Focus-friendly by design

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.

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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 works

Try a focus-friendly session free

Start with a quick diagnostic. Turn on Focus Mode, pick your pace, and see how it feels.

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PrepLion'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.