

Getting ready forthe Maturitàisn’t just “studying more”: it’s studying better, with a method that helps you understand where you’re going wrong, how to correct yourself, and how to stay consistent until exam day. If you train withcoach feedback, do regularexam simulationsand set a sustainable routine (even withmobile studying, withdark modein the evening), preparation becomes clearer and less stressful. In this article you’ll find practical tips and a weekly strategy inspired by tools likemobile studyingshouldn’t replace “deep” study, but it can multiply results if you use it for targeted micro-sessions. The key is choosing activities suited to a small screen and limited time: review, flashcards, reading notes, mini-quizzes, re-listening to audio, reviewing mistakes from simulations.
Three practical rules to make it work:


Micro-goal: 5–10 minutes with a single task (e.g., “review 8 definitions” or “redo 3 critical steps”).
Clean environment: airplane mode or muted notifications, headphones if you’re out and about, comfortable brightness.MaturitàClose the loop: at the end of the session, write one line: “what I locked in / what I’ll review later.” It’s the fastest way to turn dead time into learning.
That way, buses, breaks, waiting time, and pauses become “low-friction” review. And when you get back to your desk, you already feel in the flow: less effort to start, more continuity.
“Coach-style” feedback: what it is and how to use it to truly improve
dark modecan help you reduce eye strain and stay focused longer. It’s not a magic solution, but it’s a detail that makes a difference when you need to be consistent for weeks: less discomfort in your eyes means less desire to give up after 10 minutes.It’s feedback that doesn’t stop at the result, but trains you on the process. In practice: it tells you what you did well, what isn’t working, and what the most useful next step is. There are three main characteristics.
- Concrete: they point to the specific spot of the mistake (not “you’re confused,” but “here the definition is missing / here you skip a step / here the thesis isn’t supported”).
- Actionable: they give you a correction you can apply right away (a rule, an example, an outline, a final check).
- Encouraging: they acknowledge what’s improving and help you keep confidence, without “sugarcoating” mistakes.
Mini-routine to use them every day (15–25 minutes):
- Maturità
- Read the feedback and rewrite the “rule” in one line: what do I need to do next time?
- Do a 5-minute “targeted repetition”: redo only the step where you went wrong, not everything from scratch.
- File the mistake in a “Top 10” list: recurring mistakes become your review plan.
If you want a simple way to make this routine sustainable, you canstart for freeand try a more guided approach. If you’re interested in understanding the philosophy behind this kind of support, you can also find theabout uspage.
3 free simulations per week: how to train like in a real exam
Theexam simulationswork because they train two things at once: skills and emotional management. The more you expose yourself to timing, instructions, and unexpected issues “in a controlled environment,” the less anxiety will drain your energy on test day. Three a week is a great pace: frequent enough to build a habit, light enough not to burn you out.
Example schedule (adapt it to your subjects):
- Simulation 1 (Mon/Tue): focus on speed and setup. Goal: start well, not perfection.
- Simulation 2 (Wed/Thu): focus on quality. Goal: reduce 1–2 recurring mistakes.
- Simulation 3 (Sat/Sun): focus on stamina. Goal: keep concentration until the end.
The part many people skip is the review. Simple rule: for each simulation, devote at least 30–40% of the total time to correction and reviewing mistakes. If you do a 60-minute test, do 20–25 minutes of structured review: note the mistakes, classify them (content, method, distraction, time), and choose just one “improvement point” for the next simulation.
If you have the chance to access 3 free simulations per week, use them as a “gym”: not to judge yourself, but to collect data on how you study. If you want to start right away, you can alsosign up for freeand set a simple, repeatable, realistic calendar.
Studying better on mobile: smart review wherever you are
Themobile studyingshouldn’t replace “deep” study, but it can multiply results if you use it for targeted micro-sessions. The key is choosing activities suited to a small screen and limited time: review, flashcards, reading notes, mini-quizzes, re-listening to audio, reviewing mistakes from simulations.
Three practical rules to make it work:
- Micro-goal: 5–10 minutes with a single task (e.g., “review 8 definitions” or “redo 3 critical steps”).
- Clean environment: airplane mode or muted notifications, headphones if you’re out and about, comfortable brightness.
- Close the loop: at the end of the session, write one line: “what I locked in / what I’ll review later.” It’s the fastest way to turn dead time into learning.
That way, buses, breaks, waiting time, and pauses become “low-friction” review. And when you get back to your desk, you already feel in the flow: less effort to start, more continuity.
Dark mode: reviewing in the evening without tiring your eyes (and without losing focus)
If you study in the evening, especially on a smartphone or tablet,dark modecan help you reduce eye strain and stay focused longer. It’s not a magic solution, but it’s a detail that makes a difference when you need to be consistent for weeks: less discomfort in your eyes means less desire to give up after 10 minutes.
How to integrate it into a sustainable evening routine (30–45 minutes):
- First part (10–15 min): light review in dark mode (flashcards, definitions, formulas, dates).
- Second part (15–20 min): review the day’s mistakes and a short mini-simulation (even just 1 question).
- Wrap-up (5 min): write the “next step” for tomorrow and turn off screens 10 minutes before sleeping, if you can.
In short: clear feedback, frequent simulations, and convenient tools (mobile + dark mode) turn preparation for theMaturitàinto a more manageable path. Your goal isn’t to study “all the time,” but to study consistently and with smart corrections: that’s where the extra points come from.
