Vertech Editorial
You've got one night. Here's a proven system to cover the most ground in the least time - without pulling an all-nighter.
You Have Less Time Than You Think - Here's How to Use It
One night. That's what you've got. And the worst thing you can do is spend the first hour figuring out where to start.
This guide cuts straight to what works. Not what sounds productive - what actually helps you walk into that exam tomorrow with something real in your head.
Step One: Triage Before You Open a Single Note
Before you study anything, spend 10 minutes sorting your material into three buckets:
- High priority: Topics that showed up multiple times in class, on the study guide, or on past exams.
- Medium priority: Topics you recognize but aren't solid on.
- Skip tonight: Anything brand new that you'd need hours to understand. Not worth it.
High priority first. Always. Most students do the opposite - they start with what they already know because it feels good. That's how you run out of time before you get to the important stuff.
What to Actually Do With the Time You Have
Here's a simple 3-part structure for your night. Adjust the times based on how much material you have, but keep this order.
Triage (10 min)
Sort everything into high, medium, and skip. Do not study anything until this is done.
Active Study (bulk of time)
Work through high-priority topics using flashcards, practice questions, or teaching out loud - not re-reading.
Sleep on time
Stop by midnight. Your brain consolidates what you studied while you sleep. Skipping sleep deletes the work.
What to Skip Tonight (Seriously)
Not all study activities are equal under time pressure. Some feel productive and do almost nothing.
| ✅ Do Tonight | ⌠Skip Tonight |
|---|---|
| Flashcards - quiz yourself without peeking | Re-reading your notes top to bottom |
| Practice questions from old exams or the textbook | Highlighting or color-coding anything |
| Explain each topic out loud like you're teaching it | Copying notes into a "cleaner" format |
| Ask ChatGPT to quiz you on your weak spots | Watching long YouTube explainers from scratch |
The One Thing That Matters More Than All of This
âš ï¸ The sleep rule
Staying up past 2am does more damage than good. Sleep is when your brain locks in what you studied. If you skip it, you'll walk in tired AND the material won't stick. Aim for at least 6 hours - ideally 7.
The students who do best on tests they barely prepared for aren't the ones who studied longer. They're the ones who stopped at midnight, slept, and walked in with a clear head.
Use AI to Build Your Cram Session in 5 Minutes
If you're not sure what to prioritize, open ChatGPT and paste in your notes or the study guide. Then ask:
"I have a test tomorrow on [topic]. Based on these notes, what are the 10 most important things I need to know? List them in order of how likely they are to show up on the exam."
Then use our Generalist Teacher prompt to get quizzed on each one - it'll ask you questions and tell you exactly where your gaps are.
That alone is more useful than two hours of re-reading your notes.
