Reading Log Generator

Editable daily log with book title, author, pages, and minutes. Totals update automatically. Print to PDF or download CSV.

Contact

We’d love to hear your feedback—feature ideas, bug reports, or how you’re using the reading log at home or in class.

Email

everydayroyalties@gmail.com

What helps us help you

  • Browser & device (e.g., Chrome on Chromebook, iPadOS Safari).
  • What you tried and what happened.
  • Screenshots if possible (avoid posting student names).

Before you write

  • Refresh the page or try a private window to rule out extensions.
  • Ensure JavaScript is enabled; disable battery saver if timers pause.
  • Use the export button to back up logs before clearing your browser storage.

Last updated: 2025-09-23

Your feedback matters

Help Make This Reading Tool Even Better

Every classroom, household, and reader is different. Your suggestions help shape future improvements to the generator so that it works for more people and more situations.

Even a short message about what helped—or what got in the way—can influence what features come next.

Ideas we're exploring

Future Directions for Reading Log Templates

We're always thinking about ways to make reading more visible and more joyful. That might include new templates, integrations, or companion reflection pages.

If you have a vision for how logs could better support readers, we'd love to hear it.

Examples welcome

Share How You Use the Generator in Your Setting

Real-world examples are incredibly helpful for improving any tool. If you're comfortable, you can describe how you've adapted the reading logs for your students or family.

These stories help others imagine what's possible and highlight needs we may not have considered yet.

Collaboration

Partnering with Other Educators and Families

Many of the best ideas for reading routines come from other practitioners. When you share what you've learned, you help build a wider network of support around readers.

This tool is one piece of that ecosystem; your lived experience fills in the rest.

Questions to consider

What Feedback Helps the Most?

If you decide to reach out, you don't need a long message. A few specific details often make feedback easier to act on.

Even one concrete example from your experience can shape how the tool grows.

Edge cases

Sharing Unique Situations and Use Cases

No guide can anticipate every context where reading logs might be used. If you're working in a unique setting, your story can highlight needs that aren't obvious at first glance.

These glimpses into real life can inspire future templates and tips that better reflect the variety of readers out there.

Stories from practice

Why Your Specific Context Matters

A brief description of your context—grade level, setting, languages spoken, or program type—can make your suggestions even more actionable.

These details help connect your feedback to the realities of day-to-day implementation.

Impact stories

Sharing Moments When Logs Made a Difference

Beyond suggestions for improvement, it's also helpful to hear about the moments when reading logs supported a breakthrough.

These stories reveal the human side of a simple sheet of paper and help guide future examples and tips.