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Plan your study. Ace your exams.

Drop in your subjects, set how much time you have, and get a balanced weekly timetable that gives harder subjects more attention.

WAEC / NECO JAMB Prep KCSE University
📚 Subjects 7 subjects
Schedule
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🍅 Pomodoro Technique
Study for 25 minutes, then take a 5-min break. After 4 rounds, take a longer 15-30 min break. Keeps your brain fresh.
🧠 Active Recall
Don't just re-read notes. Close the book and try to recall what you just studied. This is 3x more effective than passive reading.
🔁 Spaced Repetition
Review material at increasing intervals: 1 day, 3 days, 7 days, 14 days. This moves info from short-term to long-term memory.
🌅 Hard Subjects First
Tackle your hardest subjects in the morning when your brain is freshest. Save easier subjects for later when energy dips.
📝 Daily Review
Spend the first 15 minutes of each study session reviewing what you covered yesterday. This compounds over time.
💤 Sleep Matters
Your brain consolidates memories during sleep. 7-8 hours of sleep beats an all-night cramming session every time.

Free Study Timetable Generator for African Students

Effective study planning is the difference between passing and excelling. Whether you're preparing for WAEC/SSCE, JAMB UTME, Kenya KCSE, or university semester exams, a well-structured timetable ensures you cover all subjects while giving harder topics more attention.

This study planner automatically allocates more hours to difficult subjects, creates balanced daily schedules, and generates a printable weekly timetable. No signup required — your data stays in your browser.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does the difficulty weighting work?

Hard subjects get 3x the time allocation, Medium gets 2x, and Easy gets 1x. For example, with 3 subjects (1 hard, 1 medium, 1 easy), the total weight is 6. The hard subject gets 50% of study time, medium gets 33%, easy gets 17%.

Can I save my timetable?

Click "Print / PDF" to save as PDF or print directly. Your subjects are also saved in your browser so they'll be there when you return.

How many hours should I study per day?

For exam prep, 4-6 hours of focused study per day is effective. Quality beats quantity — use active recall and spaced repetition. Take regular breaks with the Pomodoro technique.