Exeqte for Students: Fit Study Tasks Into the Free Time You Actually Have
As a student, your week is half fixed: lectures, labs, jobs. Exeqte takes the free time between those and pours your study tasks into it — sized to fit, sorted by what's most urgent. You set your weekly study focus blocks, add tasks with rough durations and priority based on deadlines, and Exeqte hands you a daily plan that actually fits between classes. No more "I'll study all weekend" promises that collapse by Saturday afternoon.
Why student planning breaks
Generic todo apps don't know your schedule. You commit to four hours of study on a day with two free hours. By exam week, you're scrambling.
Set up your study focus blocks
Map your real available study time per week — the hours that aren't class, work, commute, or sleep. Be honest about how many of those are actually focus hours, not 'maybe study' hours.
Estimate by assignment type
Reading: 30 min per 10 pages. Problem set: 90 min. Essay draft: 2 hours. Use rough buckets so estimating is fast.
Prioritize by deadline
Closest deadline = highest priority. The pour happens automatically: each day's list is the most urgent stuff that fits in today's focus time.
What changes
No more all-nighters. No more 'I forgot it was due.' Your week is honest with you about what fits, and your work is distributed instead of clumped.
Stop drowning in your todo list. Tonight.
Set your focus hours. Add your tasks with priority and duration. Open Exeqte tomorrow morning and follow the list. Five minutes to set up, free to start.
Open ExeqteKeep reading