One-Week Exam Study Plan: From Notes to Practice Tests
One week until the exam. The syllabus is long. Panic is optional; a schedule is not.
This plan assumes you have lecture notes, slides, or chapter PDFs. It uses daily quizzes as the engine, with SourceQuiz to generate them from your materials so you are not writing questions by hand.

Rules for the week
- No passive-only days — every day includes at least one closed-book quiz
- One topic per material — split uploads by chapter or lecture
- Read explanations — wrong answers are your study list
- Sleep — all-nighters hurt recall; this plan targets 60–90 min/day
Day 0 (today): Inventory
- List every topic on the exam
- Gather PDFs/notes per topic
- Create one SourceQuiz material per topic (name them clearly)
- Take a diagnostic quiz on the hardest topic, no notes
Your Day 0 score is the baseline. You will beat it by Day 6.
Day 1–2: Coverage pass
Goal: Touch every topic once.
| Session | Action |
|---|---|
| Morning | Quiz Topic A (medium difficulty, mixed types) |
| Evening | Quiz Topic B |
After each quiz, write down missed concepts in a single list (paper or doc). Do not re-read whole chapters yet.
Day 3–4: Repair pass
Goal: Fix the top gaps from Days 1–2.
- Sort your miss list by frequency
- Re-read only those sections in your notes/PDF
- Regenerate quizzes on the same materials in SourceQuiz
- Re-quiz Topics A and B

If a topic still scores below 70%, split it into a smaller sub-material and upload again.
Day 5: Mixed practice
Goal: Simulate exam pressure.
- Pick 3 topics
- Take quizzes back-to-back with no notes between them
- Time yourself if the real exam is timed
- Review explanations for all misses in one sitting
Day 6: Weak-topic blitz
Goal: Last gaps only.
- Quiz only the 2–3 topics with the worst history scores
- Use hard difficulty
- Prefer question types that match the real exam (e.g. multi-select if your prof uses them)
Stop when scores plateau or you run out of time. Chasing 100% on every topic is not realistic in one week.
Day 7 (exam eve): Light review
Goal: Consolidate, not cram new content.
- 20-minute quiz on the single weakest topic
- Read through your miss list from the week (no new PDF reading)
- Sleep 7+ hours
Daily time budget
| Day | Minutes |
|---|---|
| 0 | 45 |
| 1–2 | 60–75 each |
| 3–4 | 75–90 each |
| 5 | 90 |
| 6 | 60–75 |
| 7 | 30 |
How SourceQuiz fits each day
- Study → upload or paste material
- Generate → match exam question types
- Take quiz → closed book
- Review explanations → update your miss list
- Regenerate → new questions on same source for Days 3–6
Track progress in history so you see scores climb on the same material.
What not to do this week
- Re-read entire textbooks without quizzing
- Upload the whole semester as one file
- Skip explanations to “save time”
- Add brand-new topics on Day 6
FAQ
Is one week enough?
Enough to improve if you test daily. Not enough to learn a course from zero. Start earlier next term; use this plan as the last-week sprint.
How many questions per day?
10–20 focused questions beat 100 easy ones. Quality and review matter more than volume.
What if the exam is cumulative?
Prioritize topics with the highest weight on the rubric. Add one “oldest” topic quiz every other day so earlier units do not vanish.
Start Day 0 now
Open SourceQuiz, upload your worst topic, and take the diagnostic quiz. Everything else in this plan builds from that score.
Good luck on the exam.





