ExodusLearn
How to use the app
Where each part of the app lives and what it is for.
Sidebar
- Dashboard — streak, weekly activity, and shortcuts.
- Roadmaps — upload a document to generate an AI study roadmap, track progress on the roadmaps home, and open finished plans. Details below.
- Library — coming soon. This will hold saved materials in one place.
- Exodus Intelligence — your AI study chat. Pick a folder for a class, start or open a chat, then ask for explanations, walkthroughs, or a plan for what to study today. Past chats stay in the list on the left.
- Site Guide — this page.
- Account — plan, how much you have used, your name on the site, and billing.
Roadmaps
Roadmaps turn your syllabus or notes into a structured plan: topics, curated resources, and practice problems. Generation usually takes about 5–10 minutes. You have a limited number of generations per plan tier — the roadmaps home header shows how many you have left.
- Start one — Open Roadmaps. Use the Generate new roadmap button (or Generate your first roadmap when you do not have any yet), pick a file, and wait for processing. When it finishes, open the plan from your list.
- Overview — In progress plans show a progress stage; ready ones open the full roadmap (schedule, resources, practice). Failed runs can be retried from the card or removed with delete when offered.
Study pages
In Exodus Intelligence, open or create a page for one topic (for example one chapter or one problem type). Everything for that topic can live on that page so you are not jumping between apps.
- Practice Review — Put photos or screenshots of homework or exams here. Use the reflection boxes to write what went wrong and what you will do next time. Good for: fixing the same mistake before the next quiz, and keeping each week in its own “set” so review stays organized.
- Learning Resources — Paste links to videos, PDFs, or class sites and add a short note on why each one helps. Good for: one screen you open the night before a test instead of digging through old tabs.
- Flashcards — A deck for that page. Use Spaced Repetition when you want only cards that are due, or Study All to run the full deck in order before an exam.
- Open Notes — Plain notes on the same page: lecture takeaways, formulas the professor repeats, or a list of “topics they always test.” Good for: typing while you watch lecture, then linking out to resources or flashcards when you clean it up later.
When Practice, Learning Resources, or Flashcards is open, use the tabs at the top to switch tools without closing the page. Use Back when you are done.
One way to use it for a class week: Monday — make the page and save the syllabus link under Learning Resources. Tuesday — add a problem set under Practice Review. Wednesday — add flashcards from the part you missed most. Thursday — spaced repetition. Friday — skim Open Notes before discussion section.
Support
Use the contact page to reach the team. We aim to reply as soon as we can.