Folder-based quiz organization and analytics illustration
Folders

Folder Organization Workflow: Keep Quizzes Structured and Easier to Use

Use folders to group quizzes by subject, exam, or course so practice stays organized, faster to resume, and easier to review later.

Published: 2026-04-30Updated: 2026-04-306 min read

Feature Navigation

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How to Use This Feature Effectively

Once you start generating multiple quizzes, organization becomes part of performance. Folders turn a growing quiz library into a clean system you can actually use every day.

Why this matters: Students lose time when quizzes are scattered across unrelated topics. Folder structure keeps exam prep, subject practice, and revision blocks separated so it is easier to continue the right work without friction.

Step-by-Step Workflow

  1. 1. Create folders around real study goals

    Use folders for subjects, units, exams, or projects instead of vague buckets. A folder should answer one practical question: what am I preparing for?

  2. 2. Generate or move quizzes into the correct folder early

    When you create a new quiz, place it into the right folder immediately. Early structure prevents cleanup work later and keeps practice sessions easier to find.

  3. 3. Use the folder page as your focused workspace

    Open a folder when you want to stay inside one subject. From there you can launch practice, inspect quiz performance, and avoid mixing unrelated material in the same session.

  4. 4. Check folder analytics before the next session

    Use the analytics tab to see quiz count, recent score trend, session volume, and weak or strong topics. That makes the next study action easier to choose.

Important Points

Important

Folders are not just storage. They are study boundaries that keep practice sessions aligned with one real goal at a time.

Outcome

Good folder structure reduces search time, improves session focus, and makes analytics more meaningful because the data reflects one topic cluster instead of everything mixed together.

Mistakes to Avoid

  • Putting every quiz into one giant folder and expecting analytics to stay useful.
  • Using folder names that are too vague to guide an actual study decision.
  • Ignoring the analytics tab and treating folders as passive storage only.

Execution Tips

  • Create separate folders for high-stakes exams versus ongoing class practice so revision priorities stay obvious.
  • If a folder gets too broad, split it by chapter or module before your next heavy study cycle.

Next action

Move from reading to execution by opening the linked feature page and applying one step today.