Finding Your Rhythm: Time Management Strategies for Parents as the School Year Settles In

Finding Your Rhythm: Time Management Strategies for Parents as the School Year Settles In

By Angela Khater, MA, BCBA | Clinical Director at IOA

As we move deeper into the school year, many parents are finally hitting their stride with new routines. The initial chaos of back-to-school preparations has given way to a more predictable rhythm, making this the perfect time to refine your time management strategies.

As a clinical director who works with families every day, I’ve observed that effective time management isn’t just about productivity—it’s about creating space for what matters most while reducing stress for the entire family.

The Post-Settling Period: Why Now Matters

The first few weeks of school are typically focused on adjustment and crisis management. By now, however, you’ve likely identified the pain points in your schedule and have a clearer picture of what your family’s actual needs are versus what you anticipated they would be.

This settling period presents a unique opportunity to implement sustainable time management strategies that work with your family’s natural rhythms rather than against them.

Essential Time Management Strategies for Busy Parents

Conduct a Time Audit
Spend a week tracking your time in 30-minute blocks. You may be surprised to see where it really goes. Look for:

Tasks that consume more time than expected

Pockets of unused or underutilized time

This awareness forms the foundation of effective time management.

Implement the “Prep Night” System
Dedicate Sunday evenings (or whichever day works best) to preparing for the week:

Review the schedule

Prep school lunches

Lay out clothes

Restock backpacks

Brief family members on schedule changes

Front-loading reduces morning chaos and decision fatigue.

Create Family Command Centers
Designate a central spot in your home for key information:

Shared calendar

Meal planning board

Paperwork bin (forms, permission slips)

Emergency contact info

Kids’ checklists

When everyone knows where to look, you save time and reduce questions.

Master the Art of Batching
Group similar activities together: errands, emails, meal prep, or school tasks. This reduces the mental load of constant task-switching.

Establish Non-Negotiable Boundaries
Every “yes” is also a “no” to something else. Be intentional with:

Work hours

Evening/weekend commitments

Extracurricular activities (quality > quantity)

Boundaries protect time for what matters most.

Special Considerations for Families Receiving ABA Services

Families involved in ABA often juggle school, therapy, and home life. Consider these strategies:

Coordinate therapy schedules with school routines and your child’s energy levels.

Reinforce consistency by aligning home activities with therapy goals (e.g., visual schedules, brief practice during daily tasks).

Plan for flexibility with backup childcare, buffer time, and open communication with your clinical team.

Technology Tools That Help

Choose tools that simplify, not complicate:

Shared calendars (Google, Apple)

Meal planning apps (Mealime, Plan to Eat)

Task managers (Todoist, Any.do)

Navigation tools (Waze)

Pick ones that multiple family members can access.

Building Sustainable Habits

The 15-Minute Rule: Dedicate 15 minutes daily to prep, cleanup, or planning. Small efforts prevent overwhelming backlogs.

Transition Rituals: Use warnings, playlists, or visual timers to ease activity changes.

These habits reduce resistance and keep the household on track.

Managing the Mental Load

Delegate age-appropriate responsibilities: Younger kids can pack backpacks, teens can manage laundry or transportation.

Share the planning load: Split meal planning, school communication, and extracurricular management with your partner.

When to Seek Additional Support

Seek help if:

Overwhelm persists despite strategies

Your child’s needs change significantly

Stress impacts family wellbeing

Support is itself a time management strategy.

Moving Forward with Intention

Time management is an ongoing process, not a final destination. Start with one or two strategies, practice them consistently, then layer on more as they become habits.

Your time is precious—and how you spend it shows your children what matters most. By creating intentional systems now, you’re setting your family up for a more peaceful, productive, and connected school year.

And remember: your ABA team is here to support not only your child’s development, but also your family’s overall wellbeing.