Visibility and language rules
Only ready public studies are eligible for discovery. Language is normalized and enforced in listing filters so students do not see mismatched-language content when browsing or searching.
How publication, discovery, language filtering, subject grouping, and ranking work for public studies in Studieasy.
Updated: 2026-05-02
Public studies are indexed by language and broad subject, then ranked by a blend of engagement and recency. Users only see studies relevant to the selected language, and search also considers question-level content.
Only ready public studies are eligible for discovery. Language is normalized and enforced in listing filters so students do not see mismatched-language content when browsing or searching.
Each public study is mapped to a broad subject category. Subject hub pages help users browse quickly by domain while still using free text search for precise intent.
Trending and popular ranking combine engagement signals such as opens, challenge starts, completions, unique visitors, and time decay. This prioritizes studies that are both useful and currently active.
If a study language does not match your selected language, it is filtered out to keep discovery relevant.
Newest is date-first. Trending weighs recent activity plus engagement quality signals.
Put this workflow into practice with your own materials.
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