Field Mycology - WordPress

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Revision as of 17:08, 29 October 2014 by Greenea (Talk | contribs)

Your Assignment

You will generate content for a fungus post on the “Fungi Evergreen” website. The content will include text and images ...


Getting Started

Driving in WordPress

  • Dashboard Overview - get comfortable navigating the Dashboard and moving between Admin and Public view
  • Change your profile info: Name and Bio

Add a new fungus

See the Example fungus for details on what is to be included in each section of your fungus post

  1. Create a new Fungus using the New button at the top of the Admin Bar or from the Dashboard > Fungi > Add New menu
  2. Title your post - use the Latin species name for your fungus (for the workshop create a fictitious fungus with the title starting with "Fake")
    • Note: the traditional post content area will actually display at the bottom of the page. This is where we're going to add image galleries instead.
  3. Publish your Fungus and then View Fungus to see how it looks

Edit an existing fungus

  • From the public view of your Fungus, click the Edit Fungus button in the top Admin bar
  • You can also navigate from your Dashboard to Fungi > All Fungi and hover over the fungus to Edit

Input fungus data

Beneath the top content area we will be putting the rest of our content into sections using WordPress Custom Fields. The process is very similar to filling out an online form.

Note: These custom fields have their own Save button separate from the post's Update button. It important the you click both save buttons when updating fungus data
  1. Look for the Input fungus data block and fill out the fields
  2. The first time you save fungus data you will click the Add Entry button at the bottom of the fields
  3. To save this fungus data with your fungus post you need to next Update the post
  4. Click 'Edit in the Fungus Data block to add/edit content to these fields
  5. to save your changes click Save Changes in the Fungus Data block AND Update in the publish block to update the entire post.

Important: Every time you make a change to your fungus data you will need to save your changes in two places: 1) the Fungus Data block 2) the Publish block


Fungus Categories and Morphologies

  • Along the right hand side of your Fungus post, select the appropriate fungus category and morphology
  • A fungus may belong to more than one so check all that apply

Adding Links

  1. While editing a post, highlight the text you want to be a link
  2. Click the "add link" button
  3. Paste the URL you want to link to and click "Add Link"

Adding Images

File management: we will all be sharing a single media library. Make sure to use a unique file naming convention. Start your files with your species and it will be easy to find all files related to your species.

Example: Amanita_muscaria1.jpg
  • Insert an image - add an image to the body of a post
  • Adding captions to cite your image sources
    • Creative Commons images from WikiMedia Commons is a great place to start. Once you find an image you'd like to use click the "Use this file on the web" link. Copy the "Attribution" (HTML) text and paste into your image's caption.
  • Set your featured image for all posts. Featured images will appear on the at the top of each post and on category pages.


Additional Resources

  • Wordpress.com Getting Started Tutorials - these tutorials are for working on wordpress.com but is nearly identical to using WordPress at blogs.evergreen.edu
  • Lynda.com (on-campus) WordPress 3 Essential Training - this is another training geared towards using Wordpress.com but if you skip the account setup portion most of the rest is relavent to blogs.evergreen.edu