Tools Pasal

School & study planning

Timetable Maker Nepal

Create class routines for schools, colleges and tuition centres, catch teacher or classroom clashes, and download a printable PDF or PNG.

Saved automatically on this device
DayPeriod 110:0010:45Period 210:4511:30Period 311:3012:15Period 412:1513:00Lunch Break13:0013:30Period 513:3014:15Period 614:1515:00Period 715:0015:45
SundayLunch Break
MondayLunch Break
TuesdayLunch Break
WednesdayLunch Break
ThursdayLunch Break
FridayLunch Break

How to make a school class routine

Enter the institution name, adjust the teaching days and period times, then create subjects. Add a class or section and tap each timetable cell to assign its subject, teacher and classroom. Add more class tabs to coordinate a full school or tuition timetable.

Designed for Nepal’s weekly school pattern

The editor starts with Sunday through Friday and leaves Saturday out, matching the common weekly pattern used by many Nepali institutions. This is a convenience default rather than a rule: boarding schools, coaching centres, universities and examination periods can use different days, shifts and period lengths, so every day and time remains editable.

Teacher and classroom conflict detection

A timetable becomes difficult when several classes share teachers, laboratories or rooms. If the same teacher or room appears in two class tabs on the same day and period, both cells receive a visible conflict marker and the issue is explained below the editor. Empty teacher and room fields are ignored.

Example Nepal class routine

SettingExample
DaysSunday–Friday
School day10:00 AM–4:00 PM
Class periodsSeven periods of 45 minutes
Break30-minute lunch after period four
ClassesClass 9 A, Class 9 B and Class 10 A

The default generator follows this example, but it can be changed for morning/day shifts, college lectures, practical blocks or shorter tuition periods.

Why this version uses tap-to-edit

Timetable products often use drag-and-drop design canvases. Those work well on large screens but become frustrating on the phones used by many teachers and students. Tools Pasal uses a simple cell editor: tap a slot, choose the subject and type the teacher or room. The routine remains printable without requiring a design account or uploading school data.

Scope and limitations

Conflict detection covers exact teacher and room names across the classes in this project. Use consistent spelling—for example, do not mix “Computer Lab” and “Comp. Lab” for the same room. The tool does not automatically optimize teacher workload, subject frequency, consecutive periods or institutional preferences. Those are advanced constraint-scheduling problems better suited to a later automatic school scheduler.

Frequently asked questions

Can I create routines for several classes or sections?

Yes. Add or duplicate class tabs inside one project. Because the classes share the same days and periods, the tool can warn when a teacher or room is assigned to two classes at the same time.

Why does the timetable start with Sunday to Friday?

That is a useful default for many schools and colleges in Nepal, where Saturday is commonly the weekly off-day. You can remove days or add Saturday from Days & periods.

How do I save the routine as PDF?

Click Print / Save PDF and choose Save as PDF in the browser print dialog. Every class in the project is formatted as a separate clean landscape timetable.

Is my school timetable uploaded?

No. Editing, conflict checks, local saving and PNG generation happen in your browser. The project remains on the current device unless you export or print it.

Can I write subjects in Nepali?

Yes. Subject, school, teacher, room and note fields accept Nepali Unicode as well as English.

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