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This morning circle weekly planner is a post out of the 31 Days of Morning Circles. You can find the main page for this series here.
In the last post, I shared a daily structure (+ a free planner) to help you organize your daily morning circle routine.
It’s a good idea to also have a weekly routine—especially for the main activities part of the circle. Some children might have a difficult time understanding the days of the week and the time lapse between them.
This is why you’ll notice from the sample I shared on day 7, that I don’t work on calendar skills with my son. It’s too abstract a concept for him at this point. Instead, we work on specific skills/activities on specific days of the week. Rather than saying, “Today is Monday,” which means absolutely nothing to my son, I say, “Today is Drawing Day!” And, each Monday is indeed drawing day.
Over time, the child will internalize the routine. They’ll know that the day after Drawing Day is Exercise Day, and so on.
To decide what types of activities/skills you and the child want to focus on in the main activities section, create a list. Use criteria for subjects you already work on as inspiration. Then, categorize the criteria and attribute them to a corresponding day.
For example, on a weekly basis, my son works on:
Technically, we work on these skills daily, but formally, we emphasize them somewhere in the span of a week.
I use the morning circle to introduce a new skill because we are already in a safe setting. I am usually sitting close to my son and have his attention, so I can introduce a skill he’ll be using later in the day or week.
Since drawing is a fine motor activity, I’ve found that I can work on fine motor exercises through various drawing activities. For instance, drawing can be done using different tools (crayons, markers, chalk, finger, a stick, etc.) and on different surfaces (whiteboard, paper, chalkboard, sand, in the air, etc.) If I label Monday as “Fine Motor” day, it doesn’t mean anything to my son. Instead, I’ve dedicated Mondays to drawing and labelled it “Drawing Day”. This doesn’t mean we don’t draw on other days of the week. We just focus on drawing in the morning circle on Mondays.
It all depends on the child’s developmental level.
To make the task easier for you, I’ve created a weekly planner (free to download also by clicking on image):
What skills will you work on in the morning circle? What “days” would you add to the list?
Continue reading my essays, activities, and case studies for supporting the education of disabled/chronically ill and neurodivergent children.
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