Yep, I believe good old pencil and paper are the tools to use for that. Keeping in mind that eventually your models will access the database through an object relational mapper, you should think in relations.
Mostly, it is worthwhile to think in relations first and then figure out names for your models. Consider the following case where you need something that stores the following:
- posts need to be stored
- comments need to be stored
- users have to be stored
Now, before you think about how you name each of these, rather think about how they are related. I find that mostly by doing that, you will choose the right names intuitively:
A post belongs to a user, a user has many posts, a comment belongs to a post, a post has many comments, a user has many comments, a comment belongs to a user.
In this last rather intuitive sentence, you have everything you need: names and relations. Rails supports this intuition because it is so idiomatic.
This is as far as planning databases and models goes - if you have an existing application and need to figure out the models' relations, I recommend using a UML (unified modelling language) gem called railroady, which will automatically create a nice graphical overview of your application's data.