The First Days of School
Harry & Rosemary Wong
The classic guide to starting the year with clear procedures and routines — the backbone of any well-run K-3 classroom.
View on Amazon →Paperwork is the tax on teaching. These strategies don't eliminate it — but they create systems that contain it so it doesn't spread into the time you need for instruction, planning, and recovery.
The most time-expensive paperwork habit is shuffling the same paper multiple times without acting on it. When something comes to you — a form, a notification, an IEP, a referral — process it immediately if it takes under 3 minutes. If it takes longer, file it in a specific "to do" location and deal with it at your designated administrative time. Papers that move from desk to bag to desk again without being processed create cognitive load and stress, even when they're just sitting there.
Reserve 30-45 minutes per week specifically for administrative tasks: returning forms, logging data, responding to non-urgent emails, filing paperwork. Protect this time. When administrative tasks have a designated slot, they don't bleed into planning, and you don't feel guilty ignoring them at other times.
IEP and 504 documentation is legally significant. Keep a dedicated folder (physical and/or digital) per student with documentation. Before any IEP meeting, review your classroom progress notes so you come with specific observations, not general impressions. After meetings, document your follow-up responsibilities and set calendar reminders for them. Missed documentation deadlines create legal risk for the school — treat these timelines as non-negotiable.
Build a library of communication templates for frequently sent messages: behavior concern notification, academic concern notification, positive report, conference invitation, newsletter. Fill in the specific details but don't rewrite from scratch every time. This reduces the time cost of routine communication significantly without reducing its quality.
A physical inbox and outbox on your desk is one of the simplest systems that prevents papers from piling up randomly. Anything that comes to you lands in the inbox. Anything that needs to leave goes in the outbox. At your designated administrative time each week, you process the inbox — act on it, file it, or discard it. Without a clear landing zone, papers spread across every available surface, which creates visual clutter and cognitive load even when you're not actively working on them.
For digital paperwork — emails requesting action, online forms, digital documents — use your email inbox the same way. Flag emails that require follow-up. Unflag when complete. Don't leave read emails sitting unreplied as a reminder system; they accumulate and create anxiety without creating action.
Not all paperwork has the same retention requirement. Student assessment data, IEP documentation, incident reports, and parent communication logs have legal retention periods and must be kept in the appropriate location — usually the student's cumulative file. General informational flyers, meeting agendas with no action items, and routine announcements can be discarded after they're no longer relevant. At the end of each grading period, do a 15-minute paperwork purge: pull out anything that no longer needs to be in your classroom.
Documentation protects you when concerns escalate. If a parent later claims you never communicated a concern, your written log is evidence. If a student's behavior becomes a formal discipline matter, your dated observation notes support the process. Get in the habit of brief, dated notes: what you observed, what you did, what the outcome was. Two or three sentences is sufficient for most situations. Keep a simple spiral notebook or digital note folder labeled with the school year. Date every entry. Don't use sticky notes or loose papers for documentation — they disappear.
Not all teacher paperwork is equally important. Some documentation — IEP progress notes, behavior incident reports, mandated reporter documentation, legally required records — must be completed accurately and on time because the consequences of failing to do so are significant. Other documentation — detailed lesson planning formats required by administration, optional professional development logs, informal home-school communication records — matters less and can often be completed more efficiently than the format suggests. Knowing which paperwork falls into which category lets you allocate your limited administrative time appropriately. Treat the legally significant and legally required documentation as non-negotiable and complete it first. For everything else, look for the most efficient way to meet the requirement without letting the format consume more time than the task warrants.
Much of the paperwork teachers complete is variations on the same document: parent communication notes, anecdotal observations, conference records, informal assessments. Creating and refining a simple template for each type of documentation you produce regularly saves significant time over the course of a year. A parent communication log that has the date, the topic, the outcome, and a next-steps field takes 2 minutes to complete per communication. A blank page where you write notes from scratch takes 5-10 minutes for the same information. The template investment — 20 minutes to create — pays for itself in the first week. Keep templates in a single organized digital folder where you can access them quickly, and update them when you find a more efficient format.
Paperwork that accumulates undone creates ongoing cognitive load — you're aware of it, slightly anxious about it, and it occupies mental bandwidth even when you're not actively working on it. A brief daily paperwork habit — 10-15 minutes at the end of each school day — prevents the buildup. Complete today's documentation before leaving today: the communication log entry from the parent call, the behavior note from this afternoon's incident, the anecdotal observation from this morning's reading group. This daily maintenance costs 10-15 minutes but saves the much larger investment of catching up on a week of undocumented events from memory on Friday afternoon — when the details have faded and the task feels overwhelming.
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Harry & Rosemary Wong
The classic guide to starting the year with clear procedures and routines — the backbone of any well-run K-3 classroom.
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