Friday, March 19, 2010
Giving Advice All Over the Place
Updated March 22, 8:10 p.m.: And here I am being quoted again by Marian at Digital Book World, as are some of my colleagues and one of my clients.
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Wednesday, March 03, 2010
Safe!
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Sunday, January 17, 2010
How to Transition to Copyediting From Another Career
- First, read "So, You Want to Be an Editor."
- Then read the blog posts "Becoming an Editor" and "What We Do" [Note: This item was updated August 20, 2011.]
- If you're still seriously interested, buy and work through The Copyeditor's Handbook: A Guide for Book Publishing and Corporate Communications and Business Planning for Editorial Freelancers: A Guide for New Starters. [Note: This item was updated August 20, 2011; April 10, 2013; and October 8, 2019.]
- I used to advise would-be editors to subscribe to Copyediting newsletter. But the newsletter's materials were sold at the start of 2019 to ACES: the Society for Editing. You can find some of its articles in the News section of the ACES website. [Note: This item was updated October 8, 2019.]
- Next, take the certificate program that the UC San Diego Extension offers. [Note: This item was updated October 9, 2019.]
- Meanwhile, follow the links found in the Copyeditors' Knowledge Base on my web site. Take action on those that will help you fill gaps in your knowledge.
- Then buy and read my onscreen booklet, Getting Started as a Freelance Copyeditor.
- After all of that, take any additional courses that you need. There are plenty available, many that can be completed online.
- Then begin contacting publishers and other organizations, offering your editing services. You will most often be required to take a copyediting test, time for which you will not be paid.
- If you have gotten this far in the process, join a profession-related organization for networking and continuing-education purposes and to have colleagues who can answer your questions and teach you client-relations skills. I highly recommend the Editorial Freelancers Association, of which I have been a member since 1995. There are many more such organizations that you may find helpful. [Note: This item was updated April 10, 2013.]
- Take courses periodically for the rest of your life. Above all, being a copyeditor requires being willing to constantly learn: Both language and grammar practices change over time, as does the technology used to edit. You may also want or need to learn related skills, such as indexing or page layout, to stay in demand in the industry.
- Educate yourself about the financial and tax implications of being a self-employed freelancer and about how to market your editorial services. You will be a businessperson, so you will need to know how to act like one.
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Tuesday, January 12, 2010
My Germ-Away Tea
Here are the health benefits commonly ascribed to the spices in the tea:
- Spearmint: digestive aid, nausea fighter, indigestion fighter
- Turmeric: antioxidant, antibacterial, digestive aid.
- Fennel: digestive aid, diuretic, expectorant, sore-throat soother
- Sage: antibiotic, cold fighter, anticongestive, digestive aid, disinfectant, flu fighter, immune-system booster, sore-throat soother
- Ginger: anti-inflammatory, antiseptic, bronchitis fighter, circulation booster, cold fighter, anticongestive, flu fighter
It's a little spicy and tastes best hot.
Feel better.
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Friday, January 08, 2010
Get to Know the Council of Science Editors
CSE, originally called the Council of Biology Editors, was established in 1957 by the National Science Foundation and the American Institute of Biological Sciences. Today it has more than 1,200 members from around the world. It provides career development, provides educational opportunities, and develops resources for identifying and implementing high-quality editorial practices. It offers plenty of resources on its web site, including a member forum, access to publications on editing and the publishing process, and periodic white papers on issues in science publishing. Its journal, Science Editor, addresses all aspects of editing, from the technical to the interpersonal, from science education to ethics in science publishing.
CSE also puts together an annual meeting that offers educational courses, networking opportunities, and presentations of research posters and papers. This year's meeting will be May 14–18, in Atlanta, Georgia.
Check us out. Yes, I'm pleased to be a CSE member.
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Monday, January 04, 2010
What 26 Years in Publishing—15 as a Freelance Copyeditor—Have Taught Me
- If an editor treats authors respectfully, authors will return the favor.
- Authors accept edits more willingly from an editor who explains the reasoning behind changes than from one who doesn’t.
- Clients and authors always appreciate clear, straightforward, timely communication with an editor.
- Misunderstandings can occur when there are language barriers, so both author and editor must assume good intentions on the part of the other as they work at communicating.
- It’s important to respect boundaries. Authors are the subject-matter experts; the editor is the expert on grammar, syntax, overall flow, and the need for additional details.
- No matter how experienced, an editor can always learn new things. I learn something new from each manuscript I edit and each client and author I work with.
Books and journals may eventually stop appearing in paper form and be available only onscreen, but success in publishing will always require attention to the human beings involved.
