For students

The stuff we wish someone had told us.

A short collection of study habits, strategies, and test-day reminders. None of them are magic — all of them compound, quietly, over a few weeks of real practice.

Daily habits

Six habits that beat cramming, every time.

15 minutes, every day

Short daily sessions outperform marathon weekend cramming. Building a small, steady habit is the simplest thing you can do for your score.

Active recall > re-reading

Close the notes. Try to answer first, then check. It feels harder because it is — and that's where the learning actually happens.

Keep moving forward

Every question is a chance to learn something new. Stay curious, keep practicing, and trust that progress comes from showing up — not from grading yourself.

Plan backward from test day

Find your test date, count the weeks, divide the work. A plan written on one page beats a vague intention any day.

Take real breaks

No phone, no screen. Five minutes of staring out a window actually resets your focus. Five minutes of Instagram doesn't.

Sleep is a study habit

Eight hours the week before the test beats any last-minute review session. Protect your sleep like it's your score. It is.

Test day playbook

A short list for the morning of the test.

  1. 1

    Eat something real. Protein + carbs, nothing experimental.

  2. 2

    Bring water, snacks, two pencils, approved calculator, and your ID. Pack them the night before.

  3. 3

    Arrive 30 minutes early. Parking, traffic, and nerves all eat time.

  4. 4

    Skip the last-minute cramming in the parking lot. It does more harm than good.

  5. 5

    On the test itself: read carefully, mark questions to come back to, and move on when stuck. Every question is worth the same.

  6. 6

    Breathe. You've done the work. The test is just the reveal.

“The score is the result, the work is what gets you there. Show up, do the work, and the score will follow.”

Ready to build the habit?

Your first session starts today. Free to join — no card, no commitment.