How the planning logic works
StudyStitch is deliberately simple. It does not pretend to know your syllabus, your grades, or your school calendar. Instead it uses a small set of planning signals that matter in real revision life: how close the exam is, how many subjects are competing for time, how many hours you actually have, what kind of bottleneck is slowing you down, and whether the schedule has enough buffer to survive a bad day.
The tool outputs a weekly block mix rather than a minute-by-minute timetable. That choice is intentional. Over-specified plans often collapse on contact with life. A block mix is more reusable: you can move it around without losing the underlying logic.
What the block types mean
- Deep focus blocks are for learning or repairing a topic properly.
- Recall blocks are for testing memory without notes and strengthening retrieval.
- Timed/output blocks are for answers, essays, problem sets, or mini-mocks under time pressure.
- Buffer blocks exist so one missed session does not cause the whole week to unravel.
Limits
StudyStitch is not a tutoring engine, not a medical or wellbeing tool, and not a guarantee of exam performance. It will not know whether a specific textbook, school marking scheme, or flashcard system is best for you. It is a planning helper designed to reduce overload and make next steps clearer.