Plan study blocks across the week — morning, afternoon, evening — in a grid that auto-saves in your browser and prints on one page. Free.
💾 Auto-saves in this browser as you type.
Fill your hardest subject into the slots where your brain is best — for most people that's mornings — and put revision of already-covered material in the low-energy evening slots. Blocks beat marathons: plan in 25–50 minute focused sessions rather than "study all afternoon", because a specific block ("Chem: redox questions, morning") gets done while a vague one gets postponed. Leave at least two slots empty each week; a plan with zero slack shatters the first time something comes up, and abandoned plans teach you not to plan.
For exam periods, generate a day-by-day schedule with the Revision Timetable Builder, keep deadlines visible in the Assignment Tracker, and turn study consistency itself into a streak with the Habit Tracker.
How many hours a day should I study?
Quality beats quantity: 3–4 genuinely focused hours outperforms 8 distracted ones. Plan blocks you'll actually complete, then add more once you're consistently finishing the plan.
What's the best time of day to study?
Whenever you're personally sharpest — most people peak mid-morning. Schedule new, difficult material there and use tired hours for review, flashcards, and organising notes.
Should I study one subject per day or mix?
Mixing (interleaving) two or three subjects a day beats single-subject days for retention — it forces your brain to reload context, which is exactly what exams demand.
Does the planner sync between devices?
No — it saves in the browser you use it in. Plan on the device you study with, or print the week and pin it above your desk.
What goes in a study block?
A subject plus a specific task: "Biology — cell diagrams from ch. 4" not just "Biology". Specific blocks start themselves; vague ones need willpower.