A weekly planner for assignments, study blocks, and focus
WeekFlux helps you turn a busy term into a clear week: capture assignments, schedule study sessions, run focused work, and keep steady study routines.
A term rarely fails because of a single hard day. It drifts when classes, readings, and deadlines pile into one long list that never turns into a real schedule. A weekly planner gives that list a place to live in time.
WeekFlux is built around that workflow. It is a local-first weekly planner where you can map your class workload, plan assignments, place study blocks into your week, and keep the focus sessions and habits that hold a study routine together.
See your weekly class workload
Start by getting the whole week in front of you. Lectures, labs, seminars, and recurring commitments belong on the same surface as the work they create, so you can see where your time is already spoken for.
WeekFlux lets you block fixed commitments first, then plan around them. Priority mode keeps the list readable, while Calendar mode shows the week as a timeline so you can tell a light day from a packed one before you commit to new work.
Plan assignments before they become urgent
Assignments arrive as vague obligations: a paper, a problem set, a group project. The useful move is to capture each one as a concrete task and then break it into the steps that actually fit into a week.
With WeekFlux you can capture assignments quickly, split larger ones into smaller tasks, and place those tasks on the days you intend to work on them. A deadline stops being a single scary date and becomes a short sequence of scheduled work.
Schedule study blocks
Reading and revision expand to fill whatever time is left, which usually means the night before. Study blocks counter that by reserving real time for specific work instead of leaving it to chance.
Move a study task into the week and give it a time block, then treat that block as a small appointment with yourself. Because tasks and the schedule sit together, you can adjust a block without losing track of the work it represents.
At a glance
- Reserve time for reading, problem sets, and revision
- Match block length to the kind of work it holds
- Keep study blocks next to the tasks they cover
- Reschedule a block when a day fills up unexpectedly
Prepare for exams across the weeks
Exam preparation is mostly a scheduling problem. The material is known; the hard part is spreading review across enough sessions that nothing gets crammed into the final evening.
Use WeekFlux to lay revision sessions across the weeks before an exam, working backward from the date. Spacing topics over several planned blocks keeps each session manageable and gives you a realistic picture of whether your plan actually fits.
Use the focus timer for study sessions
A scheduled block still needs a way to begin. WeekFlux includes a Deep Focus timer with Pomodoro-style work cycles, so you can start a focused session directly from the study task you planned.
Defined intervals make a long session less daunting: you commit to one work cycle, take a short break, and continue. The point is not to track every minute but to make starting easier and keep your attention on a single piece of work.
Keep study habits steady
Consistent study depends less on motivation than on routine. Small recurring actions, a daily review of notes or a weekly reading session, do more over a term than occasional long pushes.
WeekFlux supports daily and weekly habits with honest streaks, so a missed day is just a missed day rather than a reset of everything. Quiet, non-gamified milestones mark progress without turning your studies into a scoreboard.
- Local-first study planning
- Assignments, study blocks, and focus sessions
- Desktop and mobile planner
FAQ
Is WeekFlux a good planner for students?
Yes. WeekFlux is a weekly planner built around capturing tasks, scheduling study blocks, and running focus sessions. That maps closely to student work: classes, assignments, revision, and steady study routines all live in the same week.
Can I plan assignments and deadlines?
You can capture each assignment as a task, break larger ones into smaller steps, and place those steps on the days you plan to work on them. A deadline becomes a sequence of scheduled tasks rather than one looming date.
Does WeekFlux help with focused study sessions?
Yes. WeekFlux includes a Deep Focus timer with Pomodoro-style work cycles. You can start a focused session directly from a scheduled study task, which makes it easier to begin and stay on one piece of work.
Do I need to pay to use WeekFlux as a student?
No. The free plan covers the full planner on one device, including tasks, time blocking, focus sessions, habits, and notes. An optional Pro plan adds encrypted sync and a few extras, but it is not required to plan your study week.
Related guides & features
- Privacy & encrypted sync Local-first, no tracking, optional encrypted sync.
- Backup, export & restore Keep control over your planning data.
- Habit tracker Daily, weekly, and monthly habits with honest streaks.
- Weekly planner Capture tasks, time block the week, and reschedule fast.
- Notes Private notes that stay connected to your plan.
- The Pomodoro Technique Focus in 25-minute intervals with short breaks.
Plan your term in WeekFlux
Turn classes, assignments, and revision into a clear week with study blocks, focus sessions, and steady habits.