Learn the method, not just the answer
A Step Sheet is a reusable, generalized walkthrough for an entire class of problems — so the next time one shows up on the exam, you already know the moves.
Make a Step SheetWhat you get
- Generalized to a whole problem type, not glued to one specific question
- Numbered, repeatable steps you can apply under exam pressure
- Covers the decision points — when to use which method, and the common traps
- Pair it with the practice exam generator to drill the method until it's automatic
- Browse a public library of Step Sheets for common math, physics and engineering topics
The trap with worked examples is that they teach you that one problem. You follow along, it makes sense, and then a slightly different version on the exam leaves you stuck — because you learned a path, not a method.
A Step Sheet flips that. Instead of solving a single question, Crameleon writes you a generalized, step-by-step procedure for the entire class of problems: the moves that always apply, the decision points where students go wrong, and how to recognise which variant you're looking at. It's the difference between memorising one answer and owning the technique.
Step Sheets pair naturally with practice exams: generate the method, then generate problems to run it against until it's automatic. There's also a growing public library of Step Sheets for high-frequency math, physics, chemistry and engineering topics you can browse for free.
How it works
- 1
Name the problem type
Tell Crameleon the class of problem you keep getting stuck on — 'integration by parts', 'truss method of joints', 'acid-base titration'.
- 2
Get the method
You get a clean, numbered procedure that generalizes across the whole problem type, with the reasoning behind each step.
- 3
Drill it
Generate practice problems of that type and run the Step Sheet until the method is muscle memory.
Step Sheets — FAQ
How is a Step Sheet different from a worked solution?
A worked solution solves one specific problem. A Step Sheet is generalized — it gives you the repeatable method for the whole class of problems, including when to use it and the common mistakes, so it transfers to questions you haven't seen yet.
What subjects do Step Sheets work for?
Anything procedural — calculus and linear algebra, physics, chemistry, and core engineering methods like free-body diagrams, mole balances, or circuit analysis. If a problem type has a repeatable method, a Step Sheet can capture it.
Is there a free library?
Yes. Crameleon hosts a public Step Sheet Library you can browse and preview for free, covering common math, physics, chemistry, biology and engineering topics.
Pairs well with
Ready to try Step Sheets?
It's part of Crameleon — the all-in-one study and engineering toolkit. Start free, no credit card.
Make a Step Sheet