July 2, 2026 · 5 min read

From PDF to Practice in 30 Seconds

You have a 40-page lecture PDF and an exam in two weeks. The old workflow: read it, highlight half of it, copy fragments into a notes app, maybe hand-write flashcards if you're feeling heroic by Thursday. The edugaa workflow takes about thirty seconds of your effort. Here's the whole thing.

Step 1 — Feed it your content

Hit Create New and drop your file. PDFs, Word documents, slides, even photos of handwritten pages all work — or paste raw text, or hand it a link to an article or YouTube video. One source per Module keeps things focused: edugaa reads that one thing deeply instead of blending five things vaguely.

Step 2 — Pick your activities

Choose what gets generated: structured Notes, Flashcards, Multiple Choice, Fill-in-the-Blanks, True/False — and Mixed Match, which builds a shuffled round out of every question type you picked. Each card has its own settings gear: difficulty from Light to Challenging, note length from quick-read to in-depth, and how many questions you want (1–15, 20–40, or 40+).

There's also an instructions box per activity. "Focus on chapter 5." "Use clinical examples." "Ask about dates, not names." It listens.

Step 3 — Generate, then practice

Hit Generate. When your Module opens you'll see every activity as an icon in the top bar — no locked order, no forced path. Skim the notes if you want the overview first, or jump straight into questions. Every correct answer fills a star and banks a permanent point; the progress bar on your Module card climbs from pale coral to deep coral as you close in on mastery.

  • One PDF → one Module → six activities. No copy-pasting.
  • Questions come with explanations, so a wrong answer teaches instead of taunts.
  • The Edugaa Tutor floats on every screen if a concept won't click.
  • Folders keep subjects tidy — Biology in one, Interview Prep in another.

The half hour you used to spend making study materials is now thirty seconds. The twenty-nine minutes you got back? Spend them answering questions — that's the part that was always worth your time.

Try it on your own material

Turn a PDF, link, or your own text into a full study Module — free.

Create your first Module →