(Virtual) Family Schedule Organization Tips & Hacks

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Help for Managing Your Virtual Family Schedule:

Keeping track of a packed family schedule was hard enough for a busy parent before the world shut down.

Things seem ten times harder since we all switched our face-to-face interactions to virtual living:

  • You’re now your kids’ virtual tech support, as you troubleshoot online class meetings, assignments, and teacher appointments for each child.
  • Instead of driving kids to weekly appointments and activities, you’re now juggling online meeting codes and passwords.
  • And on top of all this, if you’re fortunate enough to be in a household with at least one parent telecommuting right now, you’ve got to keep your own work meetings and schedules straight, too!
This virtual ukulele lesson brought to you by FaceTime and Mama’s iPad/phone line.

Be honest: 

  • How may times have you fumbled to get the right kid to the right meeting/appointment, at the right time, with the right meeting code/link?
  • How many virtual class meetings have your children missed, because they forgot and you forgot to remind them?
  • And how many emails/texts have you received from teachers, medical professionals, etc. asking why your child missed their scheduled appointment or assignment?

This is the new pain of managing a family schedule during a global pandemic.

I’d say we are down to 1-2 missed meeting reminders a week on average. Which means I am down to 1-2 emails I have to respond to, explaining why someone didn’t show up for her appointment on time.

I don’t know about you, but managing the schedules of two tweens seemed a lot easier when we had to hop into the car and drive somewhere!

Why keeping everyone on the same page is even harder now:

There are a lot of reasons why juggling schedules is suddenly more complicated:

Brain overload

Let’s face it, none of us was ready for this strange new world we’re in.

And unless you homeschooled before the pandemic, you’re not used to keeping track of your kids’ big-picture academic overview (what they’re supposed to be doing, when).

Let alone the minute details of getting them to each of their classes and meetings when the teachers are dispersed on the other side of so many computer screens.

Add in things like telemedicine links (e.g., one of our girls has a weekly occupational therapy appointment that is now taking place remotely) or links to private group meetings for Girl Scouts and whatnot, and you have a recipe for chaos. Or at least complete mental exhaustion.

And if you’re also trying to work from home, managing your own online schedule/meetings AND theirs, well, good luck.

School security protocols

If your school system is like ours, your kids have their own online learning management platforms/school accounts. Perhaps even school-issued devices. These are locked down by strict security protocols. 

I cannot AirDrop links to Essie’s school-issued iPad, email either girls a schedule with links, or access Kimmie’s school-populated Google calendar – all because of these school-established account security protocols.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m glad these security protocols are in place.

But it makes it a LOT harder to keep kiddos on the same page, and delegate some of that link-management to them. Even if they should be old enough to take on some of these responsibilities for themselves. (Let alone if you have one or more kiddos who fall outside what’s considered neurotypical.)

Coordinating with the other parent

If you have a co-parent in the same house, you are EXTREMELY blessed in that you’ve (theoretically) got some help in this. Yet you’ve also just multiplied the family scheduling challenges:

  • If one of you is working remotely, or is an essential worker still leaving the house most days, the other one is pulling their hair out trying to keep all of this straight.
  • If both of you are currently working, I’m betting more than a few things are slipping through the cracks.
  • And then there are families who are trying to stay on the same page while juggling shared custody and separate households.

I’ve been trying to divest myself of some of the responsibility for being the girls’ single-handed tech support and meeting guru for weeks now. But since my husband was also teaching his own students online until last week, he was in the same reinventing-the-wheel-mid-term overload that teachers everywhere have been suffering.

Now that he’s done with online teaching for the semester, he’s more able to take over some of the day-to-day management of the girls’ schedules and schooling. But there’s still the fact that I’m seven weeks ahead of him when it comes to memorizing which meetings happen at which times for which kid.

And all the meeting links still come to my email, social media, and cell – not his.

Solutions for Managing Your Virtual Family Schedule:

Since the world shut down in mid-March, I’ve tried several things to help all of us cope with this virtual family schedule overwhelm. Some of them may work better for your family/circumstances than others, so try them out until you find the one(s) that work best for you.

