Study Plan Generator
Get a clear study schedule for your exams. Build decks, schedule reviews, and stay on track—no more last-minute panic.

Organize decks, see when to review, and hit your exam date ready.
Why use a study plan generator?
Planning for exams and finals
Exams and finals work best when you spread study over time instead of cramming. A study plan generator helps you decide what to study when: you set your exam date and topics, then build decks from your notes and let spaced repetition schedule your reviews. NoteFren doesn’t just store flashcards—it tells you which cards are due today so you can do short, focused sessions. That way you cover everything by exam day without last-minute panic.
You can plan for one big final or several midterms. Create a deck per subject or per exam, add cards from your notes (or scan handwritten notes and generate cards), then study when the app says to review. Active recall and spaced repetition are built in, so your study plan is both structured and evidence-based.
Evidence-based exam prep: why it works
Research in cognitive science shows that spaced repetition—reviewing material at gradually increasing intervals—produces stronger long-term retention than cramming. When you space your reviews, your brain has to work harder to retrieve the information each time, which strengthens memory. A study plan that spreads reviews across days or weeks is more effective than one long session the night before.
Active recall—testing yourself with flashcards or practice questions—is another proven method. Instead of passively re-reading notes, you force your brain to retrieve answers. That retrieval practice makes the material stick. NoteFren builds both into your plan: you generate flashcards from your notes, then the app schedules when to review each card so you're testing yourself at the right times.
A simple timeline for exam prep
A practical approach: 2–3 weeks before the exam, upload or scan your notes and generate flashcards for each topic. Create one deck per chapter or unit so you can track progress. Each day, do the reviews the app suggests—usually 10–20 minutes. Add a few new cards daily rather than all at once. In the final week, you'll have fewer new cards and more reviews; the algorithm will surface weaker material so you can focus there. By exam day, you've seen everything multiple times at spaced intervals, which is exactly what research recommends.
For finals week with multiple exams, give each subject its own deck and a rough priority. Do at least a short review for every subject each day so nothing goes cold; the app's "due today" list makes that easy. If you're short on time, focus on due cards first—they're the ones the algorithm has marked as most important to review now.
Learn more about exam and finals prep
What to include in your exam study plan
| Element | How NoteFren helps |
|---|---|
| Review schedule | Spaced repetition shows you what’s due each day |
| Content from notes | Scan or paste notes → AI generates flashcards |
| Short study sessions | Focus on due cards; no need to plan session length manually |
| Multiple subjects | Separate decks per exam or topic; one app for all |
