Get 10 ready-to-use AI prompts that help students create personalized exam revision plans, daily study schedules, weak-topic strategies, past paper plans, and last-minute revision routines. These prompts are easy to edit, beginner-friendly, and designed for students who want clear guidance from AI tools like ChatGPT.
What This Prompt Does
- Creates detailed exam revision plans based on the student’s subjects, exam date, weak areas, and available study time.
- Helps students organize revision using daily timetables, past papers, active recall, and spaced repetition.
- Makes exam preparation less stressful by giving clear, step-by-step study instructions.
Tips for This Prompt
- Add as much detail as possible, including exam date, subjects, weak topics, and daily study hours.
- Be honest about your current level so the AI can create a realistic plan.
- Ask the AI to make the plan easier, harder, shorter, or more detailed if the first version does not fit your needs.
How to Use the Prompt
- Copy one prompt that matches your exam situation.
- Replace the text inside brackets, such as [Enter exam name] and [List weak topics], with your own details.
- Paste it into ChatGPT or another AI tool and ask for a revision plan you can follow.
Prompt 1: Full Exam Revision Plan Generator
Act as an expert exam revision planner and study coach.
Create a detailed revision plan for me based on the information below:
Exam name: [Enter exam name]
Exam date: [Enter exam date]
Subjects/topics: [List all subjects or topics]
Current level: [Beginner / average / strong]
Daily study time available: [Enter hours per day]
Weak areas: [List topics you struggle with]
Strong areas: [List topics you feel confident in]
Preferred study style: [Reading / practice questions / videos / flashcards / mixed]
Other commitments: [School, job, family, sports, etc.]Please create a complete revision plan that includes:
1. A day-by-day study timetable
2. Which topics to revise each day
3. How long to spend on each topic
4. Practice question sessions
5. Past paper or mock exam days
6. Short review sessions for memory
7. Break times to avoid burnout
8. Final week revision strategy
9. A checklist to track progress
10. Advice on what to do if I fall behindMake the plan realistic, clear, and easy to follow.
Prompt 2: 30-Day Exam Revision Plan
Act as a professional study planner.
I have 30 days to prepare for my exam. Build a realistic 30-day revision plan for me.
Exam: [Enter exam name]
Exam date: [Enter date]
Subjects/topics: [Enter full list]
Most difficult topics: [Enter weak areas]
Topics I already know well: [Enter strong areas]
Hours I can study per day: [Enter number]
Days I cannot study or have limited time: [Enter days]
Goal grade/score: [Enter target]Create a 30-day plan with:
1. Daily revision tasks
2. Topic priorities based on difficulty and importance
3. Practice question days
4. Past paper days
5. Weekly review sessions
6. Memory refresh days
7. Short breaks and lighter days
8. Final 3-day exam preparation plan
9. A simple daily checklist
10. Motivational advice for staying consistentMake it beginner-friendly and easy to copy into a notebook, planner, or calendar.
Prompt 3: 7-Day Last-Minute Revision Plan
Act as an exam survival coach.
I only have 7 days left before my exam. Create a focused last-minute revision plan that helps me study the most important topics first.
Exam: [Enter exam name]
Exam date: [Enter date]
Subjects/topics included: [List topics]
Topics I know well: [List strong areas]
Topics I am weak in: [List weak areas]
Daily study time: [Enter hours]
Exam format: [Multiple choice / essay / practical / mixed / unknown]
Resources available: [Textbook, notes, past papers, flashcards, videos, etc.]Create a 7-day revision plan that includes:
1. What to study each day
2. High-priority topics to focus on
3. What to skip or spend less time on
4. Daily practice question tasks
5. Quick memory techniques
6. Past paper or mock test schedule
7. Night-before-exam revision plan
8. Morning-of-exam checklist
9. Stress control tips
10. A realistic plan if I feel overwhelmedKeep the plan practical because I have limited time.
Prompt 4: Weak Topics Revision Plan
Act as a personal tutor and revision strategist.
Help me create a revision plan focused mainly on my weak topics.
Exam: [Enter exam name]
Subject: [Enter subject]
Exam date: [Enter date]
Weak topics: [List weak topics]
Topics I find confusing: [List confusing areas]
Topics I often make mistakes in: [List mistake areas]
Current study resources: [Notes, textbook, videos, past papers, etc.]
Daily study time: [Enter hours]
Target grade/score: [Enter goal]Create a weak-topic revision plan that includes:
1. Which weak topic to study first
2. How to break each topic into smaller parts
3. Simple explanations of how to revise each topic
4. Practice tasks for each weak area
5. How to test if I understand the topic
6. How often to review each weak topic
7. Mistake-tracking method
8. Confidence-building revision steps
9. A weekly progress checklist
10. Advice on when to move to the next topicMake the plan detailed but not overwhelming.
Prompt 5: Daily Revision Timetable Prompt
Act as a productivity coach for students.
Create a daily revision timetable for me that is realistic and easy to follow.
