Turn notes into flashcards, quizzes, and guided Socratic tutoring. QwizWiz is built around active recall, adaptive review, and source-grounded explanations — not passive answer-copying.
Hey, I'm Simon. First-year CS student with a deep interest in cybersecurity. I learn best by building things and figuring out how they work.
QwizWiz started as a personal experiment. I wanted a study tool that actually teaches instead of just showing you answers. Something that makes the process less painful. That's what this is.
Still a work in progress. Hope you find it useful.
A quick guided overview built into the page. No popups, no blur, no wall of information — just the main study flows explained clearly.
Threads, semaphores, deadlocks, scheduling, and memory concepts loaded as a full study deck.
Threat models, CIA triad, SQL injection, authentication, and secure design vocabulary.
A humanities-style demo showing that QwizWiz can support reading-heavy classes, not only STEM.
Notes are parsed into key concepts, source snippets, flashcards, quiz seeds, and a Socratic tutoring prompt. The point is to turn messy material into active retrieval practice.
Flashcards track correct/incorrect performance. Missed cards are moved forward in the queue, creating a lightweight adaptive review loop without requiring user accounts.
Wiz uses a structured tutor role: ask before answering, give one hint at a time, check understanding, then explain only after the student attempts the problem.
Generated concepts include source snippets from the pasted notes so students can verify where the study material came from.
Powered by Gemini AI. Wiz guides you to answers through questions instead of just handing them over.