Zotero's inbuilt Note Editor can REVOLUTIONIZE your note-taking and writing processes.

But most academics don't know much about it.

Here's how to supercharge your writing using Zotero's Note Editor 👇

A step-by-step guide with visuals 🧵
Let's start by adding a PDF to our library.

You can add a PDF using its DOI, or you can simply drag it into your Zotero library. A screenshot of Mushtaq's Zotero library. A yellow arrow poi
Once added, double click on it to open the PDF in Zotero's PDF reader. A recently added PDF in Mushtaq's Zotero library. A red box
Zotero will open the PDF in a new window.

To your left, you will see an Annotations pane, and to your right, the PDF's metadata.

You will also see Annotation Options on the top of the PDF.

In the top right corner, you will see a small Notes button. Zotero's inbuilt PDF reader showing a PDF. To the left is th
Let's add a couple of annotations before we start taking notes.

Here I have added two annotations using the "Highlight Text" button.

You can also add your own comments under these annotations. Two annotations added using the "Highlight Text" o
Now to the Notes Editor:

Clicking on the Notes button in the top right corner will open the Note editor for you.

Click on the "+" sign under the Notes Button and in front of "Item Notes."

Select "Add Item Note." Zotero's inbuilt Notes Editor displaying two options: "
Zotero will open its Note Editor with a toolbar on top. There are six tools in the toolbar:

1. Format text
2. Highlight text
3. Clear formatting
4. Insert Link
5. Insert Citation
6. Find and Replace A screenshot of Zotero's inbuilt Notes Editor. A yellow arro
Let's start with the basics - formatting text: The "Format Text" menu box open in Zotero's inbuil
Here I am composing a note with a heading (Heading 1) and a one-line paragraph. A note composed using Zotero's inbuilt Notes Editor.
Now I am adding a numbered list of three sources that I should read to take my project further.

I have used the "Numbered List" function here.

And I highlighted this part in purple using the "Highlight Text" option to remind myself to read these sources. A list of three sources composed using the Notes Editor's &q
I obtained the three sources, added them to my Zotero library, and read them.

I selected one relevant quote from each source, and manually added them to the note.

I also highlighted the word "national" because it's crucial to my project. Three quotes from three sources added to a note composed in
In the Note Editor you can also insert an in-text citation.

Click on the "[+]" (Insert Citation) button, and Zotero will open a search bar.

The search bar shows "Orsini and Zecchini, 2019" because that's the source currently open. Click on the "Insert Citation" button and Zotero w
I am going to delete "Orsini and Zecchini, 2019" and instead write "Damrosch," the author whose book I obtained the first quote from.

Zotero shows me all items by Damrosch in my library.

I select the relevant source: "What is World Literature?" Zotero showing all items by Damrosch in Mushtaq's library.
Zotero prepares the citation for insertion. It also lets you edit it to suit your requirements.

To edit, click on the citation in the search bar.

Here I'm adding the page number of the relevant quote. An in-text citation prepared by Zotero for insertion in the
Here you can see the three citations I added along with page numbers, which I manually added.

The in-text citations in Zotero Note Editor is a really POWERFUL feature.

I'll show you why: Three in-text citations added in Zotero's inbuilt Notes Edit
If you click on an in-text citation, Zotero will give you three options:

1. Go to Page
2. Show Item
3. Edit Citation

Click on "Go to Page" and Zotero will take you to the page in the original source from where you lifted the quotation 🙀 Clicking on an in-text citation gives you three options: Go
Here you can see Zotero opened page 283 of Damrosch's book "What is World Literature?" after I clicked on the in-text citation in the Note Editor.

This is something that can SUPERCHARGE your note-taking and referencing. Zotero opened page 283 of Damrosch's book "What is Worl
Now that we have taken a bunch of notes, it's time to start composing a draft of our paper.

Open a blank document MS Word, and click on the Zotero tab.

Then click on "Add Note." A blank document in MS Word with the heading "Location,
Zotero may or may not open "Zotero - Document Preferences" with a list of available citation styles.

If it does, select the citation style you want to use.

