

On this page, we can add comments to each other, add a wiki Names are crossed out for privacy.Įach thesis student has their own page so I can track themĪlong the timeline. Theses across the main stages of the thesis (ideas, proposal, data collection, dataĪnalysis/reporting, finalizing). I adapted the same timeline template above for tracking Note that under “Properties” I could choose to add showing my role of the publication if I so choose. The second is the timeline view, in which I see it based on what status the publication is in. The first is the table view, in which I can easily see my role, status, and publication information. Use this template to track your publication timeline by clicking the “duplicate” button on the top right of the page here.īelow are the two views I currently use for my publication timeline. I imagine this will be useful for sharing publications when people ask me for the PDF or location of an article. After reading a recent blog post by Chelsea Hetherington, I added tracking the journal, publication date, PDF, and journal URL. I found a template on Notion and adapted it to my needs.

This is the simplest way I am using Notion is through tracking my publication pipeline. (Click on the links to go straight to that section.) Notion for tracking publications Working perfectly fine for what I want it to do.īelow, I will detail four ways I am using Notion: tracking publications, my thesis students’ progress, summer goals, and notes about the courses I teach. Iĭoubt I am using Notion to its full potential right now. With databases, navigating the workspace, and collaborating with others. It took a while to understand how the databases work, how pages fit in I’ll admit: the learning curve on Notion was a bit rough atįirst. Task manager (I wish Todoist and Notion could integrate!), Notion has become my Projects, and spreadsheets and databases. Itself an all-in-one workspace for notes and documents, wikis, tasks and
