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AI Study Planner For Singapore Students: How To Actually Use It For PSLE, O Levels & A Levels

Updated April 24, 2026Singapore
Tutorly.sg editorial team
Singapore-focused study guides aligned to MOE exam formats.
  • Tutorly.sg has been mentioned on Channel NewsAsia (CNA)
  • Tutorly.sg has been used by thousands of users in Singapore

Introduction: Why Study Planning Feels So Hard In Singapore

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1. What An AI Study Planner Should Do (Especially In Singapore)

Before anything, you need to know what to expect.

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A good AI study planner for Singapore students should help you:

  1. Plan around MOE exam formats
    Not just “study math”, but things like:

    • “Practise PSLE Math heuristics questions”
    • “Drill O Level E-Math coordinate geometry”
    • “Revise JC 2 H 2 Chem organic mechanisms”
  2. Break big goals into daily tasks
    Instead of “Study for O Levels”, it should help you split that into:

    • Today: Trigonometry identities
    • Tomorrow: Amath differentiation basics
    • Friday: Full Paper 1 timed practice
  3. Adjust to your actual school schedule
    Singapore life is packed:

    • CCA 3 times a week
    • Remedial lessons
    • Tuition classes
      An AI planner should help you fit in realistic study blocks, not pretend you have 10 free hours a day.
  4. Help you decide what to study next
    This is the part most students struggle with:

    • “Should I do more practice, or revise notes?”
    • “Which topic should I focus on first?”
    • “I only have 30 minutes, what’s worth doing?”

A tool like Tutorly.sg won’t magically “fix” your life, but it can make these decisions much easier by:

  • Suggesting what to focus on
  • Giving you questions instantly
  • Explaining answers in clear steps

2. Common Mistakes Students Make With Study Planners

Before we talk about how to use AI to plan, it helps to know what usually goes wrong.

Mistake 1: Planning As If You’re A Robot

You write a schedule like:

  • 4–6 pm: Math
  • 6–7 pm: Science
  • 7–9 pm: English

Then reality hits:

  • CCA ends late
  • You’re tired
  • You open TikTok “just for 5 minutes”

Fix: Plan short, specific tasks, not long, vague blocks.

Example:

  • 4.00–4.25 pm: 5 questions on algebra factorisation
  • 4.30–4.50 pm: Mark and review mistakes
  • 4.50–5.00 pm: Ask Tutorly.sg to explain 2 questions I still don’t understand

Mistake 2: Copying Your Friend’s Schedule

Your friend may be:

  • Stronger in Math, weaker in English
  • Taking different subject combinations
  • Having different CCA days

If you copy them, your plan won’t match your weaknesses.

Fix: Your plan must follow your weak topics, not your friend’s.

Mistake 3: Planning But Not Reviewing

You plan once, then never adjust.

But in Singapore, your schedule changes a lot:

  • Extra remedials near exam period
  • CCA competitions
  • Surprise class tests

Fix: Review your plan at least once a week. With AI, this can be as simple as:

“I only finished 60% of last week’s plan. I missed Thursday and Friday. Help me re-plan this week so I still cover Algebra and Probability before my test next Wednesday.”


3. How An AI Study Planner Can Actually Help (Using Tutorly.sg)

Let’s make this concrete using Tutorly.sg.

Tutorly is not just a “chatbot”. It’s a 24/7 AI tutor website built for Singapore students, aligned with MOE syllabus from Primary 1 to JC 2.

You access it here: https://tutorly.sg/app

Here’s how it helps you plan and study at the same time.

3.1 Turning Your Big Goal Into A Study Roadmap

Example: You’re a Sec 4 student aiming for O Level E-Math grade A 2.

You can tell Tutorly something like:

“I’m Sec 4 taking O Level E-Math. My mid-year was B 4. My weakest topics are algebraic manipulation, simultaneous equations, and coordinate geometry. I have about 1.5 hours a day on weekdays, 3 hours on weekends. My O Levels are in 4 months. Help me plan my Math revision.”

Tutorly can then:

  • Suggest a topic order (e.g. algebra → graphs → geometry → statistics)
  • Break it into weekly focus areas
  • Propose daily tasks like:
    • “Do 8 questions on simultaneous equations”
    • “Try 1 full Paper 1 under timed conditions”
    • “Review your last test and redo wrong questions”

You don’t have to guess what to do each day. You just follow and adjust.

3.2 Getting Instant Practice, Not Just A Schedule

Most planners just tell you what to do.

Tutorly goes further by also giving you the questions.

Example:

“Give me 6 O Level standard E-Math questions on algebraic fractions, increasing difficulty, and mark my final answers.”

