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The fastest way to study for any exam. Type your topic, get 20 practice questions instantly. No notes to upload, no account needed, no cost. Just you and your next exam.
Generate AP-level practice questions with the format and cognitive demand of official high-stakes exams.
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🧠 Backed by Learning Science
Self-testing is proven to be 50% more effective than re-reading notes for long-term retention.
Testing Effect, Roediger & Karpicke (2006)
Learning science
Most students study by re-reading notes. Science says that is one of the least effective methods if you care about long-term retention.
Long-term retention: ⭐⭐ Low
Time-heavy but only feels effective
Long-term retention: ⭐⭐⭐ Medium
Useful for structure, slower for recall
Long-term retention: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Highest
Fastest route to active retrieval
Retrieving information from memory strengthens the memory trace far more than re-reading. Every time you answer a practice question, you're building a stronger path back to that concept.
Quizzing yourself across multiple sessions dramatically improves long-term retention. Generate a new set on the same topic every few days instead of relying on one last-minute cram.
Getting questions wrong during practice is not failure. It is the strongest signal telling you what to fix next, which is exactly why practice tests make the memory stick.
How it works
01
Enter what you are studying — "The French Revolution, AP European History" or "Cell Division, Grade 10 Biology" or "Quadratic Equations, Algebra 2." No notes, no textbook, no file upload required.
02
Select MCQ for recognition practice, True/False for quick concept checks, or Short Answer for deeper recall. Use Review Mode for confidence-building or Exam Mode for tougher, exam-realistic practice.
03
Answer the questions, reveal the answer key, and use the wrong answers as your study guide. The questions you missed are exactly where you should spend your next block of study time.
Exam types
Whether it is tomorrow's unit test or next month's AP exam, generate the right type of practice for the pressure you are under right now.
Cramming for tomorrow's test? Generate 15-20 questions on the exact chapter or unit you're being tested on. Focus on the vocabulary, concepts, and processes your teacher emphasized.
Preparing for finals? Generate broader review sets covering the full term, then work topic by topic across the week before the exam instead of trying to study everything at once.
Generate practice questions with tougher wording, multi-step reasoning, and formats that feel closer to high-stakes exams so the real test feels more familiar.
Use quizzes for vocabulary recall, grammar structure, and reading comprehension in language study. Self-testing is one of the fastest ways to make vocabulary stick.
Generate a short 10-question quiz right after class, then again a few days later, then again the next week. That repeated retrieval is how short-term understanding becomes long-term memory.
Use conceptual questions in Math, Physics, Chemistry, and Biology to confirm that you understand the principle first. That makes the harder calculations and formal problems much easier to tackle.
Subject coverage
Type any topic from any subject and use the results to move from vague anxiety to focused retrieval practice.
Cell Division, Genetics, Ecosystems, Human Anatomy
Periodic Table, Chemical Bonds, Stoichiometry, Acids & Bases
Newton's Laws, Energy, Waves, Electricity
Quadratic Equations, Trigonometry, Statistics, Calculus Concepts
World War II, The Cold War, The French Revolution, Civil Rights Movement
The Great Gatsby, Romeo and Juliet, Literary Devices, Poetry Analysis
Climate Zones, Population, Urbanization, Map Skills
Supply and Demand, Inflation, Market Structures, GDP
Cognitive Development, Memory Models, Research Methods, Social Influence
Vocabulary, Verb Forms, Grammar Patterns, Reading Practice
Constitutions, Elections, Public Policy, Branches of Government
Algorithms, Data Structures, Logic, Programming Fundamentals
Study tips
Most students re-read first and quiz later. Flip that order. Test yourself first, find the gaps, then go back and study only what you missed.
Give yourself 10-15 seconds to retrieve the answer before checking. That short struggle is where the strongest memory-building happens.
Do not stop at the score. Review every miss, figure out why it happened, and generate a follow-up set focused on exactly those weak concepts.
One 60-minute cram session is less effective than several short quiz sessions spread across the week. Short, repeated retrieval wins.
MCQ tests recognition. True/False tests quick discrimination. Short Answer tests retrieval from memory. Using all three gives you a much clearer picture of what you actually know.
Repeating the exact same quiz only trains memory for that quiz. A fresh set on the same topic forces you to retrieve the same knowledge in different ways.
FAQ
Yes. No account, no subscription, no usage limits. Generate as many practice quizzes as you need for any subject, topic, or exam — completely free, forever.
No. Just type your topic directly — for example, "The French Revolution, AP European History" or "Cell Division, Grade 10 Biology." The AI generates practice questions from scratch without any file upload.
No. Open the tool, type your topic, and start generating. No email, no password, no setup.
Multiple Choice, True/False, Fill in the Blank, Short Answer, and Matching are all available. Mix them together when you want broader, more effective study sessions.
10-15 questions is the sweet spot for most sessions — enough to cover a meaningful chunk of material without creating cognitive fatigue. For a full unit, split the review into multiple shorter sets.
Yes. Specify the exam type in your prompt — for example, "AP Biology FRQ-style questions on cellular respiration" or "SAT Reading comprehension practice questions."
They solve different parts of the problem. Flashcards are great for isolated fact recall. Practice quizzes are stronger for conceptual understanding and exam-format familiarity. For many exams, quizzing gives you the better signal.
Yes. Specify the language and level — for example, "Spanish vocabulary quiz, Intermediate level, travel theme" or "French grammar fill-in-the-blank, past tense."
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