I have a notebook in which I keep these lists. The first page of the notebook (after my calendars) is the project list. Since my writing happens in the context of teaching, administrative work that requires extensive event planning, as well as a personal life that includes children, my project lists tends to include items related to all of these. Sometimes, I separate them for ease of reference. Sometimes, I keep them together. For our purposes, we'll create Project and Next Action lists related to our work this week in the boot camp, with an eye towards, perhaps, using these tools beyond the last day of bootcamp.
Our first step will be to create a list of projects related to your work. In the "Readings" page under Getting Things Done you can find more details on project lists from Gettingthingsdone.com. Below I've adapted what we'll work with today.
Think of your Projects list as a current table of contents of the current outcomes on your plate.
Projects are defined as outcomes that will require more than one action step to complete and that you can mark off as finished in the next 12 months.
Projects are listed by the outcome you will achieve when you can mark it as done (what will be true?).
Effective project names motivate you toward the outcome you wish to achieve, and give you clear direction about what you are trying to accomplish.
Current projects have at least one next action, waiting for, or calendar action, in order to be considered current.
Projects that have no current next action, waiting for, or calendar action are either no longer projects for you, or should be incubated to Someday/Maybe
To help you make your project list, I've provided two documents that can be found in the Reading page under "Getting Things Done"-- The Trigger List and the Project List Verbs.