Tutorly will:

  1. Generate 6 questions
  2. Let you attempt them
  3. Check your final answers
  4. Then show you step-by-step solutions so you can learn the method

Important: Tutorly does not check every working step you write. It checks your final answer, then shows you a clear, logical solution path so you can compare and learn.

This means your “study plan” and “practice questions” are in the same place, which makes it much easier to stick to the plan.


4. Setting Up An AI Study Plan: Step-By-Step For Different Levels

Let’s go through how you can set up an AI study plan depending on your level.

4.1 Primary (Especially P 5–P 6 / PSLE)

At upper primary, the main stress is usually PSLE and subject foundations.

Step 1: List your subjects and weak areas

For example:

  • English: Comprehension open-ended, situational writing
  • Math: Heuristics, fractions word problems
  • Science: Open-ended questions, experimental set-ups
  • Mother Tongue: Composition

Step 2: Ask Tutorly for a weekly structure

You can say:

“I’m P 6 preparing for PSLE in 5 months. My weak areas are Math word problems and Science open-ended questions. I have CCA on Monday and Wednesday. Help me plan a realistic weekly study schedule that I can follow.”

Tutorly might suggest:

  • Mon: Light revision (since you have CCA)
  • Tue: Math focus (word problems)
  • Wed: Rest / light reading (after CCA)
  • Thu: Science focus openendedopen-ended
  • Fri: English (comprehension)
  • Sat: Mixed practice + review
  • Sun: Short revision + rest

Step 3: Turn each day into concrete tasks

Example for Thursday (Science):

You can ask:

“For today’s 45-min Science session, give me 3 PSLE-style open-ended questions on ‘Heat’ and ‘Matter’, then explain any questions I get wrong.”

You:

  1. Do the questions
  2. Check your answers
  3. Ask Tutorly to explain any question you don’t fully understand

This way, your “plan” is not just “study Science”. It’s “do 3 targeted questions and review them properly”.


4.2 Secondary (Sec 1–4 / O Levels / N Levels)

By secondary school, you have more subjects and more topics.

Step 1: Be honest about time

Example: You’re Sec 3 with:

  • CCA: Mon, Wed, Fri
  • Tuition: Sat morning
  • Free time on weekday nights: ~1.5 hours

Tell Tutorly something like:

“I’m Sec 3 taking Pure Chem, Pure Physics, E-Math and A-Math. My worst subject is A-Math. I have 1.5 hours free on Tue, Thu and Sun, and 3 hours on Sat afternoon. Help me plan my study time for the next 2 weeks, focusing more on A-Math and Pure Chem.”

Tutorly will suggest how to spread your time across subjects and topics.

Step 2: Prioritise topics, not just subjects

Within each subject, you should focus on your weak topics.

Example for A-Math:

  • Strong: Quadratic functions
  • Weak: Trigonometric identities, differentiation basics

You can say:

“For A-Math, plan 4 sessions over the next 2 weeks to focus on trigonometric identities and basic differentiation. Each session 45 minutes. Include practice questions and review.”

Tutorly can then structure each session with:

  • 10–15 mins: Concept recap
  • 20–25 mins: Practice questions
  • 10 mins: Review and explanation

Step 3: Use AI for “micro-sessions”

Sometimes you only have 20 minutes between things.

Instead of doomscrolling, you can:

“I have 20 minutes before tuition. Give me 3 O Level Chemistry questions on mole concept and check my answers.”

Short, targeted, and aligned with MOE/O Level style.


4.3 JC 1–JC 2 (A Levels)

At JC level, content is heavier and time pressure is real.

Step 1: Map topics to exam weightage

For A Levels, some topics are more heavily tested.

Example for H 2 Math:

  • Vectors
  • Complex numbers
  • Calculus (differentiation & integration)
  • Probability & statistics

Instead of “study everything evenly”, you can ask:

“I’m JC 2 taking H 2 Math, H 2 Chem, H 2 Physics and GP. My prelims are in 3 months. Help me create a 3-month revision plan that prioritises high-weightage topics first for each subject. I can study about 2 hours on weekdays and 4 hours per day on weekends.”

Tutorly will help you structure by:

  • Months e.g.Month1:contentrevision,Month2:mixedpractice,Month3:fullpaperse.g. Month 1: content revision, Month 2: mixed practice, Month 3: full papers
  • Topics (e.g. early focus on calculus & vectors)
  • Task types (content review vs timed practice vs corrections)

Step 2: Use AI for timed practice

Example:

“Give me 4 H 2 Math questions similar to A Level Paper 1, mix of calculus and complex numbers. I’ll try them under 40 minutes. After that, show me full solutions and highlight common mistakes.”

