Someone?
Training schedule

Hey man, i'm about to start studying chess myself. I've got a heap of different books lying around which i've never put any serious effort into, so what i'm planning to do is study only 1 page daily from each of the books. The books cover just about every aspect of chess so it seems like it'd be a well-rounded study. I'm only going to be studying 1 page from each book because I really want to try to understand as much as I can from that 1 page, and then try to incorporate what i've learn into some blitz games after the study. Even if I can't use it in the games i'll be trying to keep the ideas in my mind while i'm playing. I'm also going to start using the tactics trainer, chess mentor and videos from this site every day. It'll probably be a lot of work, but I work online so i've got plenty of time every day to devote to this. Anyway, this is my plan and it might give you some ideas!

You could try Silman's Roots of Positional Understanding:
http://www.chess.com/chessmentor/view_course?id=22
Try not to do all 300 lessons in one night, or they might not stick...LOL

You're a diamond member. Why aren't you working with Chess Mentor? Or perhaps you are and didn't mention it. If you're not, get yourself to the site and start!

My advice would be that you do not spread your study too much. If you have studied a certain topic, you need time to master it and use it in your games effectively. Studying about many topics (strategy, tactics, endgame, opening) in a little time would not let you master any of them.
I suggest you to train a specific aspect for 1 or 2 weeks, play games (to practice and learn to apply what you have learnt) and then only move to the next topic.
I practise chess for about 3 hours a day but I don`t have a training schedule. I just do some tactics work on my openings and analyse some GM games. So I would appreciate it if some one could suggest a training method by dividing the time for each aspects (like tactics,strategy etc.).Thanks.