How to Use Blueprint’s Med School Study Planner as an M1

  • Reviewed by: Amy Rontal, MD
  • First of all, congratulations on making it to medical school! You’ve worked hard to get to this point, and now you’re entering the whirlwind of information that is your first year of medical school.

    At times, medical school can feel nearly impossible to balance with various classes, exams, and trying to take care of yourself in the meantime. This is where Blueprint’s Med School Study Planner comes in—the FREE (yes, free!) way to schedule your medical school exams with the click of a button.

    Say goodbye to spreadsheets and hello to a study planner that automatically schedules (and reschedules) your tasks so you can spend less time planning and more time studying. Here’s our quickstart guide to get the most out of this “smart” study planner during your first year of medical school!


    Step #1: Create Your Calendar

    As an M1 student, you can use Blueprint Study Planner to schedule your course exams and create solid study habits. So, the first thing you should do is create a calendar for the next course exam you’ll be taking. You will be asked to fill in some information about yourself and your exam, then select a date so the tool can distribute your tasks leading up to the exam.


    Step #2: Enter Your Resources

    Next, you will need to enter which resources you will be using. Blueprint Study Planner has a full index and taxonomy of all the top resources for USMLE Step 1, Step 2 CK, and Step 3), COMLEX (Level 1 and Level 2 CE), Shelf exams, and your medical school course work. Whatever you’re looking for, you can probably find it in the study planner (even your course textbooks). You can also explore resource bundles based on data from thousands of active learners!

    At this point, your study planner will create a calendar that evenly distributes your resources throughout your study period.

    As you can see, you have a great deal of flexibility by being able to move tasks freely and mark them based on how much you were able to do!

    The Magical “Rebalance” Button

    One of your most powerful tools is the magical “Rebalance” button which automatically recalibrates your calendar to make sure all of your tasks are completed by the date specified. So, if you fall behind in your studying, just click the “rebalance” button and your schedule will redistribute your unfinished tasks to future study days.

    This is excellent if you have a particularly schedule and can’t complete the same amount of studying every day—we get it, you’re human!


    Step #3: Customize Your Study Schedule

    In the top right of your screen, you’ll see an “Edit Schedule” button. Once selected, you can navigate to the schedule you would like to set parameters for and add your study start and end dates.

    Study Plan Dates

    In the “Study Plan Dates” tab, you can reselect the dates which you input previously based on changing schedules.

    Time Off and Workload

    In the “Time Off and Workload Tab,” you can input recurring days off (i.e. every Sunday), vacations and their dates, and you can manipulate days of the week to be “Light, Normal, or Heavy” workloads. 

    For example, if you have lecture and small group every Monday, and Thursday, make those a “Light Workload” day. If you always have Fridays off, make that a “Heavy Workload” day. This will allow Blueprint Study Planner to be as flexible as possible depending on your day-to-day- life. 

    You can even select a particular day to be a “catch up day” to finish questions or other assignments without worrying about other tasks. After any change made, Blueprint Study Planner will rebalance to keep you on track for success. 

    Subject, Systems, and Resource Order

    The “Subject, Systems, and Resource Order” tab allows you to choose if you want to go by subject and in which order, if you want to complete one resource at a time, or if you want to go by organ system.

    “Overload” Warnings

    Importantly, Blueprint Study Planner will estimate how much time per day you will be spending studying and will give you warnings when it is too much. Please take these warnings seriously—sleep and self-care are almost as important as studying itself! Plus, you can’t take a test if you’re falling asleep at the keyboard.


    Ultimately, getting through the trials of M1 year is challenging, but hopefully, this short tutorial to Blueprint Study Planner will help you utilize it to its fullest potential to achieve your goal!

    Looking for more resources for M1 year? Check out these other posts on the Blueprint blog!

    About the Author

    I am a graduate of the Ohio State University with a degree in Neuroscience as well as a minor in clinical Psychology. I am currently a research coordinator at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center prior to beginning residency. I am attending the University of Pittsburgh Medical School for my MD. I am interested in the field of Orthopaedics as well as medical education, healthcare reform, and various advocacy groups. I focus on questions/testing strategy as well as taking what you learn from a book and applying it to test questions. Twitter: @LCluts