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Case planning course

Court Calm: Case Planning Made Simple

This page is built for people searching for a court calm course, court calm case planning, or a plain-language case planning course. The goal is simple: reduce panic, create order, and move from scattered notes to a usable court file.

12 lessons Self-paced Case planning

Who this course is for

  • Self-represented people starting a civil, family, housing, or administrative matter.
  • Anyone who has facts and documents but no clear case timeline yet.
  • Learners who want a no lawyer needed course before paying for one-on-one help.

What you should be able to do after this page

  • Build a court-ready case timeline that separates facts, claims, evidence, and deadlines.
  • Turn handwritten notes, screenshots, and messages into a clean working file.
  • Prepare a hearing outline that keeps the issue, remedy, and proof in one place.
  • Know what still needs research before you rely on a template or court form.

Inside the track

Core modules

Case map

Create a one-page overview of people, events, documents, and the remedy you want.

Evidence order

Group exhibits by issue so your paperwork matches your story.

Court calendar

Track filing, response, service, and hearing dates without missing the next action.

Hearing prep

Write a short issue statement, facts summary, and checklist for the day of court.

Related next step

Use this course with a guide, not in isolation.

Pair a focused track with one of the plain-language guides below if you want faster context and cleaner execution.

FAQ

Court Calm questions people usually ask first.

Is Court Calm a good starting point for beginners?

Yes. It works best when you need structure first and legal research second.

Does a case planning course replace legal advice?

No. It helps you organize your case so any legal advice you do get is easier to use.

Can this help before a hearing?

Yes. The strongest use case is preparing your file, timeline, and questions before court.