The five decisions that matter most
Before choosing pages, suppliers, or layouts, schools that get the best results tend to resolve five core decisions.
These decisions shape everything that follows.
4.1 What is the planner’s primary job?
If only one section worked perfectly, which one must it be?
For most schools, this is homework recording.
But not always.
This decision matters because secondary functions should never weaken the primary one.
If the core section fails, the planner fails.
(Linked guide: Planning student planner content)
4.2 How will homework actually be recorded?
This decision has more impact than almost any other.
Key questions include:
- recording by day or by subject
- weekly, fortnightly, or daily views
Trying to force a daily process into a weekly space, or a weekly process into a daily layout, is where planners quietly break.
Frequency drives layout. Not the other way around.
4.3 How much reflection belongs in the planner?
Reflection works best when it is:
- periodic
- focused
- linked to real conversations
Trying to capture everything usually weakens everything.
When reflection competes with homework for space, both suffer.
(Linked guide: Progress and reflection in student planners)
4.4 What needs to survive a full year of use?
A planner is handled every day.
Durability decisions are behavioural decisions.
When pages tear out, bindings distort, or covers deteriorate, students disengage. Once a planner feels broken, it is treated as disposable.
Material choices underpin everything else.
(Linked guide: Student planner materials, binding and durability)
4.5 Who will carry the design burden?
This is often the most overlooked decision.
Will the school:
- assemble and refine content internally?
- or delegate coherence, flow, and challenge to specialists?
This choice affects:
- time investment
- consistency
- confidence in the final result
Both routes can work. The difference is where the thinking sits.
(Linked guide: Designed vs Xpress student planners)