Tools

Discover the best apps and tools for organizing your learning.

The right tools won’t make you smart. But they can remove friction, eliminate distractions, and make studying easier.

This page aggregates everything useful - from free apps to physical tools you probably haven’t considered. Some are obvious. Some are not. All are practical.

Digital Tools

For detailed coverage of digital study tools, see How to Study. Quick summary:

Note-taking and organization:

  • Obsidian - Free, local markdown notes with linking
  • Notion - All-in-one workspace (free for students, but watch the subscription trap)
  • Joplin - Free, open-source note-taking
  • Standard Notes - Privacy-focused notes

Flashcards:

  • Anki - Spaced repetition powerhouse (free)
  • Quizlet - Easy flashcards with AI generation (free tier)
  • RemNote - Notes + flashcards combined

AI study partners:

  • ChatGPT - Question generation, explanations (free tier)
  • Claude - Great for longer documents (free tier)
  • Perplexity - AI search with sources (free)

Focus and blocking:

  • Forest - Gamified phone blocking ($2)
  • Cold Turkey - Hardcore website/app blocking (Windows/Mac)
  • LeechBlock - Free browser extension for site blocking

Physical Tools (The Stuff You Haven’t Thought Of)

This is where it gets interesting. Physical tools create friction between you and distraction.

Time Management Tools

Kitchen timer - Seriously. A $10 mechanical kitchen timer beats any app. No screen. No notifications. Just a loud ring when time’s up.

  • Buy any basic timer from Target, Amazon, or a dollar store
  • Bonus: Wind-up timers don’t need batteries

Pomodoro timer - If you want something designed for studying:

  • Time Timer - Visual countdown ($25-40)
  • Ticktime Cube - Flip to set time ($20-30)
  • Any cheap digital timer from Amazon works

Hourglass/Sand timer - Visual, silent, no batteries. Great for short bursts (15-30 minutes).

Calculator (Keep Your Phone Away)

If you’re doing math, physics, chemistry, or engineering, get a physical calculator. It’s the single best way to keep your phone out of reach during problem sets.

Basic scientific calculator:

Graphing calculator (if required for class):

Check if your school library loans calculators before buying.

Audio: Noise Management

Noise-cancelling headphones:

Earbuds (if you prefer):

Earplugs (seriously underrated):

Sometimes you don’t want music or white noise. You just want silence. High-fidelity earplugs reduce noise without muffling everything.

White noise machine:

Writing and Note-Taking

Physical notebooks:

Pens that feel good:

Writing by hand aids retention. Use pens you actually enjoy using.

Index cards:

Not just for flashcards. Use them for:

  • Concept mapping
  • Quick reference sheets
  • Organizing essay arguments
  • Practice problem scratch work

Buy in bulk: Amazon Basics 3x5 index cards ($5 for 500)

Dry erase board or whiteboard:

This is a game-changer for active recall. Explains concepts out loud while writing on the board. Forces you to recall without looking at notes.

  • Small desktop whiteboard ($10-15 on Amazon)
  • Wall-mounted whiteboard ($20-40)
  • DIY option: Whiteboard paint on a wall or piece of hardboard ($15)

Colored pens/highlighters:

Color-coding helps some people. But don’t over-highlight - if everything is highlighted, nothing is.

Organization

Binders and folders:

  • 1.5" or 2" three-ring binders - One per class or subject
  • Pocket folders - Keep loose handouts organized
  • Dividers with tabs - Separate units/topics

Binder clips:

The most versatile tool you’ll overlook. Use for:

  • Holding papers together
  • Clipping notes to your desk
  • Cable management
  • Bookmarks
  • Cheap phone stand (large clips)

Buy: Amazon Basics binder clips ($6 for assorted sizes)

Desk organizer:

Keep pens, sticky notes, calculator, and tools in one spot.

Cable management:

Tangled cables are visual clutter. Clean cables = clear mind.

Focus and Fidget Tools

Some people think better with something in their hands.

Fidget tools:

  • Fidget cube - Quiet clicking/spinning ($5-10)
  • Stress ball - Squeeze while reading/listening ($3-5)
  • Thinking putty - Silent, satisfying ($10-15)

These work for kinesthetic learners. If fidgeting distracts you, skip them.

Blue light blocking glasses:

If you study at night on screens, blue light can mess with your sleep. Blue light glasses filter it out.

