In Zotero, you can mark items "Read," "Not Read," etc. to better organize your library.
But most people don't know about it.
Here's how to do it 👇
A step-by-step guide with visuals 🧵
Open any collection, and select any item.
On top of the right-hand pane, you'll see four buttons: Info, Notes, Tags, Related.
Click on Tags.
You will see an "Add" button.
Click on it, and type "Not Read."
Press Enter/Return.
Zotero will create a "Not Read" tag, which will be displayed in the Tags box in the bottom-left corner of your screen.
Right click on the tag once it's created.
Select "Assign Color" from the dropdown menu.
Zotero will open a Tag Color and Position menu.
You can color-code a tag and assign it a numeric key.
For the "Not Read" tag, I am going with red color and numeral 1.
After you're done, click "Set Color."
You will see a small red square before the name of the selected item.
You will also see the tag "Not Read" in the Tags box in the bottom-left corner change its color.
Suppose you want to mark multiple items "Not Read."
Select all items you want to mark "Not Read."
Press 1, and the selected items will be marked "Not Read."
You will also see a small red square before the selected items' names.
Now suppose you have read an item and you want to unmark it.
Select that item and simple press 1, and it will be unmarked.
Repeat the above steps and create tags like "Read" and "Read+Annotated."
Color-code them and assign them a numeric key.
I have assigned the "Read" tag blue color and number 2, and the "Read+Annotated" tag green color and number 3.
Suppose you want to mark a "Not Read" item as "Read."
First unmark the item by pressing 1. Then press 2.
If you don't unmark it first, your item will get marked both "Read" and "Not Read," which can cause confusion.
Now if you want to see all the items you have read, simply click on the "Read" tag in the bottom-left corner and Zotero will show you all items marked "Read."
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Yesterday, a student share her writing process with me.
While writing response papers, she pastes a paragraph of the source text (Benedict Anderson's "Imagined Communities" in her case), and then starts writing her comments under it.
That, I thought, was a pretty neat way of drafting a response paper.
But she was worried the passages from the source text would make Turnitin assume she'd plagiarized.
"Delete the passage from the source text after you're done," I told her.
I assured her I'd read the book and I'd be able to follow her argument even without the passages from the source text.
What if I told you that you don't have stress over it?
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