Inspiration As a Class 12 student preparing for competitive exams, I struggled with poor time management, burnout, and lack of structure. Most tools felt complex or incomplete. This inspired me to build StudySphere, a simple system that solves real student problems.

What it does StudySphere is a study assistant that helps students:

Plan daily study tasks Track study time and progress Identify weak areas Maintain consistency The goal was to create one platform instead of multiple disconnected tools.

How we built it I designed the project using a clean frontend with structured components for tasks, timers, and progress tracking. Logic was focused on usability and clarity. The system was built iteratively during the hackathon with continuous testing.

Challenges we ran into Designing a simple UI without losing functionality

Managing time during the hackathon Deciding which features were essential These challenges taught me how to prioritize features, write cleaner logic, and build for real users instead of just adding features.

Accomplishments that we're proud of Building StudySphere during a hackathon and turning a personal problem into a working product. I identified real study challenges, designed the solution, and shipped a functional platform under time pressure.

What we learned Product thinking

Time management under pressure Building scalable and user-focused solutions StudySphere represents my interest in combining technology with education to solve practical problems.

What's next for StudySphere

Next, I plan to add AI-based insights to analyze study patterns, improve progress tracking, and make StudySphere more personalized. I also aim to improve scalability and user experience.

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