If you’re reading this, you probably have a clear goal: to pass yourmake-up examswithout getting eaten alive by anxiety and without wasting random hours. In 2026, the difference isn’t made by “studying a lot,” but by studying well: priorities, method, frequent check-ins. In this article I’ll explain how to set up atargeted studyPersonalized AI: how artificial intelligence adapts content, exercises, and review to your levelPersonalized AIWhen you hear “AI” applied to studying, you might think of two extremes: either magic that gets you through without studying (spoiler: no), or a toy that spits out generic summaries. The useful idea, instead, is another: usingPersonalized AIto do faster what you’d do with a good tutor: understand where you’re starting from, give you exercises at the right level, and push you exactly where you make mistakes.school make-up 2026In practice, a serious personalized AI system works in four steps (easy to understand):start for freeInitial diagnosis: it has you answer sample questions/exercises and figures out what you really know (not what it “feels like” you know).
Continuous adaptation: if you’re doing well, it raises the level; if you stumble, it slows down and changes the type of exercise/explanation.
Training on mistakes: it makes you work on the same concepts in different forms until the mistake disappears.
Scheduled review: it brings things back at the right time (before you forget them), not “whenever it happens.”make-up examsThe interesting part is that AI doesn’t have to “replace you”: it has to remove the stupid work. Like: choosing which exercises to do today, inventing variations, correcting and explaining the mistake, remembering when to review. You focus on what matters: understanding and practicing.
Concrete example: you’re preparing for an English make-up. You think you’re bad “at grammar.” Personalized AI, after a diagnosis, might discover the problem isn’t everything: it’s verb tenses in specific contexts (present perfect vs past simple) and prepositions in common collocations. So it has you do targeted exercises right there, with immediate correction and spaced review. Result: in a few days you feel something “unlock,” because you’re not shooting in the dark.
Important note: AI is useful if it’s tied to real goals (tests, exercises, simulations) and if it makes you produce answers, not just consume content. If you use it to write summaries for you that you then don’t check, it only gives you the illusion that you’re studying.
- StudierAI: tailored paths for make-up exams (high school and university)
- This is where
- comes in: the idea is to help you build a tailored path for your
, whether you’re in high school or making up a university exam. The point isn’t to flood you with material, but to guide you in a
with clear goals and measurable progress, all the way to exam day.
How can it help you, concretely, with school make-up 2026?
Personalized plan: you start from the time you have available (even a little) and the topics you need to cover, and you build a realistic outline with priorities.
- Targeted exercises: instead of doing “the whole chapter,” you work on sets of exercises built around your weak points (the ones that cost you marks).
- Simulations: you do tests similar to the exam ones, with consistent timing and requirements, so you also train your pressure management.
- Monitoring: you see whether you’re really improving (accuracy percentages, topics still in red, recurring mistakes).
- Translated into real life: you wake up, you’ve got 90 minutes before you head out. Instead of wasting 20 minutes deciding “where do I start?”, you open the plan and you know exactly what to do: 10 minutes of active review, 30 minutes of targeted exercises, 10 minutes of correction with notes on mistakes, 20 minutes on a second micro-goal, 10 minutes of recall of a topic you did three days ago. It’s not glamorous, but it’s what gets results.
- If you want to try it right away, you can
and set up your first path: the most useful thing is to start with an honest diagnosis, because that’s where it’s decided how “personalized” your preparation will be.error log: a list of your recurring mistakes with the cause. Not “I got exercise 4 wrong,” but “I mixed up the formula / I skipped a step / I misread the prompt.” It’s like having the bug list of your brain for that subject. And if you fix them, the points come.
Personalized AI
Personalized AI: how artificial intelligence adapts content, exercises, and review to your level


When you hear “AI” applied to studying, you might think of two extremes: either magic that gets you through without studying (spoiler: no), or a toy that spits out generic summaries. The useful idea, instead, is another: usingPersonalized AIto do faster what you’d do with a good tutor: understand where you’re starting from, give you exercises at the right level, and push you exactly where you make mistakes.
In practice, a serious personalized AI system works in four steps (easy to understand):
- Initial diagnosis: it has you answer sample questions/exercises and figures out what you really know (not what it “feels like” you know).
- Continuous adaptation: if you’re doing well, it raises the level; if you stumble, it slows down and changes the type of exercise/explanation.
- Training on mistakes: it makes you work on the same concepts in different forms until the mistake disappears.
- Scheduled review: it brings things back at the right time (before you forget them), not “whenever it happens.”
The interesting part is that AI doesn’t have to “replace you”: it has to remove the stupid work. Like: choosing which exercises to do today, inventing variations, correcting and explaining the mistake, remembering when to review. You focus on what matters: understanding and practicing.
Concrete example: you’re preparing for an English make-up. You think you’re bad “at grammar.” Personalized AI, after a diagnosis, might discover the problem isn’t everything: it’s verb tenses in specific contexts (present perfect vs past simple) and prepositions in common collocations. So it has you do targeted exercises right there, with immediate correction and spaced review. Result: in a few days you feel something “unlock,” because you’re not shooting in the dark.
Important note: AI is useful if it’s tied to real goals (tests, exercises, simulations) and if it makes you produce answers, not just consume content. If you use it to write summaries for you that you then don’t check, it only gives you the illusion that you’re studying.
StudierAI: tailored paths for make-up exams (high school and university)


This is whereStudierAIcomes in: the idea is to help you build a tailored path for yourmake-up exams, whether you’re in high school or making up a university exam. The point isn’t to flood you with material, but to guide you in atargeted studywith clear goals and measurable progress, all the way to exam day.
How can it help you, concretely, with school make-up 2026?
- Personalized plan: you start from the time you have available (even a little) and the topics you need to cover, and you build a realistic outline with priorities.
- Targeted exercises: instead of doing “the whole chapter,” you work on sets of exercises built around your weak points (the ones that cost you marks).
- Simulations: you do tests similar to the exam ones, with consistent timing and requirements, so you also train your pressure management.
- Monitoring: you see whether you’re really improving (accuracy percentages, topics still in red, recurring mistakes).
Translated into real life: you wake up, you’ve got 90 minutes before you head out. Instead of wasting 20 minutes deciding “where do I start?”, you open the plan and you know exactly what to do: 10 minutes of active review, 30 minutes of targeted exercises, 10 minutes of correction with notes on mistakes, 20 minutes on a second micro-goal, 10 minutes of recall of a topic you did three days ago. It’s not glamorous, but it’s what gets results.
If you want to try it right away, you cansign up for freeand set up your first path: the most useful thing is to start with an honest diagnosis, because that’s where it’s decided how “personalized” your preparation will be.
One last thing I wish I’d heard when I was in make-up mode: you don’t have to become perfect, you have to become reliable. Reliable means that on a set of key topics you can do things without collapsing at the first unexpected twist. And that’s exactly what aPersonalized AIsystem can train: smart repetition, focus on mistakes, scheduled review.
If you’d like to better understand the project and the philosophy behind the tool, there’s also the pageabout us. But if you’re in a full sprint toward exams, the rule is: less curiosity, more execution. Open the program, make the list, choose priorities, and start today with a micro-goal. Tomorrow you’ll thank yourself.
