Build Your Own Study Curriculum: A Planning Template
Turn any goal or syllabus into a week-by-week plan you'll actually follow.
Education & StudyPDF · 9 pages· v1.0
4.4Turn any goal or syllabus into a week-by-week plan you'll actually follow.
Education & StudyPDF · 9 pages· v1.0
4.4Whether you're preparing for an exam, learning a skill, or working through a course, the difference between progress and drift is usually a plan. This free template walks you through building one: a realistic, week-by-week study curriculum tailored to your goal and the time you actually have. You'll define a clear, measurable objective, inventory the topics you need to cover, estimate effort honestly, and lay everything onto a weekly schedule that includes review and rest. The guide builds in the evidence-based habits — spaced review, regular self-testing, and buffer time for when life happens — so the schedule supports good studying rather than just listing topics. A worked example takes a sample goal from a blank page to a finished 10-week plan. This is for students, self-learners, and anyone juggling study around work or family who needs structure they can keep. It pairs naturally with the other guides in this category — use it to schedule your exam prep, language learning, or skill-building roadmap. The outcome: a personalised, week-by-week study plan with built-in review and slack, plus a simple method to adjust it when you fall behind — because every plan slips, and a good one expects it. It's free so that no one has to study without a plan.
A plan shouldn't be the thing standing between you and studying. We made it free; the deeper, subject-specific guides build on the planning habit this one teaches.
Yes — it's designed to. Use it to lay out your exam-prep weeks, your language roadmap phases, or your skill-learning loop onto a real calendar.
That's expected, which is why the template includes buffer weeks and a catch-up protocol. The guide treats slippage as normal and shows you how to re-plan rather than abandon the whole thing.
No. A calendar or notebook is enough. The template works on paper or in any calendar/spreadsheet app you already use.
Read the full refund policy and trust & safety terms.