CLEP prep built for students who learn differently.
If long sessions drain you, distractions pull you off task, or the clock makes your mind go blank — that's not a limit on whether you can pass. It means you need tools built for how you actually work. PrepLion has them, in the standard plan.
Six tools that make focus the easy path
None of these are extras or a separate plan. They're part of how PrepLion works for everyone.
Focus Mode
A distraction-reduced view that shows one question at a time. Less on the screen, less to pull your attention away.
Extended time
Practice and full mock exams at 1×, 1.5×, or 2× — the same kind of accommodation many students use on real exams. Show what you know without racing the clock.
Energy check-in
A five-second “how’s my energy?” at the start sizes the session to your day. Low energy? A 5-question set still counts.
Read-aloud
Have questions and explanations read to you. Helpful when reading long passages is the hard part, not the thinking.
Built-in breaks
Long mock exams pace in short blocks with breaks built in — no two-hour marathons. Several small wins a day beat one exhausting grind.
Streak forgiveness
One rough day doesn’t break your streak. The students who pass aren’t the ones who never miss — they’re the ones who come back tomorrow.
For parents
The most useful question isn't “what did you get?” — it's “did you practice today?” The Parent view focuses on the habit, not the score: study days, streaks, and time on task. A student who needs a different approach isn't behind — they just need tools that fit. And every passed CLEP exam is real college credit earned, often saving $1,200 or more.
See how it worksTry a focus-friendly session free
Start with a quick diagnostic. Turn on Focus Mode, pick your pace, and see how it feels.
Start freePrepLion's focus tools are general, accommodations-style study aids designed for students who learn differently. They are not a medical device and make no diagnostic or treatment claims. For accommodations on official exams, consult the College Board, the testing organization, or your school.