What is Study Planner?

Study Planner helps you organize your study schedule by subject, priority, and time. Add subjects, assign study blocks, and track your progress. It keeps everything saved locally so your study plan is always available.

Each subject takes a priority tag, an estimated total study time, and a colour so it stands out on the weekly calendar. Sessions can be dragged onto specific days and time slots, then ticked off as you finish them. Everything stays in your session so the plan survives a page refresh.

How to use

  1. Step 1 — Add your subjects or topics with their priority level and estimated study time.
  2. Step 2 — Schedule study sessions by assigning dates and time slots to each subject.
  3. Step 3 — Mark sessions as complete to track your progress and stay on top of your study plan.

When to use

  • Mapping out revision weeks before exams across several subjects at once.
  • Breaking a thesis or capstone into weekly research and writing blocks.
  • Coordinating tutoring or language-class homework around a busy weekday timetable.

Result

A college student has exams in Math, History, and Chemistry. They add each subject, set Math as high priority with 2 hours daily, schedule sessions across the week, and check off completed sessions to visualize their progress.

FAQ

How do priority levels actually change the planner?
High, medium and low are visual tags only. They colour the subject card and sort it to the top of the list so you see the urgent ones first. The tool does not auto-allocate more time to high-priority subjects.
Will my plan stay if I close the tab?
Yes. Subjects and sessions are saved on this device, so reopening the page brings the plan back. Clearing your site data or moving to another device wipes it.
Can I export the schedule to a real calendar app?
Use the CSV export and import it into Google Calendar, Outlook or Notion as a table. Each row is one session with subject, date and start time, so you can map columns to whatever fields your target app expects.
What is a sensible study block length?
Most students retain more from 45 to 60 minute blocks with a five-minute break, rather than long unbroken sessions. The planner accepts any value in minutes, so adjust per subject and watch which lengths you actually finish.
How do I plan around days I cannot study?
Skip those dates when scheduling sessions. Use the previous and next week buttons to scan a full month and place sessions only on days that are realistic for you.

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