
DSC00658 by cotton1221, on Flickr
This first one is of the guides I'm doing this year after I had the binding cut off and then 3-hole punched them all. I slipped the front and back cover into the clear pockets on the outsides of the binders. The coffee was not staged but I find it very fitting.

DSC00659 by cotton1221, on Flickr
Here it is opened up. I copied all of the poems and keep them in the front pocket until needed. You can see down the side I have dividers where needed. I keep one at the next unit and then the appendix is seperated into emerging readers, spelling, storytime, and and poetry. The other guides are similer but really, how many pics of divider tabs to we really need?

DSC00661 by cotton1221, on Flickr
This is MY binder that I use daily (I splurged on a pretty one).

DSC00663 by cotton1221, on Flickr
In this binder I have about 2 units of each guide, recourses, a folder with handwritting paper, our timeline, just about anything I use daily. This keeps it all managable and in one place. I started doing this when I used Sonlight, now THAT was a big TM.

DSC00664 by cotton1221, on Flickr
I picked these up at Staples for $7 each. So far they are working well but might be too small for the older guides. I would like to make fabric covers with handles for them at some time in the near future.

DSC00665 by cotton1221, on Flickr
Each one has current books, journal, and a hanging file with any loose pages.

DSC00656 by cotton1221, on Flickr

DSC00657 by cotton1221, on Flickr
I'm trying this system out for filing papers ad record keeping this year. I tried binders last year but ended up with a box FULL of things that never got put into them. Over the last few years I've gotten a grip on my own quirks and I think this will work well. All three kids are in the same place yet sub-divided enough to find things quickly. We currently have very few restrictions or mandates in my state but I like to be prepared.
Hope this post can spark an idea to make your days go more smoothly
