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LifeOrganizers.com How to organize your home and office, organizing tips,... - StumbleUpon. Making Study Plan, Study Schedule. A very well-known saying is, “He who fails to plan, he plans to fail”. Planning is very much important, if you want to be a successful student. A schedule helps you in utilizing your time more productively. It helps you to complete your course in a particular time. It tells you how much part of your course should be studied weekly or monthly so that you can complete your course before the exam. A schedule is made on weekly or monthly or daily basis. Count the number of subjects included in your course. Example. . • Book-1 = 15 chapters = 185 topics • Book-2 = 20 chapters = 200 topics • Book-3 = 13 chapters = 145 topics • Book-4 = 16 chapters = 190 topics His entire course comprises of 185+200+145+190 = 720 Topics He has 6 month for preparation or 30x6 = 180 Days Divide total topics by total days you have for preparation, 720 topics/180 days = 4 topic/per day.

After this calculation he shall make a table (having rows and column) on paper with the help of ruler and pen. How to Make a Picture Schedule. Here is our picture schedule I made for T-rex.

How to Make a Picture Schedule

I wanted something that would help both of us to stay on track and that would help him see what we're doing next, since toddlers are of course big on visual and concrete things. I might have gotten a little over-zealous with making this though. See, each piece is glued onto cardstock and "ghetto laminated" with clear packing tape. I highly recommend using a real laminator, unless you have a very helpful husband like I do :) So here's how to make one of your own: Make a 3 x 5 square chart on Publisher or Word, ideally make the lines gray so they use less ink (mine are black by accident)Decide which activities you want and write them in the bottom of each square. **click the above photo to download the PDF so you can print your own picture schedule cards 5. How to Make a Schedule You Can Stick To. Have you ever been surprised at how much you can fit in when you’re at a conference?

When we have a schedule provided for us, we manage to get from one event to the next at the right time; the imposition of external timings means that even if we’d like to stick with one task a little longer, we move on quickly. We deal with emails in brief breaks, sending shorter replies than usual, ditching any junk without even opening it.

In day to day working life, though, we tend to find ourselves struggling to stick to self-imposed schedules. One or two things overrun; emails and phone calls come in; our boss dumps an urgent task on us. However beautiful your schedule looks, just writing it out isn’t going to help you. Don’t Over-Plan The biggest mistake which most of us make when it comes to scheduling is to over-plan. Whatever your job, you’re almost certainly going to have to face all sorts of little interruptions and hold-ups. Build in Margins.