I started a podcast halfway through my master’s program because I thought it’d be fun. It was, for about two weeks. Then I realized I was spending six hours a week just on audio editing and script prep, on top of weekly essays and a stats course that ate up every free evening. By the end of month one, I was seriously considering dropping either the show or the degree.
Neither happened. What actually transpired was a long, sometimes painful journey of discovering the right free tools and tossing those that proved tedious and not useful. Over the first semester, I tested at least 30 different applications. Most of the UI icons were horrible, or the apps had hidden pay walls, or the features sounded wonderful in a blog post but would crash the second you utilized them.
The seven that have lived to tell the tale. These are the ones I still use myself, and all I ever recommend to every student creator who asks me how I do both.
1. Audacity: The Ugly Workhorse
I‘ll be honest: Audacity looks like it was coded in 2005. Which, it was. The user interface has that sort of ‘grey toolbar’ feeling, and first time you run it, you might think you downloaded the wrong program.
And that‘s why it‘s still here: it works. It‘s free, free as in open source, free as in runs on Mac, Windows and Linux and it will multi-track edit without crashing. I‘ve cut and recorded more than 40 shows with it. Once you memorize about ten keyboard shortcuts and get a nice noise-reduction plug-in, and you‘re ready to go from raw recording to export-ready MP3 in less than 20 minutes.
Less tempting are paid options, such as Adobe Audition or Logic pro, which just look a little more visually appealing! However when you are a student and have a “zero” operating budget “pretty” won‘t really go far.
2. TextToHuman Plagiarism Checker: Actually Free, Actually Useful
This one uncovered a problem I didn‘t realize I had (until it came very close to biting me). I was authoring a very research-intensive episode script which was about the evolution of forensic science (drawing facts from journal articles, news book archives, and two textbooks). I had gotten a great script. And then, just for the heck of it, I ran it against a plagiarism checker just in case I submitted as part of the class assignment.
Three full sentences were near-identical to a Wikipedia article I’d read the night before. I hadn’t copied anything on purpose. I’d just absorbed the phrasing while researching and reproduced it without realizing. That’s the thing about accidental plagiarism: it doesn’t care about your intentions. Purdue’s Online Writing Lab has a whole section on why this happens more than students think, especially when you’re juggling multiple sources.
The online plagiarism checker by TextToHuman caught it before anyone else did. What I like about it compared to Scribbr or Grammarly’s checker: it doesn’t blur your results or lock the report behind a payment screen. You paste your text, it scans against Google Scholar, news sites, and the web, and it shows you the exact matching source URLs right there. Color-coded sentence by sentence: red for direct matches, yellow for close paraphrases, green for original text.
No account needed. No signup form. You just paste and check.
Heads up
TextToHuman scans against publicly indexed sources. It won’t catch matches against private university databases the way Turnitin does. For most student creators checking podcast scripts or blog posts, that’s more than enough.
3. MathSolver: The Tutor That Doesn’t Judge You
I’m going to be honest. There were nights during my stats course where I sat staring at a problem set for two hours and made zero progress. Then I’d have to pivot to editing an episode that was supposed to go live the next morning. Something had to give.
math-solver.io changed how I handled homework. You type in an equation, describe a word problem, or even snap a photo of handwritten notes and upload it. The tool doesn’t just spit out an answer. It walks you through every step, explaining the logic behind each one. And if step four of an algebraic expansion still doesn’t click, you can ask a follow-up question in the chat and it’ll rephrase the explanation.
No signups. No usage caps. I used it three or four nights a week for an entire semester and never hit a paywall. It didn’t replace understanding the material, but it got me past the “staring at the wall” phase fast enough that I could still make my upload schedule.
4. Notion: Your Second Brain (Once You Get Past the Setup)
I resisted Notion for months. Everyone kept recommending it and every time I opened it, I got overwhelmed by templates and database views and toggle blocks. It felt like I needed a course just to use the note-taking app.
My advice: ignore the templates. Start with a blank page. Create one table called “Episodes” with columns for title, status, and recording date. That’s it. You can add complexity later when you actually need it.
Once I did that, Notion became the only place I go for production planning. Each episode gets a page where I dump research links, draft the script, and track whether I’ve done the edit, written show notes, and uploaded. It replaced a mess of Google Docs, sticky notes, and text messages to myself. Free for personal use, which is all a student needs.
5. Canva: Good Enough Design in Five Minutes
Your podcast cover art is more important than you realize. It will be the very first thing someone will see when they search your podcast, before they ever hear a word. I wasted an embarrassing amount of time learning Photoshop before I was able to come to terms with it. I did not need Photoshop. I needed the technology equivalent of a design degree that made my cover look design degree worthy.
Canva does that. The free tier has thousands of templates sized specifically for podcast covers, Instagram stories, and YouTube thumbnails. Drag, drop, swap the font, export. Five minutes, done. Some of the nicer elements are locked behind their Pro plan, but you can get around that by uploading your own images from Unsplash or Pexels and working with the free font library.
6. Zotero: Research Without the Mess
If you run a non-fiction or educational show, your listeners will hold you to a higher standard on facts. I learned this the hard way when a listener emailed me about a statistic I’d cited in episode 12 that turned out to be from a retracted study. I’d pulled it from a blog that never updated their post. Lesson learned: track your primary sources.
Zotero is free, open source, and designed specifically for this. Add the web browser extension, and whenever you‘re reading an online journal article or news story just click the button and your full citation author, date, publisher, DOI, all the details is collected in your personal library. Have to put together some show notes or a bibliography for a course? Zotero does it in the citation style you specify APA, MLA, Chicago just one click.
7. Freesound: Royalty-Free Audio That Won’t Get You Sued
Every podcast needs intro music, transition sounds, maybe some ambient background for narrative episodes. And every new podcaster learns the same painful lesson: you can’t just use a song you like from Spotify. Copyright strikes are real, and platforms will pull your episode without warning.
Freesound.org is a massive community-driven library of audio clips, sound effects, and ambient tracks. All free. You can filter by license type, mood, and duration. Most clips are under Creative Commons, meaning you just need to add an attribution line in your episode description. I’ve used it for everything from rain ambience to subtle electronic loops for my intro. The quality varies since it’s user-uploaded, but there are some genuinely great contributors on there.
Finding Your Own Setup
I won’t pretend this list is definitive. Your workflow will look different depending on whether you run a solo show or a co-hosted one, whether you’re in a STEM field or humanities, whether you edit on a laptop in a dorm room or a desktop at home. The point isn’t to copy my exact setup. It’s to stop wasting hours on things that should take minutes, so you can protect your grades and still have something left for the creative work you actually care about.
Quick-Start Checklist
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Download Audacity and learn 10 keyboard shortcuts
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Run your next script through TextToHuman before recording
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Set up one Notion table for episode tracking
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Create podcast cover art in Canva using a free template
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Install Zotero’s browser extension for source tracking
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Browse Freesound for intro and transition audio
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Bookmark MathSolver for your next problem set
Start with two or three of these. Add more as you figure out where your bottlenecks actually are. The whole point is less friction, not more apps to manage.
Alex Mercer
Alex Mercer is a graduate student and freelance writer with four years of experience reviewing academic productivity tools and digital creator workflows.