Your Exam Topics
Priority Plan
No topics added yet. Add your first topic on the left, or load the sample exam to see how it works.
Turn your topic list into a study order
Scenario: Biology midterm in two weeks
You have a list of six chapters. The syllabus says Chapter 4 (Genetics) counts for 30% of the grade. Chapter 2 (Cell Structure) counts for 10%. You already feel okay about Cell Structure but shaky on Genetics. Without a plan, you might start with Cell Structure because the material feels easier. That would be a mistake. By entering the weights and your confidence, the planner shows Genetics at the top of the priority list. You start there, spend more time, and walk into the exam better prepared for the questions that matter most.
Assumptions and common mistakes
- Weights are your best guess. If the instructor does not publish exact percentages, estimate based on lecture time, homework load, or past exams. Update them if you get better information.
- Confidence is not knowledge. You may feel confident about a topic but still have gaps. Use a practice quiz to check. If you score lower than expected, lower your confidence slider.
- Priority does not mean ignore low scores. A topic with priority 1.2 still needs review. The planner helps you sequence your time, not skip topics entirely.
- Dependencies matter. Some topics build on earlier ones. If Topic B requires understanding Topic A, study A first even if B has a higher priority score.
Troubleshooting
If your plan disappears after closing the browser, check that you are not in private or incognito mode. Those modes often clear localStorage when the session ends. Use the Share button to save a link you can bookmark. If the table looks wrong after editing a topic, refresh the page. The data is saved automatically and will reload correctly.