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Your syllabus, your exam date, one plan you can actually follow

Most learners preparing for JEE, NEET, CBSE boards or CUET do not fail for lack of effort. They fail because their effort lands in the wrong place: three weeks on Organic Chemistry reactions they already know, four days before the exam on Coordinate Geometry they have never solved cleanly. Kwilo builds a study plan from your exam date, your syllabus and your actual performance, then rewrites it every week as your strengths and gaps change.

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A plan that starts from your date, not a generic 90-day template

The first thing Kwilo asks is what you are sitting for and when. JEE Main in January is a different plan from NEET in May, and a Class 12 CBSE board learner writing pre-boards in December has yet another shape of work. From that date, the plan works backwards: how many study days you realistically have, how many hours you can give on a school day versus a Sunday, and how much of the syllabus is still untouched.

That backward pass produces something concrete. Not "cover Physics", but "Rotational Motion by Thursday, 40 practice questions, then Simple Harmonic Motion". Each day has a target you can finish and tick off, which is the difference between a plan you follow and a colour-coded timetable you abandon in week two.

The plan also protects revision time instead of letting it get eaten. Chapters you finished in August are scheduled to come back in October and again in December, because a topic learned once and never revisited is a topic you will lose.

Weightage decides what gets your best hours

Not all chapters pay the same. In JEE Main, Coordinate Geometry and Calculus carry far more questions than Mathematical Reasoning. In NEET, Human Physiology and Genetics show up year after year in a way that Biotechnology simply does not. Kwilo uses previous-year question patterns to rank topics by how much they actually appear, then puts the heavy ones in the hours when you are sharpest.

This matters most for learners who are short on time. If you are starting serious NEET preparation in November, you cannot treat all of Botany as equal. The plan will tell you plainly which chapters earn the effort first and which ones you touch only if the schedule allows.

Weightage never becomes an excuse to skip. Low-weight chapters stay in the plan, they just sit later and get less time. You still see the whole syllabus, you just stop spending your best mornings on the parts that rarely get asked.

The plan changes when your results change

A static plan is wrong within a fortnight. You lose two days to a fever, you discover Thermodynamics is harder than you assumed, a school test eats a weekend. Kwilo recalculates instead of leaving you to feel guilty about a schedule you can no longer meet.

The recalculation is driven by evidence, not by how you feel about a chapter. If you score well on Electrostatics practice, the plan pulls back on it and spends the recovered time on Current Electricity where you are dropping marks. If a topic keeps producing wrong answers, it comes back sooner and in smaller pieces, because the fix for a stubborn topic is repetition spread out, not one long painful sitting.

Missed days get absorbed. The plan reflows the remaining work across the days you have left and tells you honestly if the syllabus no longer fits, so you can make a real decision about what to prioritise rather than discovering the problem in March.

Built for the way an Indian exam year actually runs

Board exams and entrance exams live in the same calendar and pull in different directions. A Class 12 learner cannot drop CBSE preparation to chase JEE, and cannot ignore JEE to write boards. Kwilo lets you set both, and the plan finds the overlap: Physics and Chemistry chapters that serve both, and the board-only work like descriptive answers and diagram practice that needs its own slot.

State board learners get the same treatment. Karnataka, Maharashtra and other state syllabi are not the same as CBSE, and a plan that assumes NCERT chapter ordering is useless to a learner following a different textbook. You tell Kwilo which board and which class, and the plan follows your syllabus.

School terms, pre-boards and test series are all inputs. If you have a coaching test on the 18th, the days before it shift towards revision of what that test covers.

What you see every morning

The plan opens on today. A short list, usually two or three items: the concept to study, the practice set attached to it, and the revision block for something you learned earlier. You can see the week and the month behind it, but the daily view is deliberately small, because a screen showing 140 pending chapters is a screen you close.

Progress is visible in a way that means something. Chapters move from not started to learning to practised to revised, and you can see at a glance which subject is lagging. Learners consistently discover the same uncomfortable thing here: the subject they enjoy is the one they have over-studied.

If a task confuses you, the AI tutor is one tap away inside the plan itself. You can ask why a step in a derivation works, get an explanation in plain language, and go back to the plan without losing your place.

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Setup takes a few minutes, and tomorrow morning you will know exactly what to study.

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