No matter how you’re wired, you can learn to get (and stay) organized with our course on Getting Organized.
We’ve heard for years that some students just can’t get organized. While we see the evidence, we’re not convinced that it has to be the case. The burdens of stress, of feeling overwhelmed, of not having a clear picture of what all needs to be done — these can dissolve with the right organization strategy. And that’s exactly what your student will learn in this course.
In this course, students will learn the most important fundamentals of organization, including:
We’ll teach you practical strategies that enable any student to stay immaculately organized & stress-free. It’s a simple way to keep papers from piling up in a backpack, getting lost, or going incomplete. In fact, our methods are long-standing, tried and true principles of organization applied in a way that works for students at every stage of life!
Ready to get on the road to better organization?
Enroll Now and Gain Free Access Today
What’s included with the course?
This learning guide accompanies the teaching, enabling students to make a tangible impact on their organization approach. The course includes 11 video-driven lessons. Students have the opportunity to take a certification quiz, earning a certificate demonstrating their progress. Additionally, there’s a practical guide for building the systems taught in this course.
Who is the right audience for this course?
Our “Mastering the Basics” courses have been used by middle school through college students. Our target audience would be a high school student, but students of any age will benefit from learning this material. We’re excited to offer our enriched tutorial course for free, providing valuable knowledge and resources at no cost to our participants.
Parents, let’s be honest — we all know how important this is.
We’ve done our best to make this a minor expense when compared to the stress your child experiences by losing a paper that was due because he or she didn’t have an effective organization system in place. If you’d rather spend $40/hour on tutoring to teach your student these strategies, you can go for it. But when you can equip them for success for what you’d pay for 15 minutes of a tutor (that’s the “Hello, nice to meet you” part of the tutoring), why not give it a try?