There are two main methods to add items from your Google Journal to your Google Calendar. Either you can create a new calendar and name it with a descriptive title and enter the time zone, or you can add the journal to your main Google Calendar. Then, simply click Add Calendar and follow the steps to add journal items.
Description
There is a description area for your Google journal. You can write about what happened during the day in this section. You can use font formatting and include images and links. This feature is useful if you want to keep track of certain details or keep track of a condition. The description area is also a great place to write about your day.

The academic community is using Google heavily, and Google is developing many services to provide researchers with scholarly content. With the popularity of open access journals, Google’s role in the world of academic research will only increase. Google Scholar is one of these services. However, the results are not always clear to readers, as they are often buried in a pile of other links.
Key Feature
When using the Google Journal key feature, it’s vital to know which journals are covered by the feature. For example, the Google Scholar search engine includes a wide variety of journal articles, but it only indexes journals that have published at least 100 articles in the past five years. That leaves out conference proceedings, preprint repositories, and many other kinds of sources. The GSM source list is sorted by h5-index, a variation of the Journal Impact Factor or Journal Metrics.
How to add
Once your journal is up and running, you can add it to your Google Calendar. You can choose to add it to the main calendar or to any calendars that you create. In either case, you can add a description and time zone. If you don’t see your journal on Google Calendar, then there might be an issue.