From Schedule Chaos to Freedom: How I Structure My Week as a Freelance Music Teacher
When I first left the classroom, I was craving freedom.

No more back-to-back classes.

No more duty schedules.

No more bell dictating when I could eat or breathe or use the bathroom.

And I got it. The freedom. The space. The blank calendar.

But what I wasn’t expecting?

Was how hard it would be to figure out my new rhythm.

Because once you get your time back… you suddenly have to decide what to do with it.

And that can be overwhelming.

So if you’re feeling scattered, reactive, or a little too “go with the flow” in your freelance teaching life—this post is for you. I’m sharing exactly how I structure my week as a freelance music educator—so I can teach, rest, and live with clarity and peace.

You don’t have to figure this out by trial and error.

Let’s make your schedule work for you.

Step 1: Start With Your Season

Before you start plugging things into a planner, pause and ask:
  • What matters most in this season of life?
  • What do I want my days to feel like?
  • What’s realistic for my energy and capacity right now?
For me, that meant building a week that gave me:
  • Slow mornings
  • Teaching blocks in the afternoon
  • Protected time for rest, family, and personal projects
Your version might look totally different—and that’s the point.
Your schedule should reflect your values, not your pressure.

Step 2: Set Clear Teaching Hours (That Work for You)

One of the most common freelance mistakes I see?

Letting students fill any open time on your calendar.

At first, it feels flexible.

But eventually, it feels like chaos.

Here’s what I recommend:
  • Group similar lessons or classes together
  • Teach during your peak energy hours
  • Build in a “buffer block” once a week for reschedules or overflow
I teach most of my lessons in the afternoon and classes in the morning, a couple days a week—so I have off mornings for prep or rest, and other days fully open for non-teaching tasks or margin.

Step 3: Give Admin + Planning Tasks Their Own Space

It’s easy to underestimate how much time it takes to run a teaching business.

Lesson prep.
Emails.
Parent communication.
Scheduling.
Invoicing.
Marketing or social media (if you do that).

These things need time too.

So instead of letting them sneak in everywhere and steal your peace?

Give them a block of their own.

Maybe that’s:
  • Admin Monday afternoons
  • Email catch-up on Tuesday + Thursday mornings
  • A batch prep session for social media every other Friday
You get to design it. But don’t ignore it.

Step 4: Schedule Personal Time Like It’s a Lesson

Listen, I know how tempting it is to “just squeeze one more student in.”

But here’s the thing:

You didn’t leave burnout… to recreate it with a prettier calendar.

So I block things like:
  • Walks during the day
  • A Sabbath-style rest on Sunday
  • Weekly date nights
  • Creative time that’s not “for work”
And I honor those blocks just like I would if they were a paid class.

Your peace is worth protecting.

Want Help Structuring Your Week?

Be sure to
listen to Episode 6 of Out of the Music Room for the full breakdown.


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