For Students

Study smarter. Remember more.

You read, highlight, and take notes — but come exam time, it's gone. Scribbles turns your study materials into a learning system that actually sticks.

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Learning & Retention

Read once. Remember forever.

You're reading a 40-page paper for Bio 301.

You highlight a passage about mitochondrial DNA replication and scribble "this contradicts what Prof. Lee said in lecture 12." Two weeks before the midterm, Scribbles surfaces that exact highlight as a review prompt: "How does mitochondrial DNA replication differ from the model Prof. Lee described?" You didn't make a flashcard. You didn't set a reminder. The system remembered what you found important — and asked you about it at the right time.

It's 8am. You open Scribbles on your phone before class.

Five review prompts are waiting — generated from highlights you made across three different papers this week. One asks you to explain the difference between Type I and Type II errors in your own words. Another shows a passage from your Constitutional Law reading and asks what principle it illustrates. You spend 4 minutes. Each answer strengthens the memory. By exam week, you've reviewed each concept 5-6 times without ever "studying."

You just finished a chapter on cognitive biases for Psych 200.

Scribbles generates a spark: "You highlighted the anchoring effect and the availability heuristic. Can you think of a real situation where both would lead to the same wrong conclusion?" It's not a flashcard — it's a thinking prompt. You scribble a quick answer. Next week, it follows up with a scenario and multiple choice options pulled from the concepts you've been studying. Active engagement, not passive recognition.


Staying Organized

Five courses. One place.

It's September. You have five courses this semester.

You create a list for each: "BIOL 301 — Assignments", "PSYCH 200 — Readings", "PHIL 340 — Papers." Each assignment is an object with a due date, status, and links to the readings and notes that go with it. When you open the Phil paper that's due Friday, all your highlighted passages from the three assigned readings are right there. No hunting through folders. No "which PDF was that in?"

Your philosophy professor mentions Rawls. You've seen that name before.

You search Scribbles. There it is — a highlight from your Poli Sci reading three weeks ago, with your scribble: "Rawls' veil of ignorance = interesting thought experiment but assumes rationality." Your philosophy notes and your political science notes are now connected through a concept, not a folder. By December, you have a personal knowledge graph that spans every course you've taken.


From Capture to Creation

Scribbles to polished essay.

You need to write a 2,500-word essay on social contract theory.

You don't start with a blank page. You start with two months of scribbles — highlights from Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau, your own reactions, a scribble from the bus where you had an insight about how social media changes the social contract. Scribbles clusters these by theme. You drag the best ones into a document outline. When you write, your AI assistant cites the exact passages you highlighted. The essay practically writes itself — because you've been building it for weeks without knowing it.


Built for

Medical & nursing students

600 pages of anatomy this week. Scribbles turns your highlights into review prompts that surface right before you'd forget them.

Law students

Case law from three courses, connected by legal principle — not by which folder you saved it in.

Graduate researchers

100 papers for your literature review. Every highlight, every margin note, every "this connects to..." — searchable and linked.

Undergrads juggling five courses

One place for every assignment, every reading, every scribbled thought. No more "which app did I put that in?"

Stop losing your best thinking

Start capturing for free. No credit card required.

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