1. Make a master list of all those appointments

I used to keep a running list in my Bullet Journal of any appointments/meetings I had each day, in my Weekly Log. This is also where I would list the girls’ activities that involved me schlepping them about.

RELATED POST: How Bullet Journaling Has Made Me A Better Parent

RELATED POST: How To Start A Bullet Journal, The Easy Way (Free Printable!)

Now that we’re spending our days in the living room instead of in my car, I’ve added color-coding to the daily appointments list in my Bullet Journal. This makes it easier for me to keep track of (for example) which kid has which class meeting at which time. (I get a color, too, for my own meetings and appointments.)

I also took a page in my Bullet Journal to make a master list of ALL the recurring meetings and appointments, so it was easier to see who had what at a glance. I then use this list to fill out the daily reminders on my Bullet Journal weekly log.

Don’t have a bullet journal? Then download your printable Weekly Schedule master list templates HEREthey’re free, and you have a choice of colors!

It is SO easy for me to glance at the bird’s-eye view of what the girls have to do, and where they (virtually) have to be at what times.

2. Maintain your current family online calendar

If you and your partner already use an online system to keep track of each other’s appointments and commitments, be sure to keep it updated during this topsy-turvy time. If you don’t use a shared e-planner yet, now’s a good time to start.

Dear Husband and I use Google Calendar by default; it’s the one his employer uses, so he has to use it anyway. The school where he teaches automatically populates important dates and deadlines onto the calendar (graduation, committee meetings, etc.). His department puts others on there (department meetings), and he also keeps his class schedule, office hours, and student appointments there.

Because this is already set up, it was easy for him to give me viewing access to all these things. I thus have started putting my own appointments, as well as the girls’ extracurriculars and appointments, in there so that he can view them (and keep the slot open, if it’s something he needs to cover for me).

If you haven’t already done so, you should modify all those ongoing repeating appointments and reminders that are no longer happening (e.g., your weekly school volunteer commitment).

This is also one place you can store all those Zoom meeting links, e.g. for that weekly OT appointment that now happens via telemedicine.

By adding these links into your family’s existing calendar, you and your spouse will at least be on the same page – even if you can’t sync these calendars to your kids’ school-based calendars.

3. Teach your kids to use timers and alarms

If your kids are doing virtual schooling on a device, there should be some sort of alarm function on it.

Teach them how to set up reminders/alarms for themselves on their virtual learning device(s).

If their school calendar and weekly to-do list involves a calendar app (like Google Calendar), show them (or figure out with them) how to turn on reminders in their calendar of upcoming events. Like the daily class meeting that just got moved from 10:30 to 11am each weekday.

This has worked especially well for our 8-year-old. She’s set an alarm to go off 3 minutes before every virtual meeting she has, so she remembers to log into her online meetings with teachers.

4. Make an online cheat sheet of all the codes your family needs to access recurring meetings

After a few weeks, I was sick and tired of having to hunt through my inbox and text messages to find the correct meeting link for the correct appointments/special classes at the correct times. (Especially since some of the girls’ weekly commitments went through several online meeting systems before settling on their fave. The first message link I found was not always the CORRECT link!)

Because I’m a Mac user, I opened up my Notes application and made myself a note that I could access across all my devices. (Including the old laptop that has doubled as Kimmie’s virtual schooling device + the portal for things like Girl Scout meetings and karate classes).

Whatever platform(s) you use, you probably already have some way of making electronic lists that you can access across all your devices. Whatever it is, make yourself a new e-list that, if possible, you can access from whatever device your kids will be using for their appointments.

My Notes file with meeting access codes and passwords worked well for a few weeks. Then my husband finished teaching, and I began trying to turn over some of this responsibility to him.

