Study for multiple exams in one week without melting down. A practical plan for prioritizing, spacing revision, and actually remembering stuff.
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Get it on Play StoreThat’s the trap. When you have 3 or 4 exams in the same week, your brain wants to treat all of them like emergency sirens. And that’s how people end up staring at 5 tabs, 2 notebooks, and one sandwich they forgot to eat.
You do not need a perfectly fair schedule. You need a smart one.
I’ve seen this happen so many times: the student who “studied a little of everything” feels busy, but walks into each exam with half-baked recall. The student who sorted the exams by urgency and weight? Way calmer. Way better scores.
So before anything else, write down:
Then rank them. Not emotionally. Ruthlessly.
Your week is limited. Your energy is more limited. So the first move is deciding what gets the biggest slice.
I like this rule:
That ratio is not sacred, but the idea is. Not all exams deserve equal attention. If one is in 2 days and another is in 6, the 2-day one wins. No debate.
And if one subject is a monster, give it more fresh brain time. Don’t leave the hardest topic for 10:30 p.m. after you’ve already fried your attention span.
Long sessions sound impressive. They’re usually garbage.
My honest opinion: 90 minutes is the sweet spot for most people when the week is packed. If that feels too long, use 50 minutes. If you’re really cooked, use 25-minute sprints with 5-minute breaks.
A good structure is:
And during the break, actually stop. Stand up. পানি. Walk. Don’t “rest” by opening Instagram and getting emotionally hijacked by a reel about someone making sourdough.
The point is to keep your focus sharp enough that you can do 4 to 6 quality blocks a day, not 1 desperate blur.
Studying one subject all day feels efficient. But for multiple exams in one week, it can backfire.
Why? Because by the afternoon your brain starts blending everything together. Especially if the subjects are similar, like biology and psychology, or economics and business studies.
So instead, rotate:
That way, you’re not trying to memorize 3 chapters of one subject when your brain is already overcooked.
Mixing subjects is annoying, but useful. It forces your brain to reset. And that makes memory stick better.
This is where most people waste time.
Rereading notes feels productive. It’s not. It’s comfort food for students.
The real win is active recall:
If you can’t explain a topic in plain language, you don’t know it well enough yet.
Here’s a simple method:
That tiny gap matters. It tells your brain, “This is important. Keep it.”
And if you have past papers, use them aggressively. Practice papers are the fastest way to find your weak spots. They also teach you how the exam actually thinks, which is half the battle.
You don’t need a beautiful study planner. You need a realistic one.
For a packed exam week, I’d use this format:
This is just a template. But the principle is solid: learn first, review later, and always leave room for revision.
Don’t schedule full new-topic learning the night before an exam unless you absolutely have to. That’s panic behavior. Panic behavior produces messy memory and bad sleep.
The day before an exam is not for starting new chapters. It’s for tightening bolts.
Focus on:
I’d spend the final evening doing a quick recall pass, then stop. You want your brain slightly hungry, not stuffed.
And sleep matters more than people want to admit. One bad night can wreck recall. Seven hours is the minimum target. If you can get 8, do it. If you’re down to 4 because you “had to finish one more chapter,” that chapter better have been worth the tradeoff. Usually it isn’t.
One reason multiple exams feel brutal is that everything starts sounding the same in your head. So give each subject a distinct study format.
For example:
This works because your brain stores things better when the method changes. Same day, different gears.
And it helps with recall in the exam too. Your brain starts linking content to the type of thinking it needs, not just the chapter title.
This part gets ignored constantly, which is wild because energy is the real study fuel.
If you’re exhausted, your concentration collapses. So keep the basics boring and consistent:
I’m serious about the food part. An empty stomach and a tired brain are a terrible combo. You’ll read the same paragraph 4 times and absorb exactly none of it.
Also, don’t sit in one position for 6 hours straight. That’s not discipline. That’s just making your body angry.
When exams stack up, memory gets slippery. You think you studied Chapter 7, but you only half-read it. You think you revised formulas, but you actually just highlighted them like a maniac.
This is where a habit tracker helps. If you use something like Trider (myhabits.in), you can keep a simple daily check on what got done:
It sounds small, but that visual proof matters. Progress feels less chaotic when it’s tracked.
And honestly, that matters during exam week because chaos is the enemy. Not lack of intelligence. Not laziness. Just chaos.
Some days, the plan collapses. That’s normal.
But don’t respond by quitting the whole day. Shrink the task instead.
If you can’t do 3 hours, do 45 minutes. If you can’t finish a chapter, do 10 questions. If you can’t study the whole subject, review 1 page of mistakes.
Small wins keep the streak alive. And during a week like this, keeping momentum is everything.
I’ve had days where all I managed was one clean 30-minute session, but that was enough to stop the spiral. Momentum beats drama.
If I had to boil the whole thing down, it’d be this:
That’s it. Nothing glamorous. Just a system that won’t fall apart on Wednesday when you suddenly remember you’ve got two exams on Friday.
And if you want a cleaner way to keep those daily study habits from slipping, try Trider. It makes the whole “what did I actually do today?” mess way easier to handle.