No Udemy course. No bootcamp. No flashcard app.
Just Claude — as a tutor, quiz engine, mock examiner, and a last-minute cheat sheet.
Why this matters
Most people treat AI as a search engine. Type a question, read the answer, move on. That's not how I used it. I built a full study system inside Claude, one conversation at a time. If you're preparing for any AWS exam right now, this is the exact method.
How the system worked
Step 1: Domain-weighted learning
AWS CCP has four domains. They're not weighted equally. I started with the highest-weighted domain first — not alphabetically, not randomly. Before touching a single quiz, I asked Claude to explain the domain: what services fall under it, how they differ, what the exam actually tests.
"I'm preparing for AWS Cloud Practitioner. Teach me the Security & Compliance domain — what services are covered, how they differ from each other, and what the exam specifically tests in this domain."
This part matters. Knowing what GuardDuty detects is not the same as knowing why the exam would pick GuardDuty over Inspector in a given scenario. Claude explained both.
Step 2: Quiz immediately after learning
Right after the domain walkthrough, I asked Claude to write a quiz. Not a generic quiz — one built around the concepts just explained, weighted toward the tricky edge cases.
"Now quiz me on everything we just covered. 10 questions, multiple choice, focus on areas where services overlap or are easy to confuse."
I'd answer. Claude would score it. For every wrong answer, I didn't just move on — I asked why that answer was wrong and what the correct mental model was.
"I got questions 3, 6, and 9 wrong. Explain why my answer was incorrect and what I should have been thinking instead."
That follow-up round is where most of the actual learning happened.
Step 3: Repeat across all domains
Same pattern for every domain: learn, quiz, fix gaps, re-quiz. By the time I hit Billing & Pricing (my weakest area), I had a method that worked. Support plan tiers, cost allocation tags, the difference between Cost Explorer and Budgets — all locked in through reps, not reading.
Step 4: Two full mock exams
Once all domains were done, I asked Claude to generate full mock exams. Not random questions — exams built around frequently tested concepts and known exam patterns. Timed. Scored. Reviewed question by question.
"Generate a full 65-question AWS CCP mock exam. Cover all four domains proportional to their actual exam weightings. Make it hard — focus on frequently tested and commonly confused concepts."
Two full runs. Gaps identified. Weak spots hammered.
Step 5: Day-of cheat sheet
Morning of the exam, I asked Claude for one thing: a cheat sheet.
"Give me a CCP exam cheat sheet. Format: service name → what it does → when to use it. No paragraphs, no explanations. Just a clean scannable reference."
No fluff. Just a clean reference I could scan in 20 minutes before walking in. That artifact covered everything that showed up.
What this method actually is
It's active recall, spaced over sessions, with immediate feedback. Every study method that works uses some version of this. Claude made it possible to do it without buying a course, scheduling a tutor, or finding a study group.
The key was treating Claude as a system, not a search bar. Each session had a goal: learn this domain, quiz this domain, close this gap. The conversation structure mattered as much as the content.
If you're preparing for AWS CCP: skip the passive video watching. Open Claude, pick your highest-weighted domain, and start the loop.
Learn → quiz → fix → repeat
Two mock exams before you sit. One cheat sheet the morning of.
You don't need a course. You need a method.
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