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Toolenza for Students
Built for the way students actually work
A student's tools are unglamorous: figure out what GPA you need next semester to keep a scholarship, compute what you need on the final to stay an A-minus, turn your messy notes into a flashcard deck the night before the exam, format that bibliography in APA without misremembering whether the year goes in parentheses.
Toolenza covers every one of those workflows. The AI-backed tools (flashcards-from-notes, quiz-from-notes, essay-outline, reading-level) take your existing notes and produce study material in seconds. The calculators (gpa-calculator, grade-needed) do the math you'd otherwise be redoing on a napkin three times. The focus tools (pomodoro, timer, countdown) keep study sessions structured without an app subscription.
What students reach for daily
Math you'll do every term
gpa-calculator— weighted GPA from per-class letter grades and credits. Handles 4.0, 4.3, and 5.0 (AP/honors) scales.grade-needed— what do I need on the final to keep my A? Enter current grade, weight of the final, target grade.percentage-calculator— partial credit arithmetic.
Studying
flashcards-from-notes— paste your notes; get a 12-card deck of the highest-yield terms. Front/back/topic tags, free to use in class without signup.quiz-from-notes— same input, multiple-choice quiz output. Useful for self-testing the night before.essay-outline— structured outline (thesis, sections, counter-argument, conclusion) for any topic.reading-level— quick check that your paper isn't reading like a textbook or a tweet.speed-reader— focus reading at 250-600 wpm; useful for catching up on assigned reading.cite— APA / MLA / Chicago citation generator. Paste a URL or DOI, get a citation.
Focus and time
pomodoro— 25/5 timer with optional 50/10 and 90/20 deep-work cycles.timetable— your weekly class schedule, shareable with study buddies.countdown— count down to exam day, paper due date, application deadline.sleep— 90-minute sleep-cycle calculator. Wake at the end of a cycle to feel less groggy on exam mornings.world-clock+time-zone— for international study programs and online courses across zones.
Life around school
days-between— exact days to graduation / internship start / your next visit home.currency— for study abroad and online textbook purchases.water-intake+bmi-calculator— health basics; the freshman fifteen is real.distance— drive time / fuel cost between home and campus.todos+sticky-notes+reminders— to-do, scratchpad, deadline alerts.
The freshman trap (and how this helps)
Most first-year students under-plan in week 1, panic in weeks 11-14, then spend the last fortnight cramming with no idea what they actually need. The grade-needed tool defeats the panic by showing the worst case explicitly: "You need a 71% on the final to land a B in this class." That number is a relief 80% of the time and a clear action plan the other 20%.
For the long view, gpa-calculator with future semesters lets you sketch "if I get a 3.5 next term, a 3.3 the one after, what does my final GPA look like?" — useful for scholarship conversations and law/med-school applications.
Frequently asked questions
Yes — every student tool listed is free without signup. Pro unlocks saved workspaces (re-open a half-written essay outline next week), parent share links, and ad-free browsing. Most students never need to upgrade.
It uses standard weighted GPA arithmetic (sum of grade_points × credits ÷ sum of credits). It handles 4.0, 4.3, and 5.0 (AP/honors) scales. School-specific quirks — like a school that rounds 89.5 up to A — aren't modelled; check your school's registrar policy if a calculation matters for an academic decision.
They're a great starting deck. They identify the highest-yield terms from your notes and produce concise front/back pairs. For long-term spaced repetition, paste the deck into Anki or Quizlet — both accept CSV / tab-separated import.
The `cite` tool supports APA 7th edition, MLA 9th edition, and Chicago / Turabian 17th edition. Paste a URL, DOI, or ISBN; the tool pulls the metadata and formats. Always do a final pass against your instructor's style sheet — different journals have local variations.
The `pomodoro` and `timer` tools persist their start time as a wall-clock timestamp, so reloading the tab restores the remaining time accurately. Closing the tab entirely stops the timer; if you want background timers, install the Toolenza PWA from the home-screen prompt.