  • Felix Gray - Premium blue light glasses ($95+)
  • Gunnar Optiks - Gaming/computer glasses ($50-80)
  • Cheap Amazon blue light glasses ($15-25) - Work fine for most people

Or just use software:

  • f.lux - Free, auto-adjusts screen color
  • Night Shift (Mac) / Night Light (Windows) - Built into your OS

Ergonomics (Your Body Will Thank You)

Book stand:

Reading flat on a desk strains your neck. A book stand props it up to eye level.

  • BookGem - Adjustable, foldable ($20-30)
  • Actto Book Stand - Sturdy metal stand ($25)
  • DIY: Propped-up binder or cookbook stand ($0)

Laptop stand:

Same concept - get your screen to eye level to prevent neck strain.

External keyboard and mouse:

If you use a laptop stand, you’ll need these. Your laptop keyboard is now too high to type on comfortably.

  • Any basic USB/Bluetooth keyboard ($15-30)
  • Any basic USB/Bluetooth mouse ($10-20)

Footrest or box under desk:

Your feet should rest flat on something. If your chair is too high, a footrest helps.

Standing desk converter:

Sitting for hours hurts. Standing while studying can help (for some people).

  • Varidesk Pro - Adjustable standing desk converter ($200-400)
  • DIY cheap option: Sturdy cardboard box or stack of textbooks on your desk (free)

Don’t stand all day - alternate between sitting and standing every 30-60 minutes.

Lighting

Adjustable desk lamp:

Good lighting reduces eye strain. Get a lamp with adjustable brightness and color temperature.

Color temperature matters:

Cool light (5000-6500K) for focus and alertness. Warm light (2700-3000K) for evening wind-down.

See Study Environment for more on lighting.

Phone Management (The Nuclear Option)

Phone lockbox:

If you can’t resist checking your phone, physically lock it away.

Do Not Disturb / Focus Mode:

Built into every smartphone. Schedule it during study hours.

  • iPhone: Settings > Focus > Do Not Disturb
  • Android: Settings > Digital Wellbeing > Focus Mode

Webcam cover:

If you study on a laptop, a webcam cover prevents random video call interruptions and reduces the temptation to hop on Zoom/Discord.

Reading Aids

Bookmarks:

Stop folding page corners. Use bookmarks.

  • Magnetic bookmarks - Stay put ($5 for 10-pack)
  • Page tabs/sticky flags - Mark multiple pages ($3-5)

Book light:

For reading in dim environments without disturbing others.

Hydration

Water bottle on your desk:

Dehydration kills focus. Keep water within arm’s reach.

Any insulated water bottle works:

See Hydration for why this matters.

The Weird One: Rubber Duck

Programmers use “rubber duck debugging” - explaining code out loud to a rubber duck. It works for studying too.

Get any small object (rubber duck, action figure, stuffed animal). Place it on your desk. Explain concepts to it out loud. Seriously.

This forces you to articulate your understanding. You’ll immediately notice gaps when you can’t explain something clearly.

  • Rubber duck from dollar store ($1-3)
  • Any small object you already own (free)

Novel Tools You Probably Haven’t Considered

Pomodoro With Accountability

Study with a friend (remotely or in-person) using:

  • Focusmate - Virtual co-working (3 free sessions/week)
  • StudyStream - Live study rooms with accountability

Second Monitor

If you’re doing research + writing, a second monitor is life-changing. Put research on one screen, write on the other.

Physical Calendar or Wall Planner

Digital calendars are useful, but a physical wall calendar provides visual progress.

Mark off study sessions. Visual streaks build momentum.

Library Card

Free access to:

  • Books (obviously)
  • Study spaces
  • Free printing (at many libraries)
  • Digital resources: Libby, Hoopla, Kanopy
  • Sometimes free museum passes, tool lending, seed libraries

Apply online at your local library website. Completely free.

Books on Studying and Learning

Worth reading:

Summary: Do You Need All This?

No.

Here’s the minimum:

  1. A timer (anything without a screen)
  2. A notebook and pen (physical note-taking aids memory)
  3. A way to block distractions (phone in another room, website blocker)

Everything else is optional. Add tools when they solve a specific problem you’re having.

The best tool for studying is consistent effort. But these tools remove friction and eliminate excuses.

Start simple. Build from there.