Exam-aware AI study coach
Set your exam date. Savvo maps every concept from your materials, finds your gaps, and builds a daily study plan that adapts as you learn.
Not a chatbot. Not flashcards. A complete exam preparation system that tracks what you know and what you don't.
Organic Chemistry
Exam date: April 7, 2026
Countdown begins
Readiness Score
34%
After 12 study sessions
Today's Study Plan
1h 30min total
Organic Chemistry
Cell Biology
Statistics
Your daily session is waiting
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Stop guessing what to study. Savvo tracks every concept you need to know, shows you exactly where you stand, and tells you what to do today.
From upload to exam-ready in three steps.
Step 1
PDFs, slides, handwritten notes, YouTube links — plus your exam date. Savvo takes it from there.
Step 2
AI extracts every key concept, builds your knowledge graph, and identifies exactly where you need work.
Step 3
Your daily plan adapts to your progress. Readiness climbs toward exam day. Just show up and study.
See it in action
Organic Chemistry — Lec 5.pdf
2.4 MB uploaded successfully
0%
Extracting text...
Ready to study
48 Flashcards
Auto-generated from your materials
Adaptive Practice
15 questions targeting weak areas
5 Concepts Mapped
Knowledge dashboard updated
Your readiness score distills mastery across every concept into a single percentage, weighted by importance. The color-coded dashboard shows exactly where to focus — green means mastered, yellow needs review, red needs work, gray is untested.
Organic Chemistry
6 topics to review
Cell Biology
4 topics to review
Statistics
3 topics to review
Set your exam date and Savvo works backward. Courses closer to their exam get more weight. Spaced repetition compresses review cycles as the date approaches. One unified plan across all your courses — just open the app and start.
Go beyond rote memorization with tools that build real understanding.
Topic
Explain how SN1 reactions work
Your explanation
"In SN1 reactions, the leaving group leaves first to form a carbocation intermediate. Then the nucleophile attacks. It's favored by tertiary substrates because they stabilize the carbocation..."
Great explanation of the mechanism and substrate preference. Consider also mentioning the role of solvent polarity.
Your answer
SN2 mechanism favors tertiary substrates
You swapped SN1 and SN2 substrate preferences. SN2 favors primary substrates (less steric hindrance), while SN1 favors tertiary.
Purpose-built for exam preparation, not general Q&A.
One number that tells you everything. Tracks your exam preparedness weighted by concept importance — so knowing critical topics counts more than minor details.
Open the app. Your session is waiting. A unified daily plan across all your courses, prioritized by exam proximity and your current readiness.
Know WHY you got it wrong. Every mistake is classified by error type, explained in context, and tracked for recurring patterns you need to break.
Explain it to prove you know it. The Feynman technique, automated — AI evaluates your understanding and spots gaps you didn't know you had.
Plus everything you'd expect
Set your exam date and let Savvo build your path to confidence. Free to start, no credit card required.