Vertech Editorial
Most students use AI randomly. This 60-day plan introduces one tool and one habit per week until you have a complete AI-powered study system that runs on autopilot.
Most students download ChatGPT, ask it to explain something once, and then go back to highlighting their textbook. That is not using AI to study. That is using AI as a fancy search engine. A real AI study system integrates multiple tools into your daily routine, each one handling a specific part of the learning process so you spend less time organizing and more time actually understanding material.
This 60-day plan builds that system one piece at a time. Each week introduces one new tool or habit. By day 60, you will have a complete AI-powered study workflow that handles note processing, active recall, spaced repetition, research, and exam prep, all running on tools you already have access to for free. The plan works for any major, any year, and any school.
Before You Start: The 3 Rules
This plan only works if you follow three ground rules. Break any of them and you will end up dependent on AI instead of empowered by it.
AI explains. You write.
Never copy AI-generated text into anything you submit. Use AI to understand concepts, generate questions, and organize information. The actual writing, problem-solving, and critical thinking must be yours.
15 minutes max per task.
Each daily task in this plan takes 10-15 minutes. If you are spending more than that, you are overcomplicating it. The goal is a sustainable daily habit, not an exhausting productivity marathon.
One new thing per week.
Do not try to set up everything at once. Adding one tool or habit per week lets each one become automatic before you add the next. By week 8, the full system runs itself.
The Free Tools You Need
This plan uses four free tools, each introduced in the week where you need it. You do not need to set them all up today. Install each one when its week arrives.
| Tool | Introduced | Used For | Free? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Notion | Week 1 | Notes hub, assignment tracking, summaries | Yes (.edu) |
| ChatGPT | Week 2 | Explanations, quizzes, teach-back, exam prep | Yes |
| Perplexity | Week 5 | Research with cited sources | Yes |
| Gemini | Week 6 | Google Docs integration, data analysis | Yes |
Weeks 1-2: Foundation (Days 1-14)
The first two weeks are about setting up your tools and building the habit of using them daily. You are not trying to overhaul your entire study life. You are just adding one small thing to your existing routine.
Week 1: Set up your note hub
Set up Notion (or your preferred tool) with a class database and assignment tracker. Each day after class, create a new notes page and type your raw notes. At the end of each day, use Notion AI or ChatGPT to summarize them. That is it. You are building the "notes go here" habit.
Week 2: Add the explain habit
Every day, pick one concept from today's class that you did not fully understand. Open ChatGPT or Gemini and ask it to explain the concept using an analogy first, then the technical definition. Write a one-sentence summary in your own words. This trains you to identify gaps and fill them the same day instead of letting confusion accumulate.
Daily explain prompt:
"I am studying [topic] in my [class] course. I understand [what you know] but I am confused about [specific confusion]. Explain it using a simple analogy first, then the formal definition. Then ask me a question to check if I understood."
Weeks 3-4: Active Recall (Days 15-28)
Active recall is the most research-backed study technique that exists. Instead of re-reading your notes, you quiz yourself on them. AI makes this dramatically easier because it generates unlimited practice questions from your own material.
Week 3: Daily quiz habit
At the end of each study session, paste your notes into ChatGPT and ask it to generate 5 practice questions. Answer them yourself before looking at the AI's answers. Track how many you get right. This takes 10 minutes and is worth more than an hour of passive re-reading.
Week 4: Teach-back method
Twice per week, pick a topic and explain it back to ChatGPT as if you are teaching it. Tell ChatGPT to act as a student who asks follow-up questions. When you cannot answer a follow-up, that reveals a gap. This is the Feynman technique powered by AI. If you can teach it, you know it.
Quiz generation prompt:
"Here are my notes from today's [class] lecture. Generate 5 practice questions: 3 multiple choice (with 4 options each) and 2 short answer. Mark difficulty as Easy, Medium, or Hard. Do not show answers until I attempt each one."
Want a smarter quiz experience?
The Generalist Teacher prompt turns ChatGPT or Gemini into a Socratic tutor that adapts questions to your level. It quizzes harder when you are getting things right and provides more guidance when you are struggling.
Try the Generalist Teacher - Free →Weeks 5-6: Deep Work (Days 29-42)
By now you have the foundation (organized notes) and the recall habit (daily quizzes). Weeks 5-6 add the deep work layer: using AI to tackle your hardest material and build connections between topics.
Week 5: Research integration
Start using Perplexity AI for any research assignments. When a paper or project requires sources, use Perplexity instead of (or alongside) Google. Practice the 4-step research workflow: overview, academic focus, follow-ups, verification. Save your searches in Collections.
Week 6: Cross-topic connections
Once per week, ask ChatGPT to find connections between topics from different classes. "How does [concept from Psychology] relate to [concept from Economics]?" These cross-domain connections are what professors love to see in essays and exams. AI is excellent at spotting patterns you might miss because you study each class in isolation.
