The study schedule most people make vs. the one that works

The schedule most people make assumes six hours of studying every day including weekends, starting the day they create it. It lasts three days. The schedule that actually works accounts for real life — the days you actually have time, the hours you can realistically focus, and the specific areas where you're already weak versus strong. This prompt builds the second kind. The weakness identification at the end is what separates it from a generic calendar.

Why the final week matters more than any other

The instruction to include short review sessions in the final week is based on how memory consolidation actually works. Cramming new material in the last 48 hours is significantly less effective than reviewing material you've already covered. A spaced review of everything you've learned beats a panicked first exposure to topics you ignored. The AI builds this into the schedule automatically when you include that instruction.