Posts Tagged ‘organize’

Organizing the Office

Friday, January 7th, 2011

organizing-the-office

My husband told me in no uncertain terms that I must not organize his office, or he won’t be able to find anything. Out of honor to my husband, I decided to leave the office out of the double video workshop “Organizing for a Fun Homeschool.” Well, I found another office-looking area in our house. It is a built-in desk connected to the kitchen, where my oldest son does his math, and where I edit videos to put into YouTube. It is this office space that I recently organized.

First of all, office supplies like pencils, pens, paper clips, and rubber bands can be placed into a drawer organizer that you can get at an office supply store. It really is easier to find supplies if there is a designated area for each thing. Many people prefer to have a pencil holder on the top of their desk, like a can or something similar. For me, the fewer things that are out, the more restful I feel. I try to clear off everything I can and not have any brick-a-brack cluttering up my space, which would cause me not to have enough room to work. Many times I need to set down a binder or a camera, and there needs to be plenty of space around the computer to work. Simplicity is the key.

organized-drawer

Secondly, a large bulletin board above your desk area is a great way to organize your to-do’s. Just pin something to the board if you don’t want to forget it. For example, I needed to make an appointment for my son’s teeth to be extracted by the dentist, so I pinned that paper to the bulletin board. The bad part of doing this is that the bulletin board inevitably becomes overcrowded, and you can’t find things very well. (I’m embarrassed to say that I have an example of an overcrowded bulletin board in my YouTube video “A Typical Homeschool Day.”  Just look at the opening scene, and you’ll know what I mean.) When it gets this bad, all you have left to do is sort through and accomplish whatever you were supposed to do.

how-to-organize-the-office

A secret that I just made up, which will help you to have a neat and tidy bulletin board, is to use staples instead of pins for items that are more permanent, like phone numbers you use all the time. You will notice a big difference on how fresh and clean your board looks just with this small tip.

I always have a calendar connected to my bulletin board. I do NOT have a daytimer. I don’t believe in them. If there are too many activities to fit into a normal square on my calendar, I need to cancel something. Honestly, I don’t want to live like a chicken with a head cut off. Also, the entire family’s activities are on there, so I rarely have a schedule conflict. I always check my calendar before committing to something. Plus, my husband needs to know what I’m doing, and I wouldn’t want him rummaging through my daytimer. (Once again, I don’t believe in daytimers, but I think it would be weird for someone to be pawing through my stuff just to figure out our schedule.) Simplify, simplify, is what I say.

desk-organize

Thirdly, I found a plastic magazine rack (like a short shelf) to go beside the computer. I put my son’s math workbook, his nature journal, the book he’s writing, and any other stuff he’s working on, in this schoolwork shelf. You could do this with each of your children that you homeschool. I’ve also seen shelves that mount to the wall, like hard plastic pockets drilled into the wall. That might be another idea for storing the children’s school books.

Fourth, we have a wooden hanging shelf for keys, envelopes that need to be mailed, a place to put a wallet and cell phone, and anything else on its way out of the house. This is helpful for finding spare keys when you lock your keys in the car, or to make sure you mail your bills.

Organizing the office doesn’t have to be difficult, especially if you ignore your filing cabinet. Okay, okay, I admit that the office is the most difficult room to clean in the house because of all those papers that need to be filed. Go ahead and file your paid bills, receipts, and tax forms. Find out how long you need to keep each paper, and shred the rest. An end-of-year statement trumps all 12 monthly statements, which you can safely shred, for example. I admit, this is a headache, so give yourself a huge reward when you’re done!

Anatomy Display (Science Learning Center)

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

anatomy-display

Since my YouTube video clip about organizing educational bins was highly popular, I thought I’d share another example of an educational display that is a science learning center. The bin that I showed you in the video clip was about anatomy, and here was the science learning center that I set up for my children during that unit.

We had several fun books that had clear overlays with each system of the body. I had a skeleton model that I bought for a dollar at a used curriculum sale. The anatomy chart was purchased at a teacher supply store, and it helped the children to learn the different body systems, which they drew, life-sized, of their own bodies traced on butcher paper. The human heart opens up, and you can see the different chambers. This would be good for high school, too, because it was very detailed. I got that at a teacher supply store as well. Let’s see, oh, yeah, we also had a see-through model of the systems of the body. That was kind of frustrating, actually, even though the kids loved it, because it was hard to stuff all the body parts back inside. Anyway, I hope this display is helpful to you as you homeschool your own children and get them excited about learning a specific subject.

If you would like more information on organizing your house to have more joy as you homeschool (and more fun!) feel free to get Organizing for a Fun Homeschool, two one-hour, jam-packed video sessions giving you a tour of my home and how I do things with my children. Many homeschooling mothers have come over to my house over the years, and all of them have taken lots of notes and asked lots of questions. I’ve answered everything in these videos.

Organizing Your Homeschool

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Organizing your homeschool does not have to be difficult. In this video clip, I show you how to organize educational bins for unit studies in homeschooling:

As you can see if you look upwards, a lot of storage space can be found above your head. Look at the enormous amount of stuff that I’m storing above my head. It doesn’t affect any floor space. As you can see, it’s by years–it’s what we did for each homeschool year–and we went through the history of the whole world in six years. (We also covered all the sciences within those years.)

organizing-your-homeschoolFor example, in year 2 we studied human anatomy for a full year, so let me take that down real quick… When we did human anatomy, I just threw the things into this bin. I collected things from yard sales and used curriculum sales. You can get all kids of fun stuff. Here is a model of the lungs that we did, and the model of the human arm. We have X-rays of different parts of the human body; you can put the whole body together like a puzzle. Here are the skeletons of animals, and the bones like the femur are called the same thing in animals and humans. (So once you learn the bones of the human body, you can find and label animal skeletons, too!)

I have games about the human body, and books like Blood and Guts, which have lots of fun experiments about the human body. (It does contain evolution.) I also have coloring books of the human body, and diagrams to color for younger children. You also see I have different models, like the human heart.

So all of this is stored in this bin. That’s how I store things for different unit studies, so that the second time I teach something, it is so easy compared to the first time. As you make the different hands-on items for science or history, you can throw them into the bin. By the time you get to that time period in history, surprise, surprise! You open it up and go, “Wow! Look at all the stuff I have for the Revolutionary War!”

This is a small sample of my 2-hour video workshop, Organizing for a Fun Homeschool, where I show you every room in my house, and how I organize it for fun homeschooling.

Post-It Notes

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

post-it-notesBefore my husband left to the Czech Republic on a missions trip, he had so many things that he needed to do. Instead of having everything on one list, he wrote each to-do item on a post-it note. He stuck the post-it notes like a game show board on the back of our bedroom door. I thought that was clever. Each time he accomplished something (like mowing the grass or buying a conversion plug), he would peel off a post-it. Visually, the list got smaller and smaller as time went on. The sad part of it all is that there were so many things he had to do.

This was what the door looked like three days before he left. I looked at my husband incredulously and told him there was no way he was going to get it all done. I started peeling stuff off that I had asked him to do for me, since I now saw how overburdened he was. I realized that his life was always like this, that my husband always felt behind, and that one small chore like hanging a heavy mirror might be #87 on his list. I just felt very convicted that as a wife, I need to do as much as I can to alleviate his burden instead of add to it. I would have never known this in such a visual way had my husband not put post-it notes on the back of our bedroom door.