

And, for two years, I wrote this as a to-do every. Since preparing lessons and making copies will always be items on my to-do lists, it seems bizarre to write them in each day. On Monday mornings, I look at my Outlook calendar to check to see if I have any ARD meetings or any other commitments during my planning period or after school, and then I write those in for the week. Because meetings and duties are often scheduled after school, I have a section for that, as well. I have a category for lunch, too, because I would always forget that I had lunch detention duty on Tuesdays. I have a section to place any meetings or commitments that occur on specific days during specific conference/planning times.

Then, my calendar space gets more flexible. If you don’t have a handy dandy first period planning period, then you know what I mean – perhaps you still need to print off modified versions of a unit test, or like me, you needed to pick up attendance clipboards. Before school is where I might write something that has to be done before students arrive. If I get an email with a reminder that we have a fire drill on Thursday, then I would write it in at the top, so it doesn’t get lost amongst the other to-dos. The top row is dedicated to reminders for that day. The top half of the weekly review is a glance of my week. I created three versions that might appeal to different styles.

And now I am here to give the planner printables to you! We received MANY requests for the pages I used within my Flexi. Three years ago, I shared this post about my Flexi.
#Lesson planner printable free#
Scroll down to the bottom to receive your free download. (Definitely the mark of an organized person.) “What is this tool?” you might be wondering. I have wanted to share with you the tool that helped me stay organized as a teacher since…oh… three years ago.
