Google Drive storage management is an important aspect of utilizing Google Drive as a collaborative tool.
Understanding University Storage
By default, The New School is provided a certain amount of pooled Google storage for the entire university. This means that everyone who has a Google account is utilizing some portion of this pooled storage.
The New School has enrolled in the Education Plus edition which provides the university with 20GB of additional storage per license based on our FTE (full-time equivalent) student population. In other words, if our full-time student population is 10,000 then we only receive an additional 200TB (200,000 GB) of storage so the amount of overall storage.
Google storage is spread across Gmail, Drive, Shared Drives, Photos, Docs, Sheets, Slides, Forms, Drawings, and Jamboard files. For Drive, every file including docs, presentations, sheets, and uploaded content like pdfs, videos, and photos, all consume Google Drive storage. This means that every time you save a file to Drive you are utilizing a portion of Google storage allotted to The New School.
You can see how much storage you are utilizing by going to https://drive.google.com/settings/storage
Understanding File and Folder Ownership
You only consume storage for files that you “own” or create in Google Drive. If you are not the owner of a file or folder in Google Drive then that file or folder is not consuming any storage space allotted to you.
You are the owner of:
You are not the owner of:
How to see who owns a file or folder
You can check to see who the owner of a file or folder is by right-clicking on the file or folder and selecting “view details”. If you see “me” listed under the file owner, then that file is consuming your allotted amount of Google storage.
Sharing Data and Files
Files stored in your New School Google Drive can be shared with any Google users, even those with personal Google accounts or other G Suite accounts. You can find extensive information on how to share files through Google Drive in the Google Drive Help Center.
Quick tip: Please note that sharing files with other users does not mean the file takes up space in their Google storage. The file will only take up storage space for the file owner.
Transferring Files
When an individual departs from the New School, whether they be a student, faculty, or staff member, access to Google Drive (depending on the individual's role) will be removed and all files and data contained in the Google Drive account will be deleted (even if there are shortcut links to other locations after creation, i.e. Google Shared Drives).
It is crucial, particularly for New School employees, to ensure that any necessary files that will be utilized beyond the individual's last day with the university are updated with a new owner. Once the new owner is identified and the files are transferred to that new owner, the files will then consume the storage of the new owner.
Learn how to transfer ownership of Google files and folders.
How to Keep Shared Files
There are several different methods for saving files shared with you, particularly if you know that an individual is leaving the university and you require a file or folder they are technically the owner of.
Options to copy or download a file:
*Please note: The sharing settings and version history of copied files do not transfer.
Options to download a folder:
*You cannot right-click on a folder shared with you and choose Make a copy; instead, you’ll have to open the folder and select the files to copy or download.
-
Google files (e.g. Google Docs, Google Sheets, etc.) will be downloaded in Microsoft Office file formats, e.g. Google Doc file -> Microsoft Word file, Google Sheet file -> Microsoft Excel file.
Managing Drive Files (Best Ways to Create More Storage Space)
Since Google does not provide unlimited storage, it is important to get into the habit of managing your files in Drive. Below are some helpful tips in how to do that.
-
You can also find old files by searching a date. Type into the search bar: “before:2015-01-01”. This will identify files created before January 1, 2015. To locate older or newer files, change the date.
-
By default, files placed in Google Drive trash will be permanently deleted after 30 days, however, files located in your Google Drive trash will still consume storage space until they are permanently deleted.
-
Students: Start migrating files to a personal account
-
New School students will need to transfer files out of their New School account when they graduate, so if you are running out of Google storage space you might consider starting that process sooner rather than later. Moving files to a personal account or downloading them to your computer or an external hard drive could be a great way to clean up space in your university account. We suggest starting with your largest files, which you can see here, and either download the files to an external harddrive or transfer individual files to a personal Google account by making your Google personal account the owner of the files.