You can then:

  • Attempt under time pressure
  • Check final answers
  • Study the solution steps to see how to structure your answers

Step 3: Clarify concepts immediately

When you hit something confusing:

“Explain why this H 2 Chem equilibrium question uses KcK_c and not KpK_p, and show me 2 more similar questions to practise.”

This turns your plan from just “do papers” into “do papers + immediately patch weak spots”.


5. How To Combine Your School Schedule With AI Planning

An AI study planner is powerful only if it fits your real life.

Here’s a simple way to combine both.

Step 1: Start With Your Fixed Commitments

Write down:

  • School hours
  • CCA days & times
  • Tuition
  • Religious classes
  • Family commitments

Whatever is left is your flexible study time.

Step 2: Decide Your “Minimum Study Blocks”

Be realistic:

  • On heavy CCA days: maybe just 30–45 mins
  • On lighter days: 1–2 hours
  • Weekends: 2–4 hours, with breaks

Tell Tutorly something like:

“These are my fixed commitments: CCA Mon/Wed/Fri 3–6 pm, tuition Sat 10–12, church Sun morning. I usually can study 1 hour on Tue/Thu nights and 2 hours on Sat/Sun afternoons. Help me plan my study blocks for Math, Science and English for the next 2 weeks, with more focus on Math.”

Tutorly will help you spread subjects across your available blocks.

Step 3: Use Daily Check-Ins

Each day, you can “check in” with Tutorly:

“Doing Secondary Science? Pick a topic and practise like it’s a real exam — with clear answers right after.”
👉 Try Tutorly now and start a Science topic in seconds.

![Secondary Science topics you can practise on Tutorly.sg]/app/blogimages/middle2.png/app/blog-images/middle 2.png

“I have 45 minutes now. According to our plan, what should I work on today? Focus on my weakest topic.”

Tutorly will:

  • Refer to the plan it helped you create
  • Suggest a specific task e.g.Algebraicmanipulationpractice5questionse.g. “Algebraic manipulation practice – 5 questions”
  • Provide the questions and solutions

You don’t waste time deciding what to do. You just start.


6. Using AI To Track Your Progress (Without Overcomplicating)

You don’t need fancy dashboards. You just need to know:

  • What you’ve covered
  • What you’re still weak at

Here’s how to do that with an AI tutor like Tutorly.

6.1 Keep A Simple “Mistake Log”

Have a Google Doc or notebook.

Each time you get something wrong, note:

  • Date
  • Subject & topic
  • Question type
  • Why you got it wrong (concept? careless? misread?)

You can then ask Tutorly:

“From my mistake log, I keep getting PSLE Math ratio questions wrong, especially when there are 3 groups. Give me 5 similar questions and explain the solution clearly.”

Or:

“I always lose marks on A Level GP summary questions. Here are 2 examples I did badly on. Explain what I’m doing wrong and give me a short practice exercise.”

This makes your revision data-driven, not just “I feel weak in everything”.

6.2 Weekly Review With AI

Once a week (e.g. Sunday night), do a short review:

“This week I finished:

  • 2 sessions of A-Math trigonometry
  • 1 session of Pure Chem acids & bases
  • 1 session of English comprehension
    I still feel weak in trigonometry and Chem titration calculations. Plan my next week’s schedule to focus on these, with 3 sessions of A-Math and 2 sessions of Chem.”

Tutorly can then adjust your plan.


7. Why Use Tutorly.sg As Your AI Study Planner (Instead Of Random Tools)

There are many generic AI tools out there, but for Singapore students, a few things matter a lot.

7.1 It’s Built For Singapore’s MOE Syllabus

Tutorly.sg is designed around:

  • PSLE, O Levels, N Levels, A Levels, and JC content
  • Common topics like:
    • PSLE: heuristics, fractions, Science open-ended
    • O Level: E-Math, A-Math, Pure Sciences, SS/History/Geog
    • JC: H 1/H 2 subjects, GP

So when you ask for:

  • “PSLE-style Science questions on cycles”
  • “O Level Social Studies practice on governance”
  • “H 2 Physics kinematics questions”

…the style and difficulty are aligned with what you actually see in school.

Explore more here: https://tutorly.sg/ai-tutor-singapore

7.2 It’s A Website, Not A Mobile App

Important: Tutorly.sg is not a mobile app.

You access it through your browser at https://tutorly.sg/app

This is actually a good thing for studying:

  • You can use it on your laptop or tablet while doing written work
  • You’re less tempted to jump straight into other apps on your phone
  • It feels more like an online tutor than a casual chat app

7.3 It’s Trusted Locally

Tutorly.sg isn’t some random overseas project:

  • It has been mentioned on Channel NewsAsia (CNA)
  • It has already been used by thousands of students in Singapore

So when it explains something like:

  • How to tackle PSLE Math heuristics
  • How to structure an O Level English situational writing answer
  • How to write A Level GP introductions

…it’s based on what actually works here.