Exam: [Enter exam name]
Subjects/topics to revise today: [Enter list]
Total study time available today: [Enter hours]
Energy level today: [Low / medium / high]
Hardest topic today: [Enter topic]
Preferred study method: [Reading / practice questions / notes / flashcards / videos]
Break preference: [Short breaks / long breaks / Pomodoro / flexible]
Other tasks today: [Enter school, work, family, or personal tasks]Create a timetable for today that includes:
1. Study blocks with exact start and end times
2. Which topic to study in each block
3. Break times
4. Practice question time
5. Quick review time
6. A short end-of-day recap task
7. A checklist I can tick off
8. A backup plan if I lose focus
9. A lighter version of the plan if I get tired
10. Motivation to complete the dayMake the timetable simple, balanced, and realistic.
Prompt 6: Past Paper Revision Plan
Act as an exam preparation expert.
Create a revision plan based around past papers and exam-style questions.
Exam: [Enter exam name]
Exam date: [Enter date]
Subjects/topics: [List topics]
Past papers available: [Yes / no / how many]
Exam format: [Multiple choice / essay / calculation / case study / mixed]
Weak topics: [List weak areas]
Daily study time: [Enter hours]
Target score/grade: [Enter goal]Build a past paper revision strategy that includes:
1. When to start past papers
2. How many past papers to complete each week
3. How to review mistakes after each paper
4. How to identify repeated exam topics
5. How to improve timing
6. How to mark my answers
7. How to turn mistakes into revision tasks
8. How to balance topic revision with exam practice
9. A final-week mock exam schedule
10. A progress tracker for scores and mistakesMake it practical for someone who wants to improve exam performance quickly.
Prompt 7: Spaced Repetition Revision Plan
Act as a memory and revision expert.
Create a spaced repetition revision plan to help me remember information for my exam.
Exam: [Enter exam name]
Exam date: [Enter date]
Subjects/topics: [List topics]
Facts, formulas, definitions, or concepts to memorize: [Enter details]
Daily study time: [Enter hours]
Current memory level: [Poor / average / good]
Tools I can use: [Flashcards, notebook, app, spreadsheet, calendar, etc.]Create a spaced repetition plan that includes:
1. What to review on Day 1
2. When to review each topic again
3. A repeat schedule until the exam date
4. Flashcard ideas
5. Active recall questions
6. Quick self-test methods
7. How to separate easy and difficult cards
8. How to revise forgotten information
9. A weekly memory check
10. A simple tracking systemMake the plan easy enough for a beginner to follow.
Prompt 8: Revision Plan for Multiple Subjects
Act as an academic planner.
I am preparing for multiple subjects and need a balanced revision plan.
Exams: [List exam names and dates]
Subjects: [List subjects]
Topics for each subject: [Enter topics]
Most difficult subjects: [Enter subjects]
Easiest subjects: [Enter subjects]
Daily study time: [Enter hours]
Days available for revision: [Enter number of days]
Target grades: [Enter goals]
Other commitments: [Enter details]Create a balanced revision plan that includes:
1. A subject-by-subject priority ranking
2. A weekly study timetable
3. Daily revision tasks
4. Time allocation for each subject
5. More time for difficult subjects
6. Review sessions for easier subjects
7. Practice question days
8. Mock exam days
9. Final revision checklist for each subject
10. Advice on avoiding burnout while studying multiple subjectsMake sure no subject is ignored.
Prompt 9: Personalized Revision Plan Based on My Schedule
Act as a realistic student study coach.
Create a revision plan that fits around my personal schedule.
Exam: [Enter exam name]
Exam date: [Enter date]
Subjects/topics: [List topics]
My weekly schedule: [Enter school, work, family, prayer, gym, travel, or other commitments]
Best study times: [Morning / afternoon / evening / night]
Worst study times: [Enter times]
Daily energy level: [Low / medium / high]
Study time available on weekdays: [Enter hours]
Study time available on weekends: [Enter hours]
Weak topics: [List weak topics]Create a revision plan that includes:
1. Study sessions fitted around my real schedule
2. Best topics to study during high-energy times
3. Easier tasks for low-energy times
4. Short revision sessions for busy days
5. Longer deep-study sessions for free days
6. Breaks and rest time
7. Weekly review sessions
8. A catch-up plan if I miss a day
9. A simple calendar-style layout
10. A realistic routine I can actually maintainMake the plan flexible and not too stressful.
Prompt 10: Exam Revision Plan With Active Recall
Act as a study skills expert.
Create an exam revision plan using active recall, self-testing, and practice questions.
Exam: [Enter exam name]
Subject/topics: [Enter topics]
Exam date: [Enter date]
Daily study time: [Enter hours]
Current confidence level: [Low / medium / high]
Weak topics: [Enter weak areas]
Resources available: [Notes, textbook, videos, flashcards, question bank, past papers]
Preferred revision method: [Writing answers / speaking aloud / flashcards / quizzes / mixed]Create a revision plan that includes:
1. Active recall questions for each topic
2. Daily self-testing tasks
3. Practice question sessions
4. Flashcard creation tasks
5. Review days for repeated topics
6. How to check if I truly understand a topic
7. A mistake log template
8. A weekly quiz plan
9. Final exam practice routine
10. A progress checklistDo not make the plan only about reading notes. Focus on testing, remembering, and improving.

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