AI-powered study operating system
RadarPrep watches how you prepare for the ARRT Radiography exam, detects exactly where you're weak, and builds a personalized study plan that adapts as you go. Upload your notes, paste your missed questions, or drop in a lecture PDF — RadarPrep finds the gaps you don't even know about.
Weakness Detected
Fluoroscopy dose reduction — pulsed fluoro and ABC
8 misses across 3 sessions
Three steps from scattered to structured.
Drop in lecture slides, missed question screenshots, PDFs, or paste raw notes. RadarPrep reads it all.
AI maps your weak topics, recurring mistakes, and timing issues. You'll see patterns you've been missing.
Spaced repetition cycles, daily blocks, mock exam timing — all calibrated to your exam date and schedule.
Upload anything — notes, slides, screenshots of questions you missed at 1 AM. RadarPrep finds the topics you keep getting wrong, the concepts you confuse, and the timing patterns you don't notice.
Enter your exam date, class schedule, and work hours. RadarPrep generates daily study blocks, spaced repetition cycles, and review timing — no more guessing what to do tonight.
Upload lecture slides. RadarPrep generates ARRT-style questions with rationales — including image critique questions and hotspot formats matching the updated 2026 exam.
Most apps stop at "wrong." RadarPrep tells you why: "You confused spatial resolution with contrast resolution — here's the relationship." That's the difference between a tool and a mentor.
Live quiz battles, shared decks, class leaderboards, and "most missed concepts" for your cohort. Radiology programs have 20-50 students all prepping for the same exam — RadarPrep makes that a competitive advantage.
Professors upload PowerPoints and review sheets. RadarPrep auto-generates quizzes, flashcards, and lesson summaries. Solve instructor workload — that's the B2B wedge into radiology programs.
Most students don't know what they don't know. RadarPrep shows you the full picture.
Fluoroscopy — pulsed fluoro dose reduction
8 misses across 3 sessions. You keep confusing pulsed vs continuous. Related concept: auto brightness control.
Grid guidelines — frequency lines
5 misses in the last week. Timing issue: you're answering these last, when you're fatigued.
Patient positioning — oblique chest
4 misses, always image procedure domain. Confusing anterior vs posterior angulation.
ALARA principles — solid
No misses in 14 sessions. Keep maintaining with spaced review.
Most students study what they know. The ones who pass study what they don't — and they know exactly what that is. RadarPrep gives you the map. The work is still yours. The direction is finally right.
Built by Jarien Baker, a Keiser University radiology graduate who tutored classmates throughout his program and built the study system he wished existed.