The prompt library that works with every AI. 37 “Study notes” customizable templates for ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and more.
Reading, Assessment, Classroom, Content, Early Childhood, Planning, Research, Study, Tutoring, Art, Music, Activities, Admin
285 prompts
Parenting, Finance, Productivity, Travel, Culture, Health & Fitness
100 prompts
Blog Writing, Academic, Blog, Creative, Email Writing
68 prompts
55 prompts
Email, Planning, Reports
46 prompts
Copywriting, Social Media
34 prompts
33 prompts
32 prompts
Pitches, Outreach
29 prompts
Fitness, Nutrition, Wellness
28 prompts
Interview, Networking, Resume
25 prompts
23 prompts
20 prompts
18 prompts
Academic research, analysis, and literature review
15 prompts
10 prompts
Code Review
0 prompts
37 prompts tagged with "Study notes"
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool pulls out every dated or sequential event and builds a chronological timeline from it, one entry per event with a short description and, where the material supports it, why that event mattered to what came after, built for history, literature chronology, and any subject where the order events happened in is itself part of what's being tested, or flags gaps where the material's own dates are unclear.
Paste a textbook chapter and this tool builds a strict heading-and-subheading outline of it, structure only, no questions attached to any heading and no content summarized underneath, so you can see how the chapter is actually organized before you read a single paragraph, or explains why an outline and a question-based preview are two different tools if you want that distinction first.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool condenses it into a bulleted list at a density you choose, never prose, from a lightly trimmed version close to your original wording down to a bare must-know list, built for turning a dense page into something you can scan in under a minute, or explains how to pick the right density if you're not sure how much to cut.
Paste the list of terms or steps you need to memorize in order and this tool builds a new acronym or initialism from their first letters, real words where possible or a memorable invented one where a real word won't fit, so you have something to recall the whole list from a single anchor, unlike a tool that only finds and classifies acronyms already sitting in a text, or explains why an acronym breaks down past a certain list length if you're not sure it's the right technique for your material.
Paste your raw notes describing a cyclical process, the water cycle, the cell cycle, a business or feedback cycle, and this tool builds a described circular diagram from it, each stage named in order with what triggers the move to the next stage and what makes the cycle repeat instead of terminate, since it can map the loop but can't draw the actual circle, or checks whether your notes are describing a real cycle or a process with a clear endpoint if you're not sure.
Paste your notes and this tool breaks the material into single-fact index cards, one self-contained concept per card sized to fit a real 3x5 card, written as a statement instead of a question-and-answer pair, so you can shuffle, sort, and group them by hand, or explains why one-fact-per-card beats cramming several ideas onto one.
Paste your raw notes covering two or more items you need to compare, theories, historical figures, chemical compounds, literary works, and this tool builds a comparison table with the criteria as columns and each item as a row, pulling only from what your notes actually say about each one, or flags which item your notes cover unevenly before you build a table that would otherwise hide the gap.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool sorts them into the Boxing Method, separate bordered boxes for each sub-topic laid out on the page instead of a linear column, built for visual thinkers and for material that splits cleanly into self-contained chunks, or explains when boxes beat a straight list of notes if you'd rather decide that yourself first.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool sorts them into the Sentence Method, one numbered sentence per new fact or idea, written down in the order the material actually covered it, built for fast-moving lectures where there's no time to decide on a hierarchy first, or explains why the speed comes at a real review cost if you'd rather understand the tradeoff before choosing it.
Paste your raw notes or reading material and this tool pulls out a flat, ranked list of the must-know facts only, no prose, no explanation, no grouping by sub-topic, ranked by how likely each one is to matter on an exam based on how the material itself treats it, built for the last-minute pass before a test when there's no time left for anything but the highest-value facts, or explains how it judges what counts as must-know if you want that logic first.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool sorts them into Walter Pauk's Charting Method, a grid with one column per category and one row per item, built for material that's naturally comparative, historical periods, species, theories, drug classes, or explains when a chart beats a linear page of notes if you'd rather decide that yourself first.
Paste your raw notes covering two or three items you need to compare and this tool sorts every point into what's unique to each item and what's genuinely shared between them, described in enough detail to draw the actual overlapping circles yourself, built specifically for showing overlap rather than a full side-by-side comparison across many criteria, or explains when a comparison table fits the material better if you'd rather decide that first.
Paste the facts, rules, or dates you need to memorize and this tool turns them into short rhyming lines, since a rhythmic pattern with a rhyme at the end is one of the oldest and most stubborn ways information sticks in memory, from nursery rhymes to i-before-e, built for facts with a specific detail worth locking in place, a date, a number, an exception to a rule, or explains why a rhyme fits some facts far better than others if you're not sure it's the right fit.
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