<p>I have one three-subject notebook and every time I go to a class I use one page, front and back. I never run out of space, and if I do, I write in the margins. I keep all my papers in the covers of the notebook.</p>
<p>I use a single subject notebook for every class and write only on the front of each page. I keep my papers in manila folders.</p>
<p>and I use Google Calendar to manage my appointments.</p>
<p>I have three notebooks for each subject, twelve giant folders filled to the brim with handouts and tutorials and post-it’s everywhere. </p>
<p>(that’s from 2 years of high school altogether) I can’t live without my organizer which has daily To-Do and appointment sections.</p>
<p>I’ve always had one notebook for everything. well since 10th grade. i write on random pages until it gets too hard to find blank ones. and then I get a new notebook from somewhere. and I just put my papers in my backpack. And when there get to be too many (like >20) I go through them and throw out the useless ones. </p>
<p>I have a hard time being organized for some reason. basically if i try to be organized my organization just deteriorates very quickly, so I stopped trying. but my system worked alright for me.</p>
<p>Good to know you don’t use carbon dioxide!</p>
<p>I have four folders - one for AP Physics, one for Spanish III, one for AP Human Geography, and one for Key Club (President), four composition books - one for Digital Electronics (notes), one for AP Physics (notes), one for Spanish III (current events), and one for AP Human Geography (current events), three spiral notebooks - two for AP Lang (writing journal, dialectical journal) and one for AP Human Geography (notes), and two binders - one for AP World History and one for AP Lang. </p>
<p>Four folders, four comp. books, three spiral notebooks, and two binders total.</p>
<p>Uhh HSL has been officially taken over…I’m out.</p>
<p>I have a binder with sections for every class except Japanese which has a spiral notebook.</p>
<p>I use looseleaf, folders, and binders. I prefer looseleaf because I can switch pages out, take one page out, etc, and spirals have a bad habit of breaking on me. Anything I need everyday (working on for a specific test) goes in a folder- one for each class. In the left pocket are syllabi, policies, reference sheets, helpful tables/charts, etc. In the right are notes and worksheets for the current unit. After each unit is over, the notes go (in order) into a binder I keep at home for the final/APs. It saves me from having to carry mutiple binders, which is a blessing.</p>
<p>Freshman: One big binder with loose leaf and dividers for all classes.
Sophomore: 2 inch binder for every class, and accordion folder.
Junior: Laptop with Evernote, and accordion folder.
I love my accordion folder.</p>
<p>my brain. like seriously</p>
<p>I get a three ring binder for each class, and wind up being too lazy to hole-punch papers and just shove everything into the two pockets.</p>
<p>I always have felt that a single subject binder for each subject works the best, as it keeps all relevant information together. However, I do know people who pull off combining subjects (like humanities for instance).</p>
<p>All in all, it’s mostly personal preference. Try out different methods, and see which works best for you!</p>
<p>I have one big binder for all 5 of my classes. I have a one subject notebook for my honors physiology lab journal. And one 3 subject notebook for taking notes in Spanish, math, physiology, and English class. I also have a planner that I write all my homework in. I’m way more organized than last year.</p>
<p>6 folders, 1 for each class. 2 notebooks, 1 for math and 1 for science</p>