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Turn the run-up to any exam into a clear week-by-week plan. Choose how many weeks you have, add your own subjects, set your session rhythm, and download a plan you can hand straight to students or parents.
Works for the 11+, entrance and admissions exams, GCSEs, A-Levels, the bac, university concours, music grades and more. Add any subjects you like. Nothing you type leaves your browser.
Adjust anything and the plan on the right updates instantly.
Optional. Add it and each week gets real dates counting back from exam day.
How many weeks you have before the exam. The plan stretches or compresses to fit.
How often and how long you teach this student.
Tick the presets that fit, and add any subjects of your own. The plan rotates through them evenly.
A ready-to-share plan. Download it or copy the text.
Tip: edit any title, add or remove sessions, and change durations right here. Everything you change is in the download.
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Turn this plan into booked sessions
In Teamlilit, set the weeks up once as recurring sessions, publish mock exam slots parents can book, and track each student's progress in one place.
Start a free trialTeamlilit turns this plan into a live schedule: recurring sessions carry the weeks, parents self-book your mock exams, and every student's progress sits on one profile. Set it up once and spend exam season teaching, not chasing admin.
The weeks before an exam are where technique, timing and confidence come together. This planner turns whatever time you have into a structured week-by-week plan you can adapt per student and hand to parents, so the run-up feels organised instead of frantic. It works for any exam and any mix of subjects.
Foundations are built over months, but the score a student posts on exam day is shaped disproportionately by the final stretch. That is when exam-specific skills mature: working at pace, applying method under pressure, and keeping nerves in check under timed conditions.
The biggest jumps tutors see tend to happen between the first mock and the real exam. A student who knows the content but has never practised under pressure routinely gains marks from method and familiarity alone, which is exactly what this plan drills.
Whatever length you choose, the plan follows one arc: diagnose, build method, sharpen accuracy, work at pace, a full rehearsal, then a taper. Short plans compress the middle; longer plans get more practice weeks. The arc deliberately front-loads teaching and back-loads timed practice, so pressure is added only once the method is secure.
Set the student's name, the exam, how many weeks you have, how often you teach and which subjects the exam tests. Tick the presets or type your own subjects, and the planner rotates evenly through all of them. Add an exam date and each week is labelled with real dates counting back from the day itself.
Most exams test several subjects, so the plan spreads sessions across every subject you add rather than over-drilling one. If you teach two sessions a week, that is roughly a subject per session, with mocks woven in near the start and near the end. Add as many subjects as the exam needs.
Two well-placed mocks give you data without burning the student out: a baseline early to set targets, and a full rehearsal about two-thirds of the way through to show what the final stretch should attack. Keep the last week light on purpose.
A downloaded plan is a starting point. The moment you want it to run itself, book the recurring sessions, publish mock slots parents can claim, and track each student's progress, you have outgrown the PDF.
That is where a tutoring platform earns its place: set the weeks up once as recurring sessions, let parents self-book the mock exams, and keep every student's targets and results on one profile so the weekly review is a glance, not an archaeology dig.
Common questions about planning the run-up to an exam.