Lectures, deadlines, a part-time job, and actually seeing your friends. See the whole week in one view, protect real study time before it disappears, and break big deadlines into blocks you can handle.
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Your timetable shows lectures, but it's silent on everything that decides your grades: the reading, the essay drafts, the revision. Those live as vague items on a list, so they get pushed back behind shifts and social plans until the deadline arrives all at once.
Studying improves the moment it has a time. When a study session is an actual block on Wednesday afternoon, it competes for that hour like anything else — and the week shows you instantly if you've left too much for the last day.
Lectures, shifts, society nights and study all in one week, so nothing important hides behind your timetable.
Place study as blocks before the week fills up, so it's there on purpose — not whatever's left at 11pm.
Split an essay or revision into sessions across the days before it's due, so big work stops becoming a last-night panic.
A good student planner shows your whole week — lectures, study, work shifts and social life — in one view, so study time doesn't get squeezed out by everything else. It also needs to hold loose tasks like readings and assignments, not just timetabled classes. Big Picture Planner combines a Life Inbox for tasks with a visual week, so your fixed timetable and your to-dos sit together.
Start with the fixed points — lectures, seminars, shifts — then add deadlines as markers, and finally place real study blocks into the gaps before social plans fill them. Planning study as actual blocks (not a vague "revise" on a list) is what protects it. Big Picture Planner lets you drag study sessions onto the week so they compete for time like everything else.
Yes. Because everything lives in one visual week, your shifts, classes and study sit side by side, so you can see exactly where study time genuinely exists around work. When a shift changes, you move the block and re-fit study and life around it in a couple of minutes.
Deadline pile-ups happen when work stays as a single scary item on a list with no time attached. Breaking an assignment into study blocks and placing them across the days before the deadline turns "finish essay" into a series of manageable sessions you can actually see. A visual week makes it obvious if you've left too much for the last day.
Open the demo and lay out a term-time week with study protected. No account, no commitment.