I am going with MLA 9th edition. "Zotero - Document Preferences" menu open in MS Wo
After you choose a citation style, Zotero will open a yellow search bar with a list of all your notes.

Select the note relevant to your current project. Zotero's "Add Note" search bar open in MS Word.
Click on the relevant note and Zotero will import the note into your Word document.

Notice, the citations are all correctly formatted according to the MLA 9th editon.

Now, you have your notes and citations in MS Word.

Start writing. A note imported into an MS Word document from Zotero's Notes
Do a couple rounds of writing and editing and you will have a decent draft.

Below is the first page of one of my forthcoming articles.

---

And that's how you can use Zotero's Note Editor to conceive, develop, and execute a project. The first page of Mushtaq's forthcoming article. Four citati
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More from @MushtaqBilalPhD

Oct 9
Zotero has 10,000+ citation styles 🙀

Write your paper in one style (e.g. MLA) and CHANGE it to another (e.g. APA) in seconds.

But most academics DON'T KNOW about it.

Here's how to change citation styles in Zotero 👇

A step-by-step tutorial with visuals 🧵
Start with opening a blank document in your word processor.

For the purposes of this tutorial, I'm using MS Word. You can do it in Google Docs too. A blank document in MS Word.
You'd also need to open your Zotero desktop app.

I'm assuming you already know how to build a Zotero collection for your project.

If you don't know, I have a separate tutorial on that too. Mushtaq's Zotero desktop app showing different folders.
Read 25 tweets
Oct 6
Zotero and Research Rabbit:

Two FREE apps that when integrated together can SUPER-CHARGE your research 🚀

But most academics don't about it.

Here's how to get started 👇

A step-by-step guide with visuals 🧵
Log in to your Research Rabbit account.

In the top left corner you will see a tab "Connect to Zotero."

Click on it. Mushtaq's Research Rabbit homepage. A red rectangular box hi
Research Rabbit will prompt you to log in to your Zotero account. Zotero's login page.
Read 22 tweets
Oct 3
Research Rabbit is an incredible tool that FAST-TRACKS your research. Best part: it's FREE.

But most academics don't know about it.

Here's how to get started 👇

Research Rabbit 101: A step-by-step guide with visuals 🧵
Go to researchrabbit.ai and sign up with your email. An image of the landing page of Research Rabbit. A yellow ar
Once you've signed up, this is how Research Rabbit's interface will look like. Research Rabbit's main user interface.
Read 18 tweets
Sep 22
Recently, I wrote a bunch of Zotero tutorials that went (mildly) viral on #AcademicTwitter.

Thought I'd put them all together so folks can find them easily.

So, here goes 👇

Zotero 101: A meta-thread 🧵

Retweet to share it with your friends/colleagues.
1. Getting started

This thread will teach you how to:
• Install Zotero
• Build your library
• Create in-text citations in MS Word/Google Docs
• Create bibliographies

2. Adding items to your library

This thread will teach you four ways to add items to your library:
• Zotero Connector
• Item identifiers like DOI, ISBN, etc.
• Manually adding a PDF
• By manually entering meta-data of an item

Read 9 tweets
Sep 19
Really excited to share that my students and I have started doing collaborative annotations on Zotero 🤗

The small red box in the photo is the first annotation that a student did today.

The moment I saw it on the screen I felt an enormous rush of dopamine 😀 Collaborative annotating on...
We were discussing this paragraph from Benedict Anderson's "Imagined Communities" and close-reading the first line.

I told them to pay attention to the highlighted sentence on two levels: semantic and lexical. Image
They understood it very easily on the semantic level.

But it took them a second to figure out why I was asking them to pay attention to it on the lexical level.

It took a bit of back and forth and then a student said Anderson's language is not inclusive.
Read 4 tweets
Sep 16
A lot of folks who have started using Zotero recently still don't know how to sync their libraries.

Why sync?

It enables you to access your library on multiple devices, and online.

This is how you sync your Zotero library 🧵
Start by logging into your Zotero account. Zotero.org landing page. A ...
Open Zotero Desktop app.

Go to "Edit" and click on "Preferences." A dialog box in Zotero Desk...
Read 6 tweets

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