But instead of just needing the access codes, he needed the full schedule of who had which meetings when. Hence what came next:

5. Create an open-access schedule/calendar of recurring appointments

As noted above, DH’s original idea of putting all the links into our calendar AND the girls’ devices didn’t work. We could not link Kimmie’s school Google Calendar to ours because of the school-established security protocols, and Essie’s school uses a totally different scheduling system.

The solution was to make an electronic spreadsheet (using Google Sheets) that combined the day-by-day list in my Bullet Journal with the access codes/meeting links in my Notes file.

Once we had a family spreadsheet that ALL FOUR family members could access, all I had to do was email the link to Dear Husband, and bookmark the link on the girls’ devices.

Having an online family schedule planner solved several problems:

  • Daddy always has the girls’ schedule at his fingertips, for the times when he’s on duty;
  • The girls always have the appropriate access codes on their devices, so they can log themselves into karate classes, Girl Scouts, and recurring appointments without my having to do it for them.

Want to download your own customizable copy of the spreadsheet I used to schedule our family’s virtual commitments and meeting links? Then just ✅click HERE!

This online visual schedule was a huge help in getting DH into the girls’ virtual schooling schedule groove.

The girls agreed that when they remembered their meetings, having the links handy for them to let themselves in was helpful. BUT, this schedule was less useful as a reminder for them because it wasn’t always open-front-and-center on their devices.

6. Use bright sticky notes for family schedule reminders

SO – I then added another layer of virtual family schedule reminders: bright sticky notes, in the girls’ fave colors, right on their devices.

Since I didn’t have room to put the entire schedule on a 3×3 sticky note, I just wrote down the meetings they forgot the most often, and those for which someone needed to log them in (complete with meeting codes and passwords).

With visual reminders on multiple levels, I like to think we have that piece covered now.

But since some people process better when they hear things, vs. seeing them, we’ll soon be letting Daddy into one last step:

7. Morning family briefings

There’s a reason many teachers have a “morning meeting” with their students at the start of each school day.

We have a 3rd grader and a 5th grader this year, in two different schools, in two separate districts, running on two different educational philosophies. Yet they both have classwide morning meetings with their teachers, at the start of every school day.

Since the girls were infants, I’m used to having a morning check-in with my husband, so we’re clear on who has which meetings/appointments when, who’s getting the girls to which activities, and who’s cooking dinner around which evening events.

As he’s taught the second half of spring semester online, we’ve continued this practice. But as with life pre-pandemic, his teaching day has begun before the girls’ breakfast time.

Now that his teaching is done for now, it’s time to be more deliberate about looping him into the morning check-ins the girls and I have about who has which special meetings and activities that day. That way, EVERYONE is on the same page, all at once.

This is especially important when I’m working on a deadline or am in meetings. Knowing that Daddy AND the girls have confirmed, together, who has to do what at which time, will help me resist the temptation to “check in” on how they’re doing. (Which, needless to say, Dear Husband finds annoying – and who can blame him?).

No need to check in, Mama – we’ve got this under control!

Your turn:

What have you tried to keep your family’s school and work commitments straight now that everyone’s living virtually from home? Which things have you found most useful for keeping everything straight? Do let us know in the comments!

And don’t forget to ✅grab your FREE virtual family scheduling tools by filling out this form!

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47 thoughts on “(Virtual) Family Schedule Organization Tips & Hacks”

  1. It’s certainly been a huge adjustment juggling virtual schedules. The only way for me to keep them straight is a good old fashioned paper planner.

    1. Super Mom Hacks

      Oh, I am SO right there with you, Christa! That’s why I’m so old-school on this that I started with a few versions of keeping-it-all-straight in my Bullet Journal. If not for wanting to loop my husband in, it’d probably all still be in analog form (including the stickies on the girls’ devices with the meeting codes) LOL!

  2. It’s definitely important to have a schedule with reminders and have everyone on board.
    Since families are home, they won’t get the usual prompts of school busses and team events. Staying on top of a tightly run ship with encouragement and communication is key.

  3. These are so helpful. Organisation can be difficult let alone trying to do this in the current climate. Thank you, these tips will help.

