Writing and editing guides Books
Farrar, Straus & Giroux Inc Draft No 4 On the Writing Process
Book SynopsisThe long-awaited guide to writing long-form nonfiction by the legendary author and teacher.
£11.99
Random House USA Inc The Art of Fiction
Book SynopsisThis classic guide, from the renowned novelist and professor, has helped transform generations of aspiring writers into masterful writers?and will continue to do so for many years to come. John Gardner was almost as famous as a teacher of creative writing as he was for his own works. In this practical, instructive handbook, based on the courses and seminars that he gave, he explains, simply and cogently, the principles and techniques of good writing. Gardner?s lessons, exemplified with detailed excerpts from classic works of literature, sweep across a complete range of topics?from the nature of aesthetics to the shape of a refined sentence. Written with passion, precision, and a deep respect for the art of writing, Gardner?s book serves by turns as a critic, mentor, and friend. Anyone who has ever thought of taking the step from reader to writer should begin here.
£14.45
McGraw-Hill Education - Europe The Newspaper Designers Handbook
Book SynopsisThroughout the seven editions of this book, Harrower has successfully deconstructed the process of laying out newspaper pages. For journalism students and professionals alike, countless designers have used this book to learn how to design and improve their skills as visual communicators. Harrowerâs unique voice and quirky sense of humor are still very much alive in the seventh edition.Table of ContentsIntroduction PrefaceQuick historyCurrent trendsDigital news designLooking aheadChapter 1: Fundamentals What it’s calledTools of the tradeBasic typographyFour basic elementsHeadlinesTextPhotosCutlinesDrawing a dummyA broadsheet dummyA tabloid dummyExercisesChapter 2: Story Stories without artMug shotsText shapesPhotos on the pageHorizontal photosVertical photosSquare photosDominant photosThe picture comboExercisesChapter 3. Page Design The gridPages without artPages with artModular page designFront page designDesigning Page OneMaking stories fitInside pagesDouble trucksBad juxtapositionsRules of thumbExercisesChapter 4. Photos Photo guidelinesPhoto constructsCompelling photosWeak photosFrom camera to pageProcessing digital imagesSizing photosHalftones & screensScanning imagesCropping photosStand-alone photosThe photo columnPhoto spreadsPhoto spread guidelinesStudio shotsPhoto illustrationsIllustrationsRisky businessExercisesChapter 5. Nuts & Bolts The flagLogos and sigsLiftout quotesDecks and summariesBylinesCredit linesSpacingRules and boxesRefers and promosBreaking up textJumpsChapter 6. Graphics Alternative Story FormsA.S.F. presentationsFast factsBio boxesListsChecklistsQ&A’sQuizzesSurveys and pollsQuote collectionsCharts and graphsTablesRatingsTimelinesStep-by-step guidesDiagramsMapsGraphics packagesPackage planningGraphics guidelinesGraphics galleryChapter 7. Special Effects Bending the rulesThe Stewart variationsWraparounds and skewsPhoto cutoutsMortises and insetsScreens and reversesDisplay headlinesColorAdding color to a pageColor guidelinesPrinting full colorChapter 8. The Redesign Redesigning your paperEvaluating your paperGathering examplesCompiling a shopping listBuilding prototypesTesting and promotionWriting a stylebookLaunching and following upRedesign galleryAppendix Exercise answersGlossaryIndexAcknowledgmentsCredits
£153.09
Yale University Press Writing for Science
Book SynopsisProvides a range of writing skills that an experimental scientist needs to employ. Chapters cover various types of science writing, from routine forms, such as laboratory notes, abstracts, and memoranda, to the more complex writing required in dissertations, journal articles, and grant proposals.
