🗂️

Subject Priority Decider

You have multiple subjects and limited time. You don't know which one to open first. Answer 4 quick questions per subject — get a ranked priority order with a clear reason for each.

⏱ Takes about 3 minutes

Advertisement space — AdSense placeholder

Your Subjects

Add each subject and answer 4 honest questions. The tool ranks them for you.

Advertisement space — AdSense placeholder

Example Usage

Subjects entered: Maths (exam in 3 days, last score 45%, 60% syllabus left, very unconfident) · Physics (exam in 10 days, last score 72%, 20% left, fairly confident) · Chemistry (exam in 7 days, last score 55%, 40% left, neutral)

Result: #1 Maths — Exam is closest AND you're weakest here. This is your most urgent problem. #2 Chemistry — Mid-range urgency with meaningful gaps remaining. #3 Physics — Most prepared, furthest away. Do this last.

How This Tool Works

Each subject gets a priority score based on four weighted factors. Exam proximity carries the most weight — a subject 2 days away beats everything else. Then comes your last performance score (lower score = higher priority), then syllabus remaining, then your own confidence level.

The result isn't just a number — it's a reason. You'll see exactly why each subject landed where it did, so you can agree with it or adjust accordingly.

Study Tips

Frequently Asked Questions

Four factors are scored and weighted: exam proximity (40%), your last score in the subject (25%), syllabus remaining (20%), and your confidence level (15%). These weights reflect how much each factor typically affects exam outcome. Subjects with close exams and low scores always come first.

Then your performance score and syllabus remaining break the tie. Whichever subject you're weaker in — lower last score, more content left — gets ranked higher. That's usually the right call.

Up to 8 subjects. For most students preparing for board or entrance exams, 3–6 is the typical range.

Yes — especially in the final 2–3 weeks before exams when multiple papers are close together. Priorities can change significantly day to day as exams approach. Running it daily takes under 2 minutes once your subjects are set.

That would only happen if your score and confidence in it are extremely low. In that case, the tool is telling you something important — that subject needs foundational work now, not just last-minute revision. Trust it.

Related Tools