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Wednesday, December 30, 2009
The Journals in Which My ESL Authors Get Published
- Anesthesia and Analgesia
- Anesthesia and Analgesia
- Archives of Medical Research
- Archives of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery
- Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
- Biophysical Journal
- Biotechnology Letters
- Chinese Medical Journal
- Cleft Palate–Craniofacial Journal
- Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research
- Injury
- Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science
- Journal of Arthroplasty
- Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery
- Journal of Bone and Mineral Research
- Journal of Clinical Anesthesia
- Journal of Comparative Human Biology
- Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics
- Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery
- Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care
- Molecular Vision
- Oncology Reports
- Orthopedics
- The Permanente Journal
- Protein Expression and Purification
- Radiology
- Spine
I am grateful to all of the authors who trust me to handle their writing with care while helping them to describe their research as clearly and succinctly as possible.
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Thursday, December 10, 2009
How to Find Clients Who Need ESL Editing
But there are roundabout ways:
Make it known that you specialize in ESL editing. Do this on your business web site, in your resume, in your entries in online directories of professional editors, in your LinkedIn profile, and everywhere else online where you have a presence, and explain what ESL editing is and what your work process is. You might even consider adding a line about ESL editing to your signature for posts to profession-related e-mail lists. Listmates have been known to refer potential clients to one another.
Do a version of hanging out where these authors are likely to be. For example, if you like working with university students who need ESL editing, contact various university department heads and let them know that your services are available and that you will abide by university regulations about students hiring editors. Contact various universities' international student organizations and ask if they'd post your contact info and a description of your services on their web site or their page of the university web site. If you want to work with researchers who need ESL editing to get their journal articles published, contact professional organizations that deal with subject matters you like to edit (engineering, psychology, physical therapy, economics, linguistics, education, business management, etc.) and ask to make your contact info and services description available to their members.
One of my versions of hanging out where these authors are involves contacting the editors-in-chief of journals whose subject matter I feel comfortable working with and letting them know that I know that there is great research being done by ESL authors but that because of budget and schedule limitations, the journals' staff members likely can't spend the necessary time to heavily edit these authors' manuscripts. I add that I can solve that problem for them by working directly with authors (i.e., the authors—not the journals—pay for my services, as an investment in their careers) and that I would be pleased if they (the editors) would consider referring promising ESL authors to me. I don't ask for exclusivity for such referrals; if the journals already have a list of freelance ESL copyeditors to whom they refer authors, I'm happy to be added to the list.
Seek referrals and cultivate continuing relationships with current ESL clients. As you gain ESL clients, those who are pleased with your work will be happy to tell others about your services. Make it clear in your communications, especially written ones, that you'll gladly accept referrals. You can even put a note to that effect at the bottom of your invoices or your payment receipts, if you provide these for individual authors, as I do. When you finish a project for an ESL client, be sure to mention that you'll be available for editing additional materials that the person writes in the future. E-mail these clients periodically to say hello and remind them that you enjoyed working with them and would like to work with them again.
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Wednesday, December 09, 2009
Internship for a Budding Copyeditor?
I am in college right now working on an English degree. My goal is to work as a freelance copyeditor when I graduate. Before I returned to school in January 2008, I studied a lot about copyediting. Since I returned to school, my professors have been very pleased with the quality of my work, and this last semester I worked as a tutor in my school's writing center.
I am going to take the spring semester off school with a new baby, and I would like to use this time to complete a copyediting internship with an experienced freelance copyeditor. This will count as a class toward my degree. I will need to work at least 200 hours between now and mid-April.
Through this internship, I hope to gain more editing skills and confidence in my editing abilities. I also want to network more with other copyeditors and publishing companies and gain experience to add to my résumé.
The person I intern with will need to ensure that I have learning opportunities, supervise my work, and provide an evaluation at the end. My work should save my supervisor a lot of time, though certainly not 200 hours. I do not expect to work as quickly as a more experienced copyeditor, and my supervisor will need to review at least some of my work and answer questions.
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Thursday, December 03, 2009
Is It Copyeditor Appreciation Week?
Check out "Ode to a Copy Editor." You'll also like "Hail to the Copy Editor."
I could so easily get used to hearing praise for my profession.
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Wednesday, December 02, 2009
Being Thanked in Print
One of my ESL (English as a second language) clients from China just sent me a PDF of his article, which I edited and which has just been published in the Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. He and his coauthors thanked me in the note at the end of the article. I'm in JBJS, at the top of page 2885 of volume 91, issue 12 (the issue for December 1, 2009)!
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Thursday, November 12, 2009
Editorial Potpourri
This one is a handy tool for both editors and writers: "The Ultimate Resource Guides for MLA, APA, Chicago, and CSE." It's a compendium of links to web sites explaining the various styles and showing examples of materials that follow them.
Information on the Boycott the APA Manual Facebook page indicates that the American Psychological Association is now willing to provided corrected replacement copies of the sixth edition of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, the first printing of which is rife with errors and odd style changes.
Spice up your office or home décor with the Periodic Table of Typefaces, Popular, Influential, & Notorious.
Finally, no editorial office is complete without tea, so I direct you to the delightful "AnTEAoxidant Rap."