The Pomodoro + AI combo
During weeks 5-6, try pairing your deep work sessions with the Pomodoro technique: 25 minutes of focused study, then a 5-minute break where you ask AI to quiz you on what you just studied. Four pomodoros equals 2 hours of deep work with built-in active recall at every break. This is more effective than 4 hours of unfocused studying.
Weeks 7-8: Exam Mode (Days 43-60)
The final stretch is where everything comes together. Weeks 7-8 focus on exam preparation using every tool and habit you have built so far.
Week 7: Build your exam study guides
For each class with an upcoming exam, compile all your notes from the semester and paste them into ChatGPT (or upload them to NotebookLM for long documents). Ask it to generate a comprehensive study guide organized by topic with the most important concepts highlighted. Then test yourself on each section using the quiz habit from weeks 3-4.
Week 8: Simulated exams
Have ChatGPT generate a full practice exam for each class: same format as the real exam, same time limit, same difficulty level. Take it under exam conditions (no notes, timed, no AI help). Then review your answers with AI to identify remaining weak spots. Repeat for your weakest areas. This is the highest-ROI study activity you can do in the final week.
Practice exam prompt:
"Create a practice [midterm/final] for [class]. The real exam has [format details: X multiple choice, Y short answer, Z essay questions]. Cover these topics: [list topics]. Make it slightly harder than a typical exam to push my preparation. Include an answer key at the end."
After Day 60: The System Runs Itself
If you followed this plan, you now have five habits that run on autopilot:
After class
Notes go into your hub and get summarized by AI
Daily
One concept explained + quiz yourself
Weekly
Teach-back session + cross-topic connections
For papers
Perplexity for research, AI for brainstorming
Pre-exam
AI study guides + simulated practice exams
Measuring Your Progress
How do you know the plan is working? You need measurable checkpoints, not just a vague feeling of being "more organized." Track these three metrics throughout the 60 days.
Quiz accuracy rate. Starting in week 3, track what percentage of your self-generated quiz questions you answer correctly on the first attempt. Week 3 might be 40%. By week 6, if you are following the active recall habits, you should be above 70%. This is the most direct measure of whether you are actually learning the material.
Time to find information. At the start of the plan, finding a specific note from two weeks ago might take 5-10 minutes of searching. By week 4, with your Notion hub organized, it should take under 30 seconds. If you are still losing notes, your organizational system needs attention.
Assignment completion rate. Track how many assignments you complete before the deadline versus the night of. Before the plan, most students are night-of submitters. By week 6, the assignment tracker and weekly review should have most of your work done 1-2 days early. This is the stress reduction metric.
Common Mistakes That Sabotage Your Plan
Trying to set up everything on day 1
This plan works because you add one thing at a time. Students who try to configure Notion, ChatGPT, Perplexity, and 5 other tools on the first day burn out by day 3. Follow the weekly schedule. There is a reason each tool is introduced in a specific order.
Using AI to avoid thinking
If you are asking AI for answers instead of explanations, you are learning nothing. The plan specifically uses AI for quizzing and explaining, not for producing finished work. If you skip the "answer it yourself first" step in the quiz habit, you lose the entire benefit. Learn more about the consequences of misusing AI.
Skipping the Sunday review
The weekly review is the glue that holds everything together. Without it, assignments slip, notes pile up unprocessed, and your system gradually falls apart. Five minutes on Sunday prevents five hours of scrambling on Wednesday night.
For specific tool guides referenced in this plan, check out how to use ChatGPT for studying, the complete Notion AI setup, and the Perplexity research guide.
Start your study system with the right AI prompt
The Generalist Teacher prompt adapts to any subject, quizzes you at every step, and builds the kind of understanding that shows up on exams.
Try the Generalist Teacher - Free →Adapting the Plan for Different Majors
The core habits in this plan work for any subject, but the specific way you use AI tools will vary depending on your major. Here is how to customize the plan for the three most common student categories.
STEM majors (science, math, engineering). Lean heavily on ChatGPT for step-by-step problem solving during weeks 3-4. Use the quiz generation prompt but ask for calculation problems instead of conceptual questions. During weeks 5-6, use Gemini for data analysis and chart generation in lab reports. For exam prep in weeks 7-8, have ChatGPT generate practice problem sets and walk you through solutions you get wrong.
Humanities majors (history, literature, philosophy). Focus on the teach-back method during weeks 3-4 because understanding arguments and being able to articulate them is more important than memorizing facts. During weeks 5-6, use Perplexity heavily for primary source discovery and contextual research. For exam prep, have ChatGPT generate essay prompts and practice writing timed outlines.
Social science majors (psychology, sociology, economics). Balance both approaches. Use ChatGPT for understanding research methodologies and statistical concepts during weeks 3-4. Use Perplexity during weeks 5-6 for finding empirical studies and current data. For exam prep, focus on connecting theories to real-world examples since social science exams often require application rather than pure recall.
Regardless of your major, the habit structure remains the same: organize daily, quiz daily, review weekly. What changes is the content of your prompts and which AI features you use most. Adapt the prompts throughout this guide by changing the subject and topic to match your classes.
