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Family Activities
Write out tasks for the week - school activities, shopping, appointments
– one per card. Stick them up in your "zone" and organize by date,
location, priority, or family member responsible. Family members
can view what
will happen that week and take the cards with them as reminders.
Shopping lists
Use header to categorize different lists (grocery store, drug store,
department store, etc.) Fill out the lists as you go through the week.
When you’re ready to shop, decide which stores you are going to and bring
just those lists along with you.
Manage weekly chores
At the beginning of each week, write one chore per card, along with
a reward for completing it. Family members then pick the tasks they
will do that week from the "zone," and return them after the chore
is done for the reward. Reuse the card again next week, or add more
as necessary.
Vacation Planning
On each card write an activity, restaurant, or other attraction that
you’d like to visit as you plan your vacation. Be sure to include estimated
time spent at that activity. Prioritize the activities to make sure you
have time for all. Use with a map of your destination to group activities
by location or timing.Make sure to include time to relax! Once you’re
on your way, keep cards with you for reference.
Recipes
Keep your recipes clean and easy to see by posting on a cabinet or
refrigerator.
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Flashcards
Use the 2 7/8"x 4 7/8" cards for self-testing, and post the ones that
are hard to remember up where you can see them – mirrors, doors,
desks at home, refrigerators, or inside lockers – until you have
learned them. In the
header, record class subjects, chapters, topics, or test dates.
Research Papers
Organize papers by keeping reference and source information on one
set of cards, and facts for the paper on another set. Arrange your cards
by topic, chronology, or importance on a wall or desk so you can see all
your information at once. Use the header to record the source, page number,
sub-topic, and order it should appear in the paper. Then writing is simple!
Debate
Cards have all the room you need for your information. You can sort
through them quickly during a tournament, and post the ones you know you’ll
use to respond to the other team’s argument.
Speech Planning
Write one idea per card, then rearrange for the best flow, stack together
and take with you. Stick them to a podium, or flip through them as
you talk.
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Projects
Use headers for project names and due dates, and list action steps.
Contact Files
Record file name or client name followed by a contact log.
Task Organization
One "to-do" per card. Post them up, prioritize, then stack together
to carry with you to meetings.
Speech Planning
Write one idea per card, then rearrange for the best flow, stack together
and take with you.
Resource Management
Use headers for teammate or employee name and fill out their action
items.
Brainstorming
Write each idea on a card, stick them on a wall and categorize and
prioritize all the ideas as a group. Once the ideas are organized,
pull them off the wall, stack them in groups and hand the stack to
the group member responsible for the next steps in that area. Or take
them back to your desk to record the group work.
Project Planning
Write one task per card, decide how to group them (functional area,
priority, co-worker name, or chronological timeframe), rearrange them
on a table or wall until the plan is complete, then give each task
to the appropriate team member to follow up, or leave on the wall as
a roadmap for the project.
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