful stickers can be purchased to make it more fun.
Spaces for Layers of Learning subjects are next to the daily checklist so the student can write in which explorations you will be doing this week.
Then at the bottom of this page mark off daily morning and afternoon chores.

On the facing page, write in the Writer’s Workshop activities for each day next to the book or books that have been chosen or assigned for independent reading for the week.
Beneath that there is room for the spelling “Word Work” list and the things that are being memorized this week.
Parents and students fill out the weekly assignments as you go through the year. Wait until the current week to fill in the circle dates at the top of the Daily Work Checklist so you don’t get behind when life’s inevitable interruptions occur.

The end of each 4-week monthly section is a page for a weather graph of temperatures and conditions. This helps students practice graphing and data collection. And it is fun!

The weather graph from the current month faces the monthly calendar from the next month. 
Grades & Records
Students can use this section to track the books they’ve read, their grades, and transcripts.

Here students can write down the grades they receive for assignments so they can track their progress and get feedback in real time.


For high schoolers, there is also a section for tracking their GPA and transcripts along with jobs, clubs, sports teams, and other extra curricular activities for college applications.


References
This final section includes quick references like metric conversion charts, multiplication charts, maps of the world and the USA, grammar basics, and sciecne basics with a periodic table of the elements.






















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