Mark a chapter done, and six revisions schedule themselves across the next 30 days. Nothing forgotten, nothing to plan.
A chapter gets taught, the unit test passes, and the chapter is quietly forgotten. By the time the boards arrive, it is a year of re-learning crammed into a few weeks. Not because anyone was lazy, but because no one was tracking what needed revisiting, and when.
Most of a chapter fades within days unless it is revisited at the right moment.
Tracking revision for every chapter in every subject is bookkeeping no one keeps up by hand.
One long session the night before feels productive and is gone within days.
When you mark a chapter complete, Abhyaas lays out six revision sessions across the next 30 days, based on the science of spaced repetition. You never plan a thing.
The next 30 days, scheduled for you
Write sessions pull the chapter from memory. Read sessions refresh it. Both are short.
Each review is marked Excellent to Poor. A weak review adds a makeup session automatically.
Your child opens the app and sees exactly what to revise today. No guessing.
Finish all six well and the chapter is marked Mastered, board-ready and off your mind.
The schedule does the remembering. You and your child just follow the daily list.
Reviews land just before each chapter would slip, so it sticks in long-term memory.
By exam time, old chapters are already revised. Preparation becomes review, not rescue.
Reviewing a chapter several times at growing intervals instead of once before a test, so it moves into long-term memory and stays there.
The child does the revision. The parent marks it done and rates the quality, which the system uses to schedule any makeup sessions.
It is not dropped. The session is marked overdue and rescheduled to the next available day, so nothing falls through.
It is tied to your child's actual chapters and tracks revision quality over time, not a generic reminder you set yourself.