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GOOD ENGLISH IS GOOD BUSINESS
Substantive
editing and/or copyediting
and/or proofreading
Academic
Journals:
Editing academic journals requires close communication
with contributors to verify meaning, argument, and
documentation. This kind of editing includes substantive
editing, copyediting, and proofreading. It also requires
knowledge of style manuals such as MLA, CMS, APA, and AP,
and an application of specific house style.
Academic Manuscripts:
To editing the work of professionals I bring eleven years’
editorial experience, an MA in Linguistics with a
specialization in the Teaching of English to Speakers of
Other Languages (TESOL), a BA in Language Arts, more than
twenty years teaching English, and more than five years
teaching English as a Second Language (ESL).
B2B Websites and Publications:
Good advertising and good English are one and the same.
Businesses selling to other businesses, online and/or
brick-and-mortar, depend on razor-sharp copywriting and
editing to move consumers to buy products and services.
Just the right word in just the right place on a page
draws in or drives away a customer.
Trade Publications:
Publications that target specific audiences depend on
advertising to pay the bills. They depend on writers to
win and keep readers. Editors aid that effort by
tightening sentence structure, trimming excess words, and
cutting jargon.
Christian Publications:
The fear of the Lord is the beginning of
wisdom (Proverbs
1:7).
Like apples of gold in
settings of silver is a word spoken in right circumstances
(Proverbs 25:11).
Fiction:
The elements of fiction include not only plot (initial
incident, rising action, crisis, climax, dénouement,
resolution), character, and setting, but also point of
view, timelines, chronology, tone, and mood. Aristotle was
right: unity of action, time, and place make or break a
story. Good editing ensures a saleable short story or
novel.
Nonfiction:
I know from experience that writing a monthly column is a
tall order. It means stitching together information from
multiple sources to explain an idea; convincing readers of
a point of view; describing products, services, and new
technology; and letting competitors and clients tell their
stories. Columnists need editors!
Poetry:
Editing poetry invites a light hand that neither
embellishes nor misrepresents meaning. Rather, editing
poetry ensures that intended meaning is conveyed by
correcting punctuation, spelling, grammar, and inadvertent
omissions — but not unconventional usage.
MBA Essays:
Editing includes specific frameworks for school/s chosen;
short-, mid-, and long-term goals; prompts such as a time
of failure and your reaction; greatest accomplishment
and/or influences; resumes; letters of recommendation,
etc. Editing ensures essays at or under prescribed word
counts and as many drafts as necessary to satisfy editor
and client.
Personal Essays:
To help candidates craft unique essays I bring the
following experience:
-
Ten years’ experience
strategizing, developing, and editing personal essays
required for four-year institutions
-
Twenty years’ experience
teaching high school English
-
Forty years’ experience reading and
grading high school and university frosh compositions
and research papers
-
Five years’ experience teaching English
as a Second Language (ESL)
PhD Essays:
Post-graduate degree candidates must show specific
knowledge of their field as well as what they can
contribute to an institution’s reputation for academic
rigor in the field’s R&D. Programs want to know “why
you at this school in this study?” A
good editor works with applicants to facilitate strategy;
fit format to message; and develop, edit, and improve the
flow of content. |