I'm a digital packrat of the most incurable kind. That whole "I might need this someday" thing rears its ugly head; I still have 5 1/4" floppy disks with my college senior thesis on them. Not that I have any software that can access the files, and it's been at least 5 years since there was a computer in this house that accommodated ANY floppy disks, but I've got those disks...
I use gmail for most of my email, but I have it forwarded through some complicated electronic system or other so I can read it in Outlook on my computer. Therefore, I never go to gmail's site unless I need to check the spam folder for something that was misfiled.
I had 67,000 messages in my gmail inbox yesterday. Years and years and years of messages. And I deleted them all.
And it didn't kill me or cause bad things to happen to my family. At least, that's what I keep telling myself.
But I'm still not ready to dump those floppy disks.
Showing posts with label Organization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Organization. Show all posts
Friday, July 06, 2012
Monday, October 10, 2011
The Disorganized Student
I was very happy to see that the fourth-graders were required to have "trapper" binders, loose leaf paper, and pocket folders this year. Little Brother has a good handle on academics but not on organization. In his school, the fourth- and fifth-graders share two teachers for the major subjects, so there is some traveling between classrooms and getting used to two different sets of expectations. It's a good way to ease the kids into the middle-school mode.
I figured that since his teachers asked for a particular type of binder, they'd be devoting some time, early in the school year, to good use of this organizational tool.
And week after week, I'd see him come home with all kinds of loose papers stuffed into one of the pockets inside his binder, which also contained his homework planner, pencil case, 200 sheets of looseleaf, 5 dividers, and 3 pocket folders. The looseleaf? Unused. Dividers? Divided nothing. Pocket folders? Empty, except for one which had a paper from Spanish class inside it. Other Spanish papers were stuffed into that same pocket that held Scholastic book order forms, tests I'd signed, and a homework project due September 27--completed, but never handed in.
One month into the school year, it wasn't looking like his teachers were doing anything to make sure the students were using the supplies they'd been required to have.
So this morning, since there was no school, I had Little Brother empty out that binder. He recycled all the papers he no longer needed (most of them). He put all the Spanish papers into the Spanish folder. He's already sort of in the habit of keeping Spanish stuff together, as that teacher encourages that habit in class. And we labeled one pocket folder "Take Home" and "Hand In." He will put anything to come home in the "Take Home" side. When it's finished (homework complete, tests signed, forms filled in) it will go to the "Hand In" side. We'll see if this works, and I can reinforce this system at home.
We labeled the dividers too, though there's nothing to divide at the moment.
I hope this helps him. Next step: dealing with the "flash cards" that are floating around his backpack. I like that the teachers encourage the kids to make flash cards when they need to remember important terms or lists. But they do no good when they wind up in the bottom of the backpack, in a jumble of subjects and topics! Does anyone have ideas for how he can organize and carry these index cards around? It's not like he can put a 3X5 file box in his backpack.
I really think he'd be better off with an accordion file, but I still think that teachers require things for a reason. There will be conferences with the teachers in mid-November, so I'll give this another month and see how we roll. If it's not working out, I'll talk with the teachers about it then.
Ideas for organizing a smart but scatterbrained 9-year-old will definitely be appreciated!
I figured that since his teachers asked for a particular type of binder, they'd be devoting some time, early in the school year, to good use of this organizational tool.
And week after week, I'd see him come home with all kinds of loose papers stuffed into one of the pockets inside his binder, which also contained his homework planner, pencil case, 200 sheets of looseleaf, 5 dividers, and 3 pocket folders. The looseleaf? Unused. Dividers? Divided nothing. Pocket folders? Empty, except for one which had a paper from Spanish class inside it. Other Spanish papers were stuffed into that same pocket that held Scholastic book order forms, tests I'd signed, and a homework project due September 27--completed, but never handed in.
One month into the school year, it wasn't looking like his teachers were doing anything to make sure the students were using the supplies they'd been required to have.
So this morning, since there was no school, I had Little Brother empty out that binder. He recycled all the papers he no longer needed (most of them). He put all the Spanish papers into the Spanish folder. He's already sort of in the habit of keeping Spanish stuff together, as that teacher encourages that habit in class. And we labeled one pocket folder "Take Home" and "Hand In." He will put anything to come home in the "Take Home" side. When it's finished (homework complete, tests signed, forms filled in) it will go to the "Hand In" side. We'll see if this works, and I can reinforce this system at home.
We labeled the dividers too, though there's nothing to divide at the moment.
I hope this helps him. Next step: dealing with the "flash cards" that are floating around his backpack. I like that the teachers encourage the kids to make flash cards when they need to remember important terms or lists. But they do no good when they wind up in the bottom of the backpack, in a jumble of subjects and topics! Does anyone have ideas for how he can organize and carry these index cards around? It's not like he can put a 3X5 file box in his backpack.
I really think he'd be better off with an accordion file, but I still think that teachers require things for a reason. There will be conferences with the teachers in mid-November, so I'll give this another month and see how we roll. If it's not working out, I'll talk with the teachers about it then.
Ideas for organizing a smart but scatterbrained 9-year-old will definitely be appreciated!
Monday, April 25, 2011
Slowly but Surely...Spring Cleaning
I'm using the 3-bag method to clean up in here today.
So far so good! I've discovered that I do, indeed, have a desktop. It is brown. It is not dusty, because there was no room for any dust to land on there!
I found a couple of things I didn't know were missing, and my bag of stuff to relocate is by far the fullest of the 3 bags.
The rest of the house still needs work--lots of work. But my little corner of the world is well on its way to neatness.
- 1 paper grocery bag for recyclable paper
- 1 tote bag for stuff that belongs in another room
- 1 trash bag
So far so good! I've discovered that I do, indeed, have a desktop. It is brown. It is not dusty, because there was no room for any dust to land on there!
I found a couple of things I didn't know were missing, and my bag of stuff to relocate is by far the fullest of the 3 bags.
The rest of the house still needs work--lots of work. But my little corner of the world is well on its way to neatness.
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