High School Edition · undated on purpose
Every planner your kid abandoned had one thing in common: January. Dated planners punish missed days. For an ADHD, dyslexic, autistic, or AuDHD brain, that's not a planner — it's a guilt subscription.
The Kindquill Study Journal is built the other way around. Skip days are part of the system: every page is undated. Miss a day, a week, a month — pick it back up and nothing is “behind.”
Sensory load is real, so the design keeps it low: matte cream instead of bright white, no harsh contrast, no busy grid, and predictable page shapes that repeat so the layout is never something new to decode. No puzzle-piece imagery, ever. Here, predictability is a feature, not a limitation.
Lexend Deca, the dyslexia-friendly typeface, on low-glare cream. Left-aligned, generously spaced, with no hourly grid anywhere. A dated planner charges guilt for every blank box. This one drops the dates, so a skipped week bills you nothing. The Exam Countdown pages take the time math off your plate: days left, what you know cold, the next three days only. No streaks. No shame. It will not fix your focus. It works with the brain you have.
Formats: Printed journal (148 pages, 8.5×11) · iPad planner for GoodNotes & Notability (light + dark) · Kindle Scribe · Google Slides for Chromebooks · Notion template · printable PDFs.
Drop your email here and we'll ping you the day the High School Edition goes live, launch-week price attached. In the meantime you get free pages now and then, the Weekly Reset first. No streaks, no spam, unsubscribe in one tap.
Is this planner dated?
No, on purpose. Every page is undated, so a missed week costs nothing. Start any month, any week.
Who is the High School Edition for?
High school students with ADHD, dyslexia, autism, or AuDHD, especially the ones who have already abandoned planners. It is a tool, not a treatment.
Is it too young-looking for a teenager?
No. The look is plain and grown up: cream pages, clean type, no cartoon mascots and no gold stars. It reads as a tool a high schooler owns, not a kid’s homework folder.
Is it an academic-year planner?
It works as one without locking you to it. Because every page is undated, you can run it as an academic year planner from August, a calendar-year one from January, or start it the week you buy it.
What formats will it come in?
A printed journal plus five digital formats: iPad (GoodNotes and Notability), Kindle Scribe, Google Slides for Chromebooks, Notion, and printable PDFs.
When can I buy it?
Not yet, but soon. Get on the launch list here to hear first and lock the launch-week price, or try the free Weekly Reset printable in the meantime.
Middle School · College · Everyday (adults)
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Kindquill · built for brains that work differently · a Five Explorers Press imprint
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