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 sorts them into a three-column page, term or question in the first column, the explanation in the second, and a concrete example or memory hook in the third, built for vocabulary, formulas, and definition-heavy material rather than a flowing lecture, or explains when three columns beat two if you'd rather decide the format yourself first.
Paste the list of facts, terms, or steps you need to memorize and this tool picks the mnemonic device that actually fits the material, an acronym, a rhyme, a memory palace, a link-method story, or a number-rhyme system, and builds it for you, instead of forcing every memorization problem into the same technique, or compares two or three device types side by side if you'd rather choose the fit yourself.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool builds a freeform concept map from it, concepts as nodes connected by labeled relationship lines running in any direction, not a top-down hierarchy, described in enough detail to draw since it can map the connections but can't draw them, built for material with genuinely tangled, many-directional relationships between ideas, or explains how it differs from the strict Mapping Method if you want that distinction first.
Paste your raw notes describing a step-by-step process, decision procedure, or algorithm and this tool builds a described flowchart from it, each step as a box and every decision point as a labeled branch showing which path to take based on the answer, since it can map the sequence but can't draw the boxes and arrows itself, built for processes with real branching logic rather than a simple straight sequence, or explains when a plain numbered list beats a flowchart if you'd rather decide that first.
Paste your psychology notes and this tool pulls out every named study and formats it as researcher, year, finding, and significance, the exact format most psychology exams expect you to cite a study in, instead of leaving studies scattered as supporting detail buried inside paragraph notes, or explains how to take study-citation notes correctly while reading.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool sorts them into the classic Outline Method, main topics as Roman numerals, supporting points indented under each one, details nested a level deeper than that, or explains how to run the method live during a lecture if you'd rather take the notes yourself.
Paste the notes or text of one textbook chapter and this tool builds a focused review guide scoped to that single chapter, learning objectives, key points, and a short set of review questions with an answer key, kept narrow enough to actually finish in one sitting instead of a whole-topic study guide, or explains how to scope it if you're not sure where one chapter's material actually ends.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool describes a radial mind map for it, one central topic in the middle with branches fanning outward in every direction and sub-branches fanning further out from those, following the radiant-thinking layout Tony Buzan popularized, built for brainstorming and quick visual overview rather than precise labeled relationships, or explains how it differs from a concept map if you want that distinction first.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool describes Walter Pauk's Mapping Method for it, a main topic branching down into sub-topics and those sub-topics branching further into details, drawn as an indented tree rather than a linear page, built for material with a clear hierarchy and real cause-and-effect or category relationships, or explains how it differs from a freeform concept map if you want that distinction first.
Paste your raw notes describing a classification system or an organizational structure and this tool builds a described hierarchy chart from it, top-down levels with every item nested under exactly the parent category it belongs to, built for taxonomies, org charts, and rank or classification systems rather than a topic's conceptual structure, or explains how it differs from the Mapping Method if you want that distinction first.
Paste your anatomy and physiology notes and this tool organizes them by body system with structures, their functions, and the step-by-step physiological processes that connect them, an academic structure-and-function review, not a clinical care guide, so you can trace how each system actually works end to end, or explains how to study a physiological process as a sequence instead of a list of disconnected facts.
Paste your lecture material, reading, or slide content and this tool builds a guided notes handout, the full structure and connecting text printed out with strategic blanks left at the key terms, numbers, and facts a student fills in while following along live, the format researchers like William Heward have studied for improving lecture attention and retention, or explains how guided notes differ from a cloze reading test if you want the distinction first.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool describes a hand-drawable sketchnote layout for it, containers, connecting lines, banner headings, and simple icon suggestions for the key ideas, following the visual note-taking approach from Mike Rohde's The Sketchnote Handbook, since it can describe the page but can't draw it, or explains the core building blocks of sketchnoting if you'd rather learn the approach before drawing your own.
Paste your messy raw notes and this tool cleans them up without switching their method, fixing scattered ordering, merging duplicate points, tightening rambling phrasing, and removing filler, while keeping whatever format you already wrote them in, or flags what's actually wrong with a page of notes first if you want a diagnosis before a rewrite.
Paste the notes from several lessons or chapters that make up one unit and this tool condenses all of it into a single review sheet organized lesson by lesson, connecting themes called out explicitly across lessons where they exist, built for the material a unit test or midterm actually spans, or explains how to tell when several lessons genuinely form one unit if you're not sure where the boundaries are.
Paste your OCR-scanned or manually typed-up handwritten notes and this tool expands your own shorthand and abbreviations, fixes likely OCR misreads while flagging the uncertain ones instead of guessing silently, and turns fragments into complete readable notes without losing what you actually meant, or explains a shorthand system that scans and types up cleaner in the first place.
Paste your math or science notes and this tool pulls out every formula into an organized reference sheet, each one with its variables defined, its units noted, and a short trigger line for when to reach for it, no derivations or worked examples included, or explains how to build a formula sheet that actually helps you pick the right formula under pressure.
Paste the notes from a lecture you just sat through and this tool builds a short recap of what was covered plus a specific list of what to review before the next class, since the value of a recap comes from doing it minutes after the lecture ends while the gaps are still visible, not weeks later when everything looks equally forgotten, or builds the recap directly from an audio transcript if that's what you have instead of written notes.
Paste the reading notes you took while working through a book, one chapter at a time, and this tool turns them into a proper chapter-by-chapter summary, each chapter's actual content condensed on its own instead of blurred into one whole-book overview, built from your own notes rather than the book's title, or explains how it differs from a summary built from a book title alone if you want that distinction first.
Paste your history notes and this tool converts them into a chronological timeline, each event dated and tagged with what caused it and what it led to, so the notes show the chain of causation a history exam actually tests instead of just a list of dates and names, or explains how to spot cause and effect while reading a history assignment.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool sorts them into a simple two-column split page, main points on the left and supporting examples or clarifying detail on the right, with no cue column and no summary band, a lighter format than Cornell notes for material that just needs the main content kept visually apart from its supporting detail, or explains when the lighter format is enough if you'd rather decide that first.
Paste your notes or study material and this tool compresses everything into an ultra-condensed, single-page cheat sheet, terms, formulas, and key facts only, with every explanation and example stripped out, or explains what actually belongs on a good cheat sheet if you're not sure what to cut.
Paste your raw lecture notes or reading material and this tool rewrites every point as the question it answers, one question-and-answer pair per fact instead of a section-level question the way SQ3R turns headings into questions, so the whole page becomes a built-in self-test rather than a page you review and then separately quiz yourself on, or explains how this differs from turning headings into questions if you want that distinction first.
Paste the raw notes you took during a lecture and this tool rebuilds them into a proper topic outline, inferring the main topics and supporting points a live lecture rarely announces cleanly, since a professor talks in a straight line while the actual structure underneath has to be reconstructed after the fact, or checks a lecture outline you already built for gaps you might have missed while writing live.
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