← Back to home

For the nightly grind

Homework planner for students who have five subjects due the same week

Homework rarely arrives one subject at a time. You get a Maths worksheet Monday, a History reading Tuesday, and by Thursday you're trying to remember whether the Chemistry prac report was due Friday or next Friday. A homework planner only works if it can hold all of that at once, sorted by subject and by night, without you having to mentally re-sort it yourself every evening.

A real homework week, not a perfect to-do list

Say your Tuesday looks like this: a Maths worksheet due Wednesday morning, an English reading response due Thursday, and a Chemistry prac report due Friday at 4:30pm. In MyStudyPlanner, all three sit on your calendar on the night you'd actually work on them — not just listed by due date, but positioned against your real timetable, so you can see you have a free period Wednesday afternoon that's a natural slot for the Chemistry report.

Built for homework across subjects

Sorted by subject, not just by date

Each subject keeps its own colour, so a glance at tonight tells you what's Maths and what's English without reading every title.

Homework sits next to your actual timetable

Because your recurring classes are already on the calendar, you can see which nights are lighter and which are already full of class prep — not just a flat to-do list with no sense of your week.

Nothing disappears once it's not due "soon"

A worksheet due in 10 days doesn't vanish from view the way it can in a plain notes app — it's sitting on the date you assigned it, visible whenever you get to that day.

Try the planner before you sign up

The demo is the easiest way to see how MyStudyPlanner handles real student workload. You can click through the planner with sample subjects, homework, study sessions, reminders, and calendar entries before creating an account.

Frequently asked questions

How is a homework planner different from a to-do list app?

A to-do list treats every task the same. A homework planner that's built for school understands that homework belongs to a subject, has a due date and often a specific class it was assigned in — and ideally sits next to your actual timetable so you can see when you'll realistically do it, not just that it's "due soon."

Can I see all my homework for one subject at once?

Yes. You can filter by subject to see everything outstanding for just Chemistry, or just English, which is useful before a parent-teacher conference or when you're trying to figure out which subject is piling up.

What if I have homework with no fixed due date, like ongoing revision?

You can add it without a due date and it'll sit as an open task until you mark it done, rather than being forced into a date that doesn't really apply.