About this topic
Student Study Tools is the cluster we send teachers, tutors, and parents to most often. It groups four sub-collections — study schedules, homework trackers, class schedules, and reading logs — that together cover the planning surface area of a typical school week, from the moment a class is added to a schedule through the moment a long-term project is turned in.
Inside the Study Schedules collection you will find weekly study plans, exam-countdown sheets built around spaced-repetition principles, Pomodoro logs for shorter focused sessions, subject-by-subject breakdowns for students juggling more than four classes, and term-long plans for college and grad-school horizons. The intent here is not just to allocate time but to make the study session concrete: instead of an open-ended evening labeled "study," the page asks for a specific topic, a specific chapter, a specific number of practice problems, and a specific recall prompt at the end.
Further reading: a longer essay on the methodology behind student study tools.
Homework Trackers cover the daily-by-class layout that works best for elementary and middle school, the weekly-by-subject layout that high schoolers tend to prefer, and the project-breakdown sheets that turn a two-week assignment into ten manageable next-actions. Every variant has a clear "started / finished / turned in" check-off column, because the most common failure mode of homework is not finishing it — it is finishing it and forgetting to hand it in.
Class Schedules and Reading Logs round out the cluster. The class-schedule library covers 7-period bell schedules, A/B-day block schedules, college MWF/TR layouts, and homeschool weekly schedules, plus pocket-sized and wall-sized variants. The reading-log library covers daily-minutes logs for school summer-reading programs, monthly-titles logs for year-long reading goals, one-page review sheets for books you want to remember in detail, and TBR (to-be-read) lists for stacking the next twelve titles.
If you are setting up a study system from scratch — for yourself, your child, or a tutoring student — the recommended starter set is one class schedule (printed twice, one for the binder and one for the fridge), one weekly homework tracker, and one weekly study planner. Add a daily reading log if you are working toward a minutes-per-day goal, and add a project-breakdown sheet the moment a multi-week assignment hits the calendar. Every printable in this cluster is free, ad-supported, and sized for US Letter on a standard home or school printer.
Sub-categories in this topic
The Student Study Tools topic groups 4 sub-categories that share a purpose:
- Study Schedules — Weekly and term-long study planning sheets for school, college, exam prep, and self-study — with subject blocks, exam countdowns, and review cycles.
- Homework Trackers — Daily and weekly homework planners — assignment logs, project breakdowns, and "did I turn it in?" check-off sheets.
- Class Schedules — Weekly class-schedule printables for students, teachers, and tutors — by period, by day, and by block.
- Reading Logs — Reading trackers and book journals — daily minute logs, monthly book lists, page-count progress, and one-page review sheets.
High-intent printables this topic covers
Common things readers come here looking for:
- Study Schedule Template
- Homework Tracker Printable
- Class Schedule Template
- Reading Log Printable
- Exam Prep Planner