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Filter Groups using tags
When you browse groups, you will see a section of tags in the lower left corner. In some cases, such as Artstor Curated, the list of groups is multipage. To quickly filter the list of groups, click on a tag. This will limit the list of groups you are viewing to only those that have that tag attached to them. Selecting additional tags will further limit the list of groups.
Click the x at the end of the tag name to remove it as a filter.
Organize Groups using tags
Tags can be used to keep your groups organized. Applying a tag or multiple tags to a group, makes a group even more discoverable.
Applying multiple tags will help refine your list of groups. For example, if you create six groups for a course, each one related to a specific lecture, you could name each of the groups with defining information such as “Early Feminist Works Lecture One,” “Early Feminist Works Lecture Two," “Later Feminist Works Lecture One,” “Later Feminist Works Lecture Two,” and so on. Then, to recreate the way folders previously sorted your groups, you could apply tags of course numbers and/or semesters to these groups. You could add the tags “ARTH 300” and SPRING 2017” to each of these groups.
Clicking on tags ARTH 300 and SPRING 2017 would show all of the groups you have created that pertain to both of these tags.
Because all folder titles have been converted to tags, when you first login to Artstor, you may have several groups that have the tag “My Work Folder.” If you wish to remove this tag, it will need to be removed from each Group it is linked to.
Add Tags
To add a tag to a group, you can do this when you are creating a new group, or by opening an existing group and editing the group info. When you begin typing in the tag field, a list of suggested (existing) tags will appear. Tags are case sensitive, so it is possible you might duplicate tags if you use different case, e.g. Sphinx and sphinx would be two, separate tags.
Edit Tags
Currently, tags cannot be edited. You must delete the tag from all groups to which it is attached, then go back and open each of the groups and add the new tag. If you have several groups using the same tag (such as the former folder name "My Work Folder") you will need to open each of the groups using that tag and edit the group information, remove that tag, save your changes, then repeat with the rest of the groups using that tag.
Tips for Using Tags
- Tags are case sensitive. The tag “Painting“ can be added to a group that is already tagged as “painting”
- Tags should be granular: course numbers, weeks, instructor names, all separated.
- When creating several groups that will share some tags, a comma separated list copied and pasted from a document (for example: ArtH 200, Spring 2018, M. Chan) will populate as separate tags.
- Currently the only method for searching tags is to use your browser's search (Ctrl/Cmd+ F) function.
Using Tags as an Instructor
Tags can help you organize your groups. Typically, instructors use groups as content grouped for lectures or exams. For this purpose, the names of the groups could be created like this:
Group title: “Terracotta Warriors - Prof M. Chan”
Tags: ArtH 200, M.Chan, Spring 2018, Lectures
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Group title: “Midterm Exam - Dr. Lipinsky”
Tags: ARCH, Exams, 2017, LIPINSKY
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Group title: “The Rise of Modernism - HANSON”
Tags: ArtHistory 300, Week Four, 2017-2018, HANSON
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If you want the titles of your groups to appear in a specific order by lecture number, use a leading zero for numbers 1-9.
Using Tags as a Student
If you are sharing your groups with your institution, including your name in the group title will help you quickly find your own groups, and distinguish your group or assignment from other students’ groups. If you are creating a group for a specific course, use the course tag your instructor uses if one exists. Also include tags for the semester and year that you are taking the course.
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