study-habits
Study Habits
Learning that sticks—through science, not stubbornness.
What it does
This skill transforms how you absorb and retain information by combining proven cognitive techniques with persistent session tracking:
- Study Session Tracking - Logs when you study, what topic, duration, and effectiveness rating for accountability and pattern recognition
- Technique Suggestions - Recommends study methods based on your learning goal (memorization vs. deep understanding vs. skill practice)
- Spaced Repetition Reminders - Intelligently schedules review sessions to hit the sweet spot where forgetting begins
- Progress Dashboard - Shows your study velocity, topic mastery levels, and retention curves over time
- Exam Countdown - Builds personalized prep schedules that work backward from exam date to ensure full coverage
Usage
Start study : "Start a 50-minute study session on photosynthesis" → Creates a session timer, suggests an optimal study technique, and tracks your focus
Log topic : "I just finished studying Chapter 3, felt confident" → Records the session, captures confidence level, determines next review interval
Review schedule : "When should I review calculus next?" → Shows which topics need review based on spaced repetition algorithm, prioritizes by forgetting curve
Check progress : "Show me my study stats" → Displays sessions completed, topics covered, retention trends, time invested per subject
Exam countdown : "I have an exam in 21 days on biology" → Creates a study plan that distributes chapters across available time, accounts for review cycles, flags high-risk topics
Study Techniques
Active Recall : Test yourself without looking at notes. Forces your brain to retrieve information rather than passively reread. Far more effective than review.
Spaced Repetition : Review material at increasing intervals (1 day, 3 days, 1 week, 2 weeks). This combats the forgetting curve and moves knowledge to long-term memory.
Pomodoro Technique : Study in 25-minute focused bursts with 5-minute breaks. Prevents burnout and maintains attention during sessions.
Feynman Technique : Explain a concept aloud as if teaching it to someone with no background. Exposes gaps in understanding immediately.
Interleaving : Mix different topics or problem types in one session instead of blocking them. Builds flexible knowledge and stronger pattern recognition.
Tips
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Track confidence, not just completion — Rate how well you understood each topic (1-10) rather than just marking it done. This surfaces weak areas early.
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Use active recall over rereading — Flashcards, practice problems, and explain-it-aloud beat passively reviewing notes by 10x.
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Study in shorter sprints, more often — Three 45-minute sessions spread across a week beat one 2-hour cramming session. Your brain consolidates overnight.
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Review the day after, then space out — First review should be 24 hours later, then 3 days, then a week. The algorithm handles this automatically.
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All data stays local on your machine — Your study history, notes, and progress never leave your device. Full privacy, full control.