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Friday, November 06, 2009
Excellent Employment News
I told her that in calling me to inform me, she'd just performed her first act as a professional: She'd provided information that helped lift someone's gloom (mine). What's supremely ironic is that news stories are reporting that the U.S. unemployment rate has risen to 10.2%, the highest it has been since Becky was born in 1983.
She got this job despite having had to slow her job search because she has a small child (my delightful 2-year-old granddaughter, who was born right about the time Becky finished the requirements for her master's degree) and despite the fact that she and her husband haven't been able to afford to have Internet access at home. That has meant that potential employers couldn't reach her in a timely fashion by e-mail, which many prefer to use rather than the phone, and that she could only occasionally get to the public library to complete online job applications, which is how most potential employers now prefer to deal with job applicants.
I am so proud of her persistence. That kid—er ... um ... mental-health professional—has guts and a good heart. She'll be working for an organization that "provides housing and support services to some of Long Island's neediest people: families and individuals who are homeless, working their way out of crisis, or faced with debilitating medical conditions or mental illness." This is exactly the kind of work she wanted. She did an internship with a social worker employed by a public school and didn't find the work there stimulating enough.
You rock, Becky!
Love,
Mom
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Thursday, October 29, 2009
A Dose of Beauty from My Husband the Master Cabinetmaker

Here's a stunning screen door with Asian-influenced design that My Husband the Master Cabinetmakertm restored and refinished for a client in the Hamptons. (The trim around the door and window will be refinished by house painters; the slate top step is covered with a temporary plywood box to protect it while carpenters, cabinetmakers, interior painters, electricians, and other craftspeople go in and out with heavy equipment.)
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Tuesday, October 13, 2009
A Few Too Many Oopsies in the New APA Style Manual

You might also find the APA's blog APA Style helpful in figuring out what's changed and what's an error in the new edition of the style manual.
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Saturday, October 10, 2009
Where to Find Professional Editors
- Bay Area Editors' Forum
- Board of Editors in the Life Sciences
- Bookbuilders of Boston
- Cambridge Academic Editors Network
- Council of Science Editors
- Directory of CE-L Freelancers (choose the "Freelancers" tab on that page; these are copyeditors from around the world who subscribe to the Copyediting-L e-mail discussion list)
- Editorial Freelancers Association
- Editors' Association of Canada
- Northwest Independent Editors Guild
- San Diego Professional Editors Network
- Society for Editors and Proofreaders (UK)
- Society of Editors (NSW) Inc. (Australia)
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Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Redesigned PubMed Interface

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Saturday, September 26, 2009
The Copyeditors' Knowledge Base
Have a knack for grammar and know AP, CMS, and/or MLA style inside and out? Maybe you want to try copyediting. We mention this because not only does mediabistro have a bazillion copyediting courses coming up, but we just discovered a fantastically thorough and free resource for copyeditors and copyeditor wannabes at Katharine O'Moore-Klopf's web site. The Copyeditors' Knowledge Base is chock-full of reading material and examples, and it is free, free, free. Learn where to get formal training and/or certification, see sample letters to clients (a project estimate, a sample contract), learn about reference books to buy, and so on. ...
Please do spend some time perusing the information accessed through the Copyeditors' Knowledge Base. Whether you want to get into editing or are already an experienced editor, there's plenty of information you can use on industry basics, education and certification, business tools, editing tools, networking, finding work, and profession-related reading. It's my theory that there really is enough work out there for all freelance editorial professionals, if only we know where to look for it. And doesn't it make work life just that much easier and more pleasant if we help one another? copyeditor copyediting editor editing publishing Copyeditors' Knowledge Base EditorMomNew MTA Tax for Freelancers in NYC Metro Area
The first estimated payment for it is due on November 2. I've seen no publicity about this tax, so it does seem to have been sneaked into place; it was enacted May 9, 2009. Here is what a colleague posted about it to one of the editing-related e-mail lists that I subscribe to:
[Here] is the Web site [with] information for the self-employed: [The MCTMT] applies to the five counties of the City of New York plus Rockland, Nassau, Suffolk, Orange, Putnam, Dutchess, and Westchester counties, for net earnings with $10,000 as the threshold point. (Below that figure, you don't have to worry about this.) The tax rate is .34% (.0034) of total net earnings within the geographic area listed above. That's $34 on $10,000. We are supposed to calculate this and make estimated tax payments starting on November 2, 2009. See the Web site above for all the details.
Please check with your accountant.
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Thursday, September 24, 2009
National Punctuation Day 2009

There are plenty of ways to celebrate, including participating in the National Punctuation Day Baking Contest. Just think: You could prepare and enjoy the Official Meat Loaf of National Punctuation Day. I can imagine people in households everywhere eating colon cakes, comma con carne, and semicolon sweetmeats. Can't you?
Another way to celebrate is to play Grammar Ninja, to which I am now seriously addicted, thanks to an editor colleague. Play it if you dare!
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