BlogToolkit: Building Time Management Skills Through Lesson Plans
Note To Career Coaches:
At Think Skill Tools we call this our BlogToolkit. This free resource contains a one-page infographic that is packed with practical tips, activities, and resources to help you show up as the best career coach in all learning spaces for all students. The goal of this toolkit is to help you guide your students to explore their interests and dreams in a strategic way.

Like The BlogToolkit? Share with others.
Check out our printables to keep you shining as a Career Coach
Practical Ways to Keep Learning
- Read our blogs on all things time management. We really like talking about this skill to help get students ready for life and their future careers.
- Consider attending webinar trainings, live workshops, and/or self-paced e-courses that discuss effective lesson planning with soft skills like time management.
- Work with other career coaches (e.g. teachers, parents, friends, etc.) to create and share lesson plans that incorporate soft skills like time management.
- Check out sites like Canva to create your own lesson plan templates that emphasize time management. Even using AI assist tools will help!
- Embrace the power of continuous feedback mechanisms in your classroom. Seek feedback from students on how well the lesson plans help them manage their time AND focus on career readiness.
- Utilize online resources like this and this, as well as tools for lesson planning that have a focus on time management.

Think Skill Tools was founded by Dr. Danielle Reid. Having no choice but to hang up her lab coat as an Environmental Health Toxicologist and Industrial Hygienist, after having her first child, she pivoted into a space where she could have the best of both worlds – loving on her kids and serving others in the education sector. She dove head first into the world of educational content development and homeschooling. Walking in her purpose (and having fun with it!), she is on a mission to create resources that make career education (at home and in the classroom) the norm and way less complicated to navigate.
