AIPGF Foundation 30-Day Study Plan

A structured AIPGF Foundation 30-day study plan with reading order, review loops, practice timing, and final-week priorities.

Use this plan when you want a clear first pass through the AIPGF Foundation guide instead of jumping between glossary items, official pages, and practice questions without a sequence.

Fastest useful reading order

  1. Read the root page so you know what Foundation is actually testing.
  2. Read Framework basics to lock in the scope of AIPGF and why AI governance is not the same as ordinary software or tool governance.
  3. Read Ethics, principles, and governance so you can separate legal or ethical issues from productivity claims.
  4. Read Structure, maturity, and tailoring so you can judge whether a governance response is proportionate.
  5. Read Roles, behaviours, and life cycle so you can see who owns what and how governance travels through the delivery flow.
  6. Read Assessment and improvement last, because it is easier once the framework pieces already feel familiar.

Seven-day revision loop

  • Day 1: Root page, glossary skim, and Chapter 1.
  • Day 2: Chapter 2.
  • Day 3: Chapter 3.
  • Day 4: Chapter 4.
  • Day 5: Chapter 5.
  • Day 6: Cheat Sheet plus targeted review of the two weakest chapters.
  • Day 7: Mixed practice, then use the FAQ and glossary only for the concepts that still produce hesitation.

What to do after a weak practice result

  • Identify whether the miss was really about terminology, role ownership, lifecycle timing, tailoring, or maturity assessment.
  • Re-read only the section that governs that mistake.
  • Convert the mistake into a one-sentence rule before attempting another short practice set.

Best last-mile use

In the final review window, do not try to reread everything evenly. Use the cheat sheet for the fast distinctions, the glossary for exact language, and the weakest chapter for one deliberate re-read before you return to practice.

When to move into practice

Move into heavier practice once you can explain:

  • the difference between ethical intent, effective use, efficient use, and governance maturity
  • how roles, controls, and life-cycle checkpoints fit together in the framework
  • why the strongest answer usually strengthens governance clarity and evidence before optimization or rollout

Matched practice preview

Revised on Monday, April 27, 2026