  4. I love that I don’t have to do this right now. I have 3 kids who are normally in far too many activities and this has been such a great reeval period

    1. Super Mom Hacks

      Oh, excellent! I am pleasantly surprised that the very few activities my kids were in before all this have all continued virtually – for some reason, though, logging onto the computer at a certain time seems infinitely harder to pull off than just showing up at the right time via car!

    1. Super Mom Hacks

      How fortunate that your regular routine hasn’t been disrupted much by this chaos! Everything our family does virtually now is at a different time, or even a different day altogether, than it used to be!

  5. I love this. What a fantastic way to organize schedules. My family is so bad at this that we can’t even get myself and my husband on track with what we’re doing. If we had to homeschool, I don’t even know how we’d handle. We are not a scheduling family but we absolutely need to be, especially as kids get older.

    1. Super Mom Hacks

      It definitely becomes more and more important the older your kids get. I remember how it seemed like such a big deal to get the preschooler to preschool and the K student on the bus once upon a time; even though we really limit our kids’ extracurriculars, it seems as if there is always something going on now, and that has made joint scheduling crucial even BEFORE the pandemic hit.

  6. This is a great guide for those of us working from home and having kids who are schooling from home. We’ll definitely be using some of these.

  7. Keeping track of everything now that we are all at home is getting trickier by the day. Thank you for all of your wisdom an tools, it will definitely help us out! Hang in there!

  8. Melanie williams

    This is such a great idea for families with children. I am sure many people will find this useful x

    1. Super Mom Hacks

      Honestly, being the teacher the 2 weeks we did Mama Homeschool (before the teachers were allowed to start “teaching” remotely again) was loads easier than being Mama Gatekeeper for “virtual school”! 🙂

  9. I so need this right now! Mental overload with all the schedules! Love the tip about the cheat sheet for codes and passwords.

    1. Super Mom Hacks

      #gamechanger – last night was a minor miracle: thanks to the cheat sheet, Essie logged HERSELF into her Brownie Girl Scouts meeting for the first time!!! 🙂

  10. We’re using Google calendar to schedule our family events but I love your tips a lot more tbh, they’re more engaging i think. Thanks a lot.

  11. Good tips for getting organized! My daughter does not go to school yet so there is no schedule to follow as such. But we try to keep a routine for her.

  12. Luckily (in some ways), my boys are still young. We are working with my youngest in his last year of preschool and my oldest is finishing first grade. Since we unenrolled my youngest (his school is also a daycare so didn’t close but we chose to keep him home and would have been paying either way) his education is entirely on us. I’ve used a lot of online resources to find things for him to work on for kindergarten prep. My oldest gets sent a schedule every Sunday and it has the assignments for the entire week in one place. He only has one scheduled meeting each week with his class and a 1:1 now and then for assessments on reading level. I keep EVERYTHING in a google calendar that my husband and I share. And my boys know how to set their timers on the echos around the house 🙂 I can’t imagine doing this with kids who have multiple classes and teachers right now!

    1. Super Mom Hacks

      Yeah, it’s occurred to me that most of the parents I’ve been commiserating with on these challenges are parents of tweens and early elementary students, and/or parents with kids who somehow fall outside neurotypicality. My baby bro and his wife are having a hard time keeping their infant and 3yo occupied while they both telework, and friends with high schoolers have kiddos able to manage their own meetings – but in that in-between stage of ca grades 1-6 (maybe 1-8 for those whose kiddos are “exceptional,”) THAT is the challenging spot where the kids have more demands than they can reasonably administer for themselves.

  13. I am definitely going to use some of these ideas – I am struggling to keep on top of home schooling, home training and music lessons/practice… plus my work and study to deal with too!

    1. Super Mom Hacks

      You are DEFINITELY not alone! I hope at least a few of these work for you. This post was yet another case of me thinking “what’s wrong with our family that we can’t get this together?” until I heard from more and more of my mama-friends that their families were struggling just as much with all of this! 🙂 Good luck!

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