What this template does
Good chemistry studying is not about finding more hours — it is about placing the right practice at the right distance from each other. This template takes the techniques that actually build skill, retrieval practice and spaced practice, and turns them into a fixed weekly cadence so your child never has to decide on a tired Tuesday night whether or how to study. The decision is already made; they just work the row.
The week is anchored to two fixed points: Concept Day, when a new idea and its math are taught, and Experiment Day, when that idea is put to the test at the bench. Everything else is short, spaced problem-solving placed at the moments memory needs reinforcing — one day out, three days out, and again on the weekend.
The seven-day cycle
Below is the full cycle. The exact weekdays will shift with your child's schedule — what matters is the spacing, not the calendar. Print it and write your own days into the first column.
| Day | Focus | What to do (15–30 min) |
|---|---|---|
| Day 1 — Concept Day | Encode the method | That evening, close the notes and redo two of the day's worked problems from a blank page. Reopen the notes and mark, in a different color, exactly where the setup broke down. The errors are your study list. |
| Day 2 — +1 quick recall | First retrieval | No worked examples. Solve two fresh problems of the same type cold, carrying units the whole way (dimensional analysis). Whatever you stumble on, mark it for the weekend. |
| Day 3 — rest / light | Let it settle | Optional 5-minute fact pass — polyatomic ions, solubility rules, or molar masses on flashcards. Let a little forgetting happen; it makes the next retrieval stronger. |
| Day 4 — +3 Experiment prep | Connect math to bench | Work the underlying calculation again, then write a one-line prediction: what will tomorrow's experiment show — the color change, the endpoint volume, the sign of ΔT — and why? Walk in with a number to test. |
| Day 5 — Experiment Day | Test the prediction | Do the science. Keep the lab notebook live, with units and significant figures. That night, finish the analysis while it is fresh — did the measured result match your predicted number? |
| Day 6 — weekend spaced review | Interleave the units | Mix this week's problems with earlier units in one short set — a titration next to a gas law next to a limiting-reactant problem. Honest self-testing only, no peeking at solutions. |
| Day 7 — preview & reset | Prime next week | Skim ahead to the next concept for 10 minutes so Day 1 lands on prepared ground. Reset the planner. |
How to use it
Three rules make the cycle work, and all three are about discipline rather than effort:
- Always close the solution first. Every box above starts with solving — producing the answer on a blank page before checking the worked example. If your child reads the solution first, the box has failed no matter how long they sit with it.
- Keep each session short. Fifteen to thirty honest minutes beats two distracted hours. The power is in the spacing between sessions, not the length of any one.
- Protect the +1 and +3 retrievals. These are the days students skip, and they are the most important. Solving a problem just as you begin to forget the setup is the single mechanism that converts a lesson into a durable skill.
Why the spacing beats cramming
It is tempting to compress all of this into one long session the night before a test — same total minutes, less hassle. But skill does not work that way. The struggle to reconstruct a setup you have half-forgotten is what strengthens it, and that half-forgetting only happens across days. A crammed session feels productive because the method stays fluent and familiar; a spaced session feels harder because you keep having to rebuild the setup — and the rebuilding is the learning.
The discomfort of spaced problem-solving is not a sign it is going badly. It is the sign it is working.
For the reasoning behind these techniques and how to run them well — working problems by hand, the mole map, dimensional analysis, interleaving units — read the companion guide, how to study chemistry. This planner is simply that guide, scheduled.