Mrs Clever
Pre-Order: Weekly Dashboard Student Planner: August 2026- July 2027
Pre-Order: Weekly Dashboard Student Planner: August 2026- July 2027
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Pre-Order now. Delivery the first week of August.
When we sat down with students to design this planner, they showed up with not just opinions, but brilliant ideas and thoughtful additions.
Yes, they wanted it to be pretty — a soft blue floral cover with matching accessories, something worth pulling out of their bag. But they didn't stop there. They thought through exactly how it should work: how the weekly layout needed to shift when summer hit, where the sticky note should live, what a daily "Tell Mom" box could do for their relationship with their parents, and how the end of the year deserved more than a blank page.
The Mrs. Clever Weekly Dashboard Student Planner is the result of that conversation. It's beautiful because they asked for beautiful. And it's thoughtful because they refused to stop at pretty.
August 2026–July 2027. Hardback. Backpack-safe covered spiral. Built by students, for students.
More than a planner. A keepsake.
Most planners are forgotten by October. This one gets better as the year goes on.
The Weekly Dashboard Student Planner is a hardback, gold spiral-bound planner (August 2026–July 2027) designed for the girl who is keeping track of more than just homework. It's built around the things that actually matter to her — her schedule, her people, her dreams, and the memories she doesn't want to lose.
Pretty was just the starting point.
Yes, the cover is beautiful — soft blue floral, hardback, with coordinating sticky notes tucked right inside. The girls asked for that, and we agreed 100%. A planner she loves to look at is a planner that stays on her desk instead of the bottom of her bag.
But that was the easy part.
The harder work was everything else: the covered spiral so nothing snags or bends in her backpack. The weekly layout that is structured one way during the school year — with homework columns, due dates, and after-school plans for every weekday — but then restructured entirely for summer, because her life in June looks nothing like her life in October, and they knew that mattered.
The daily *Tell Mom* box, because she's got things she wants to remember to share, and they tend to evaporate between the bell and the front door. The sticky note space drawn into every single week, because that's where sticky notes actually belong.
And there's something else worth saying about paper: writing things down works in a way that a phone calendar simply doesn't. Homework, plans, the small things she doesn't want to forget — they get buried in notifications and group chats. On paper, they stay put. She sees them. She remembers them. That's not nostalgia. That's how memory works.
Every detail in this planner was debated and decided by the students who use planners. It shows.
What's inside:
About Me — She starts the year by making it hers. Personal info, her schedule, her current obsessions, a doodle of her mood, her people, and the declaration: This is going to be the year I...
Big Picture Plans + Vision Board — A month-by-month overview of what she wants the year to hold, alongside a full vision board spread where she can write, sketch, collage, or junk journal her dreams across every category: school, health, friendships, money, hobbies, and the ones that don't fit in a box.
Year at a Glance — A two-page spread covering all twelve months, August 2026 through July 2027, so she can see the whole year at once.
Monthly Tab Dividers — Each floral divider has space to write in her word of the month, what she's looking forward to, her goals, and wins to carry forward from last month. Every month gets a fresh start.
School Year Weekly Pages (August–May) — Two pages per week, with a structure she actually asked for:
- Homework tracker with due dates — every day, Monday through Friday
- After school plans
- Saturday and Sunday lines (because weekends happen too)
- A designated sticky note space on every single week
- Tell Mom — a dedicated spot each day to jot down the things she wants to remember to share when she gets home
- Grateful for this week to open the week
- Praise this week to close it
Summer Weekly Pages (June–July) — Same great structure, reorganized for summer life. Time blocks for work hours, summer classes, or camp schedules. Don't forget and Tell Mom sections carry through. Gratitude and praise stay all year.
The Yearbook — This year, in your own words.
This is the section that makes the planner a keepsake.
At the end of the school year, the planner doesn't get recycled. It becomes a record. The girls in our focus groups talked at length about this — these are enormous years. The friendships, the drama, the moments that feel enormous while they're happening (and turn out to actually have been). They wanted somewhere to put all of it, in their own handwriting, before it slipped away.
The Yearbook section gives them that place. She'll find pages for:
- What she learned about herself — and about other people
- Her favorite moment from each month
- A look back at her vision board: What Became Real — how those dreams actually showed up
- The stories, the inside jokes, the best friends
- The highs and the lows
- The soundtrack of the year
- Notes to her future self
- What she's already thinking about next year
It is a full record of who she was during this particular, unrepeatable school year. That's not something you throw away.
The details:
Dates: August 2026 – July 2027
Binding: Hardback with covered/protected gold spiral — backpack safe with ribbon bookmark and elastic cover strap
Includes: Coordinating sticky notes inside cover
Dividers: Monthly floral tab dividers (August through July)
Weekly layout: School year pages + summer time-block pages
Features: Tell Mom daily, sticky note spot, gratitude + praise every week
Sections: About Me, Big Picture Plans, Vision Board, Year at a Glance, Monthly Dividers, Weekly Pages, The Yearbook
Size: 8.75" x 9.25"
For mom:
Every school day has a spot called Tell Mom — for the things she wants to remember to share with you when she walks in the door.
It's small. It matters.
You know how it goes. She comes home, drops her bag, disappears — and you find out about the field trip permission slip at 9pm.
The Tell Mom section gives her a place to capture those things during the day, so they don't get lost between the bell and dinner.
Beyond that: this planner was built to help her feel organized without feeling overwhelmed, celebrate what's going well, and end the year with a record of who she was.