8. Practical Prompts You Can Use Today

To make this really usable, here are some copy-paste style prompts you can try at https://tutorly.sg/app.

8.1 For PSLE Students

  • “I’m P 6 and my PSLE is in 4 months. My weakest subjects are Math and Science. I have about 1 hour a day on weekdays and 2 hours on weekends. Help me plan a weekly study schedule, with more time on Math and Science.”

  • “Give me 4 PSLE-style Math word problems on ratio and fractions. After I try them, check my final answers and show me clear step-by-step solutions.”

  • “I always lose marks on Science open-ended questions because my answers are not detailed enough. Show me 3 questions on the topic ‘Interactions of Forces’ and model answers that would get full marks.”

8.2 For O Level Students

  • “I’m Sec 4 taking O Level E-Math, A-Math, Pure Chem, Pure Physics and English. My mid-year results were: E-Math B 3, A-Math C 6, Chem B 4, Physics B 4, English B 3. My O Levels are in 5 months. I can study about 2 hours on weekdays and 4 hours on weekends. Help me design a 2-week study plan focusing more on A-Math and Chem.”

  • “Give me 5 O Level A-Math questions on differentiation, increasing difficulty. After I try them, check my final answers and show me full solutions.”

  • “I’m weak in O Level English comprehension. Give me a short passage and 5 questions, then explain what examiners are looking for in each answer.”

8.3 For JC / A Level Students

  • “I’m JC 2 taking H 2 Math, H 2 Chem, H 2 Physics and GP. My CT 2 results were: Math C, Chem D, Physics C, GP C. Prelims in 3 months. I can study 2 hours on weekdays and 5 hours on weekends. Help me plan my revision so I can aim for at least a B in each subject.”

  • “Give me 3 H 2 Math questions involving both differentiation and integration, similar to A Level Paper 1 style. After I try them, show me full worked solutions.”

  • “I struggle with GP AQ (Application Question). Give me a sample paragraph and show me how to write a strong AQ response, then give me a practice question to try.”


9. How To Avoid Over-Relying On AI

AI is powerful, but you still need to be careful.

9.1 Use It To Guide, Not To Do Everything For You

Good use:

  • Planning your schedule
  • Getting practice questions
  • Checking final answers
  • Understanding step-by-step solutions
  • Clarifying concepts immediately

Bad use:

  • Copying full answers without thinking
  • Letting AI write essays for you
  • Not doing any questions by yourself

A simple rule:
You must still write the answers yourself, on paper or digitally, before checking with AI.

9.2 Always Compare With Your School Materials

If Tutorly explains something differently from your school teacher, use that as a chance to understand the concept from two angles, then decide which explanation makes more sense to you.

You can even ask:

“My teacher explained this algebra method using cross-multiplication. Your solution uses a different method. Show me both methods side by side and explain which is faster and less error-prone for exams.”

This helps you think like a top student, not just follow blindly.


10. Putting It All Together: A Simple 7-Day Starter Plan

If you want to try using an AI study planner this week, here’s a simple template you can adapt with Tutorly.

Day 1 (Today): Setup

  1. List your:
    • Subjects
    • Weak topics
    • Available time each day
  2. Go to https://tutorly.sg/app
  3. Ask Tutorly to help you create a 1-week plan based on your level and time.

Day 2–6: Follow & Adjust

Each day:

  1. Tell Tutorly how much time you have today e.g.45minutese.g. “45 minutes”
  2. Ask:

    “According to the plan we made, what should I do today? Give me specific tasks and questions.”

  3. Do the questions
  4. Check your final answers
  5. Study the solutions for any questions you got wrong
  6. Note down common mistakes in your mistake log

Day 7: Review

Ask:

“This week I completed these tasks: [list briefly]. I still feel weak in [topics]. Help me adjust my next week’s plan to focus more on these areas.”

Repeat weekly. That’s how you build consistency.


Final Thoughts: Studying Smart, Not Just Hard

In Singapore, everyone is busy, everyone is stressed, and everyone is “studying hard”.

The real difference comes from:

  • Planning your time realistically
  • Focusing on your weakest topics
  • Getting immediate feedback when you’re stuck
  • Adjusting your plan week by week

An AI study planner like Tutorly.sg is not magic, but it’s a very practical tool to help you do all of that without wasting time guessing what to study next.

If you want to try it for yourself, you can start using the AI tutor directly here:

👉 https://tutorly.sg/app

No need to download anything. Just open the website, start a session, and let it help you plan and study for your next PSLE, O Level, or A Level exam.


“Practice PSLE Science questions and get clear, step-by-step answers instantly.”
👉 Try a question now and see how fast you can improve.

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