Thank you so much for the video! I was wondering if you might have any ideas for some "self--study" type layouts? Trying to learn a new about topics on my own is proving rather challenging when it comes to tracking and staying motivated!
Not a teacher, and know you are not teaching anymore at the moment......but still appreciate this and what you are doing. And I'm sure myself and non teachers can still take tips from this for our own journals. Also super helpful for students xx
This video is immensely helpful. I‘ve used a bullet journal at uni and loved it. I stopped when I entered teaching. I tried using teacher planners but they were not for me. I also tried doing everything digitally, but neither organization apps nor digital versions of teacher planners were my thing. Now I‘m back to a bullet journal and since a teacher needs different spreads than a student, I am loving your teacher bujo related content!
I've used your term planner layout for two years now and honestly has kept me so on top of things! I always have to use pencil for it, as it changes daily! But it's now my favourite layout in my teacher bullet journal!! Thank you x
I’ve been teaching higher ed for several years now. I’ll definitely be using many of these layouts for the upcoming terms. I love these ideas, and I think they’ll be adaptable for many types of teaching and instruction. Thanks so much for making this video and sharing all your ideas!
@@JashiiCorrin you’re absolutely right that these aren’t applicable to every teacher (especially because I’m teaching undergrads not children) but the biggest thing I got from the vid was inspiration for my own planning. Definitely one i’ll rewatch when i need motivation!!
Not a teacher! Still love this. the Topic Checklist inspired me for a new tracker I want to try with the new month and my ToDY app with spaces being done. I will be able to see what places are commonly cleared and what places I commonly neglect.
This video, heck this entire playlist, is super-helpful to me as a university professor. There are some things that aren't quite the same either because of secondary versus post-secondary ed things, but those are easy enough to translate, or because our language usage is a bit different in the US and NZ. For example, when I use the term "extension" for a student who needs it, that's someone who needs more time to complete an assignment, so the due date is extended. It sounds like you're using it quite differently, since you're talking about activities so I'm curious what you mean by it. Are they for students who need to dig deeper into a topic? Students who need to make up missed time/assignments? Similarly, I'm curious what you mean by "surface, deep, transfer." Surface and deep seem intuitive enough, but not transfer, which in the States we usually use to mean someone who has moved from one school/college/university to another. I'm not sure if you'll see this comment on an older video, but if you do and you have time, I'd love to learn what you mean in both these situations.
Both those words mean the same thing here too, but they also have different applications 😄 an “extension” activity is one that goes deeper with the content, looking at it from a new angle, challenging the student to think more about how it can be used, etc. It’s the kind of activity you’d give a student who has got a good grasp on the concepts covered so far and you want to keep them engaged 👌 an extension can also be pushing out a deadline though 😊 as for transfer, that can be between schools, but in the context of “surface deep transfer” it’s the progression of skill learning, as in you know the basics, you know the concepts well, you can apply the skills or transfer them to another context 👌
@@JashiiCorrin Thank you! That makes a lot of sense and gives me some thoughts about how I approach a couple of things. I spent a good chunk of yesterday setting up my acabujo for the next semester and several of these spreads gave me very useful food for thought as I decided what would be helpful and/or how I needed to tweak things. So, again, thank you!
Thank you for this! I usually just have a catch-all bujo or planner, but I've been thinking about having somewhere to keep really specific notes for all my work. (I'm an ESL teacher and case manager.)
Most welcome and hope it was helpful! 💜😄 I normally kept my teaching stuff and other everyday stuff together (mainly because when I pulled my teaching stuff out of my journal, all that was left was chores which was super uninspiring, haha) 😝 can totally see the value in having a separate space for specific work notes like you mentioned!
Hi! I'm a teacher too and when I saw the title I thought there was no way there could be 57 really useful spreads but hey, turns out I was wrong! Haha Loved this video, it gave me ideas 👍
I am on sabbatical this AY, but I think some of the layouts will help me keep track of the different research projects I'm working on and the milestones which will make writing that summary report in May easier. I will definitely use some of the other layouts when I'm teaching again next year - especially the ones related to keeping track of my marking. I am TERRIBLE at keeping up with it - especially as my teaching has evolved from major exams/projects to frequent low-stakes assessments. I have a year to think about how to tweak these layouts for my needs and whether they should be part of my regular bullet journal or a separate one for just teaching (I'm a professor, so half of my job is teaching, half is research, and half is administration - and yes I know that adds up to more than 1, thus the need for the sabbatical this year!)
Haha, totally understand the sabbatical needs; that does sound like a lot! 😝 I totally relate, much more difficult keeping up with marking when you have more low-stakes assessments rather than major exams in my opinion
I'm going to have a look at this, but before I do, and also forget what I'm going to ask, can you do a series of videos on how you would set up strictly keeping track of assessment data on BJ? Especially if you have many classes. Thank you
I could look into something like that 😄 I do have a general markbook layout in this video too which might help 😊 I personally do my markbooks digitally in Excel (just as it's easier for when I have to copy grades over and such). I've got a video on that one too which might be of interest: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-6wb-mC68HQ4.html
I love all of these ideas! I have CPD tracker too, as I have to do atleast 10 hours of professional development every year and it's good to make sure I'm doing some each month. I also have some other spreads related to being a private tutor, like logging how many hours I've worked each year since I'm self employed ☺️
JESS this is AWESOME !! I'm doing a teacher bujo for my sister-in-law for this school year. It certainly is already full but for next year and my other friend that already requested a bujo for 23/24, this will be a gold mine !!!! Thank you so much :-D
This is an AMAZING video! As an MYP teacher, and someone who is switching to bullet journalling for my teacher planning, I am bursting with ideas now! Thank you!
Feeling inspired by this video! I've watched your previous teaching spread videos too, but I feel like I took a lot more notes this time. Now I just need to find time to create some of these for myself! My favorites (since you asked...) are: blooms taxonomy list (so I can stop googling it every few months), course policies page (adaptation of your classroom rules list, because I constantly find myself looking back in a sea of documents to remember what we agreed on at the beginning of the semester), "words of appreciation" log (which I want to adapt into a school-yearbook style spread for students to sign at the end of the term if they want to!). But there were several others I took note of to integrate into my teaching journal when I have time. Thanks for working on this and sharing it with us!
I just decided to make a staff room teacher bingo for the next school year😊 Though it surely won't be in a bujo thanks for the idea! If my colleagues don't want to participate I can always still do it on my own🤗
Fun to get people involved! I hope they join you with it 😄💜 My colleagues and I would play "Soup Bingo" as my school has a soup of the day 4 times a week 😝
This video came just in time. I need a new system for planning this coming school year. I just ordered my journal and will be using a lot of your ideas. Thanks so much!!
It would be interesting to see student journal spread ideas. Even though I’m well out of school, I still take courses and private lessons for personal enrichment and would love to see some ideas outside of what I did back in the 80’s.
@@JashiiCorrin I do! Quite a lot of my Teacher BuJo is inspired by/stolen from your layouts :D This year I might need more as I, maybe, will teach another subject, which will require more preparation and spreads :)😁📚
I’m hoping to start further education teacher training here in the UK after I graduate from my undergrad degree (i’m in my final year) and your teaching related videos are the best i’ve found! Thank you from a future teacher 💜