This post has little to do with science, or education. It has everything to do with organizing my work, my students, and my life.
I’ve loved Evernote for a while. I recommend it to students, and colleagues, and pretty much everyone I see. I’ve also loved Omnifocus on my Macbook Pro for a good long time. I check it on my phone more times than a 10th grader checks Facebook. The iPad version is finally out. It appears to be a huge improvement over the iPhone version that simply runs on the iPad. It ought to be; with a price tag of $39.95. I don’t begrudge OmniGroup a profit. It’s just that I’ve purchased the Mac desktop app (about $40 ed pricing, when it was available), and the iPhone app (19.95). I’d like a break here…… I’ll honestly be a bit sad to say goodbye to Omnifocus.
Then, I read this blog post about a grad student using Evernote in a few unusual ways. (If you don’t already use Evernote, just trust me and do it.) I’m not sure I could do without notebooks as the author does, and I still find that I want to title things rather than just using tags in the title. I scrolled along the post until I came to the calendar section. I’ve never been successful with either paper or electronic calendars. I always write too much stuff on the calendar. I have to look at the calendar and to-do list separately, and my ADHD brain just does not compute. I’ve made it work for just over a week now, and am very pleased.
The solution:
- Each day, open a new note. Title it like this: 03-18-12 Log Sunday. (The creator of this system titles his daily notes “Journal”, but I”m already using that tag for something else, so I chose to use “Log.”)
- List all the things you want to accomplish that day. I like the checkbox format, the article guy used – and replaced it with X when completed, but he is probably also using checkboxes now.
- As you complete each item, check it off.
- Something you didn’t finish? Just copy and paste them to the next day’s note.
- When an engagement, appointment, meeting,etc appears, open a new note (title for that date) and paste in the time, place, other info. It looks like this:
I’ll add more info about the event as I get it.
When a day is complete, I will rename it MMDDYY Archive Dayoftheweek and move it to the Log Archive notebook.
Advantages to this system:
- all information for one event is in one place. Think: Linked notes, if needed.
- Within the notebook, they can be sorted on my iPhone, iPad, or desktop app.
- I didn’t have to learn and come to love a new app.
- My calendars are nice and clean. I can still open a calendar to get a big picture. I’m wondering if a day’s note could even be linked to Google Calendar.
- Notes about the day can be added on the fly, so long as you have a device. Notes written by hand can be typed in later, or added with a photo or app like CamScanner or Whiteboard Share.
- Notes can be linked.
- I have a premium account, so can share editable project and grocery lists with my husband.
- It’s free, unless you use it as much as I do.
- It’s available everywhere. (I love you, Evernote!)
Disadvantages:
- I already use Evernote for just about everything. If you don’t, you need to learn the app. The learning curve is pretty low.
- Eventually, I will have to delete stuff, or archive things massively.
To be perfectly honest, I have only set up the system within the past week, so I’ll be learning for a while. Please, please, add your input and tweaks. I will, as well.
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