How to track progress in a journal?

Lavada Braun
2025-07-18 19:02:08
Count answers
: 9
There are so many ways to track your reading progress and also there are infinite ways to design your book journal layouts. A reading journal is a notebook that you make from scratch to track reading related progress such as the books you’ve read, want to read, reviews, and the list goes on. Here are some examples that are popular in the book bullet journal community: Bookish Quotes Reading Goals Reading Progress Reading Log Reading Tracker Book Reviews TBR (To Be Read) List/Books To Read Books I’ve Read Best Books of the Month/Year Book/Reading Doodles. I like setting goals in order for me to be accountable for the things I want to achieve, this year, my aim is to read 30 books. Keep track on the books you’ve read with this simple spread that looks like a library card, I like including the start and finish dates to see how long it takes me to read a book. This is actually a remix of social media goals I commonly see in the bullet journal community but for your reading goals, because my reading goal is 30 books this year, I’ve divided that goal by five. I’ve used a yearly tracker for my reading journal so that way it’s easier for me to have a yearly overview on the days I have spent reading.