Study guide generator
Organize a unit into chronology, key figures, causes, consequences, and essay prompts.
Open Study guide generator →History exams reward students who can connect events, not just list them. The cause of a revolution, the consequences of a treaty, the chain that links one war to the next: these are what essays and short-answer questions actually test. Dates matter when they anchor a sequence, but pure date memorization is rarely enough on its own. Studii works with the source set history courses use: textbook chapters, lecture notes, primary source extracts, and recorded class sessions. Paste a unit of notes here for a quick artifact, or upload the chapter in Studii to keep timelines, flashcards, and study guides linked to the same source.
Start freeOrganize a unit into chronology, key figures, causes, consequences, and essay prompts.
Open Study guide generator →Drill dates, figures, treaties, and the cause-and-effect chains that anchor a course.
Open Flashcard generator →Build questions on causes, consequences, and the dates your course treats as important.
Open Quiz generator →Compress dense readings into structured notes you can revise from.
Open AI note summarizer →Build timelines as flashcard decks alongside dates and causes so each card teaches a sequence, not an isolated fact.
For each major event, write a card with three columns: what caused it, what happened, and what followed.
Quiz yourself on cause-and-effect before drilling names and dates, because the essay questions ask about cause.
Group figures by movement or ideology rather than by chapter so similar actors stay distinct.
When two interpretations of an event compete, make one card for each and a third comparing them.
Paste a section like this here, or upload the full source in Studii for better coverage.
Paste a section like this here, or upload the full source in Studii for better coverage.
Paste a section like this here, or upload the full source in Studii for better coverage.
No. It uses the dates your notes treat as important and ignores ones the source did not emphasize.
Yes. Use the study guide generator to organize a unit, then quiz on cause-and-effect for the essay portion.
If your notes describe a historian's interpretation, the output reflects it. The generator follows the material you paste.
Paste the source extract plus your annotations. The concept explainer is useful for unpacking a dense primary source before you build cards on it.
Upload once. Generate notes, quiz questions, flashcards, and podcasts from the same source.