Weekly Review Planner
Map your 7-day study week — assign hours per subject per day, with daily totals and balance warnings.
| Subject | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat | Sun | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | |||||||||
| 0 | |||||||||
| 0 | |||||||||
| 0 | |||||||||
| Daily total | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Frequently Asked Questions
How many subjects should I plan for?
Mirror the official subtest count for your exam — 4 for UPCAT, 5 for CSE, 3 for LET (Gen Ed, Prof Ed, Major), 5 for NLE. Adding extras dilutes focus; shedding subjects below your weak ones is how scores drop.
Why does the planner warn at 10 hours?
Sustained 10+ hour study days don't actually convert to retention — diminishing returns kick in around hour 6 for most reviewers. If you need 70+ hours a week, you're probably behind on a different lever (sleep, comprehension of base material, or test technique).
Should weekends look different?
Most reviewers do longer block sessions (3–5 hour mocks) on weekends. Stack your mock + review on Saturday, leave Sunday for the weakest subject from the previous week's mock review.
How do I balance subjects?
Spend at least 30% of your hours on your weakest subject. The biggest gain comes from moving a 50% subject to 70% — the same hours spent on a 75% subject only get you to 80%.
Is this really enough planning?
Use it as a quick weekly outline. For a full block-by-block schedule, pair this with the Pomodoro Timer (focus blocks) and the Coverage Tracker (chapter ticks).
Stop manually balancing — let the AI plan
Super Tutor builds a personalised weekly plan against your weak topics and updates it after every quiz.
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