£22.50
Columbia University Press The Novelists Lexicon
Book SynopsisTrade ReviewEnlightening and enjoyable. World Literature TodayTable of ContentsForeword Preface A Adumbrated, by Rick Moody Aletherature, by Helene Cixous Amen, by Zeruya Shalev Anonymity, by Colum Mccann Autofiction, by Philippe Vilain Available, by Lyonel Trouillot Awareness of Banality, by Dimitri Verhulst B Balagan, by Etgar Keret The Banana Republic of Letters, by Chloe Delaume Beauty, by Robert Dessaix Bildungsroman, by Upamanyu Chatterjee Breton, by Christophe Honore Bricoleur, by Monika Fagerholm C Catin, by Jacques Henric Chaff, by Ayerdhal Cinderella, by Eric Reinhardt Creature, by Alissa York Cunnilingus, by Rikki Ducornet D Disappointment, by Nelly Arcan Discipline, by Enrique Vila-Matas Dream, by Dany Laferriere E Echappee, by Marie Desplechin Evolution, by Karen Connelly F Faire, by Christine Angot Fille, by Alain Fleischer Furniture, by Jonathan Lethem H Happiness, by Wei-Wei Harmony and Reconciliation, by Hwang Sok-Yong Hedonism, by Adam Thirlwell Heretic, by Andre Brink Honesty, by Peter Stamm I "I", by Rachid El Daif Identities, by Nuruddin Farah Wise Imagination, by Pascal Mercier India, by Tarun J. Tejpal Insomnia, by Ludmila Ulitskaya Island, by Erri De Luca L To Last, by Giuseppe Culicchia Laughter, by Tariq Ali Lies, by Adriaan Van Dis Loyalty, by Duong Thu Huong M Mariquita, by James Canon The Meaning of A Word..., by Kirsty Gunn The Strolling Mirror, by Rodrigo Fresan N No, by Olivia Rosenthal No Why, by Yannick Haenel Nomad, by Elif Shafak The Novel As Web, by A. S. Byatt Novel/Life, by James Meek What Is The Novel?, by Alaa El Aswany Novice, by Nicolas Fargues P Paralipomena, by Lydie Salvayre Pathos, by Alberto Garlini Phantom, by Ying Chen Physical, by Luc Lang Plague, by David Peace (The) Present, by Jean-Yves Cendrey R "Real", by Philippe Forest The Real, by Nicole Malinconi (Holy) Russia, by Genevieve Brisac S A Successful Sentence, by Gila Lustiger Shadow, by Elisabetta Rasy Signed D.C., by Dennis Cooper Silence, by David Albahari The Depopulated Skies, by Thomas Jonigk Suffering, by Fatos Kongoli T Terroir, by Annie Proulx U Un-, by Jonas Hassen Khemiri Unknowable, by Daniel Mendelsohn The Unreal, by Arthur Japin W Waiting/Attention, by Anne Weber Woman, by Benoite Groult The Word Word, by Leslie Kaplan "Words, Words, Words", by Peter Esterhazy Work, by Rafael Chirbes Y Yusuf, by Suhayl Saadi Z Zorby, by James Flint Contributors Index
£13.29
John Wiley & Sons Inc Writing CopyFor Dummies
Book SynopsisTips on writing to consumers and business-to-business Create captivating, results-oriented, sales-generating copy Need to produce winning copy for your business? This fast, fun guide takes you through every step of a successful copywriting project, from direct mail, print ads, and radio spots to Web sites, articles, and press releases. You''ll see how to gather crucial information before you write, build awareness, land sales, and keep customers coming back for more. Discover How To: * Write compelling headlines and body copy * Turn your research into brilliant ideas * Create motivational materials for worthy causes * Fix projects when they go wrong * Land a job as a copywriterTable of ContentsIntroduction 1 Part I: Understanding Copywriting Basics 7 Chapter 1: Writing Copy: Capturing Hearts, Minds, and Money 9 Chapter 2: Marching Ahead with Copywriting Fundamentals 19 Chapter 3: Looking for Ideas: Finding Inspiration through Investigation 39 Part II: Direct Response Writing That Makes the Sale 53 Chapter 4: Working with the Power of Direct Response 55 Chapter 5: Writing Direct Response Letters That Win Business 69 Chapter 6: Creating Direct Response Brochures That Sizzle and Sell 91 Chapter 7: Completing the Direct Response Package 107 Chapter 8: Going It Alone: Self-Mailers, Postcards, Catalogs, and More 127 Chapter 9: Blasting Away with E-Mail 143 Part III: Building Awareness of Your Business 159 Chapter 10: Basic Branding 101 161 Chapter 11: Writing High-Powered Ads for Your Business 173 Chapter 12: Creating Effective Press Releases and Press Kits 191 Chapter 13: Gaining Credibility with Outstanding Articles 211 Part IV: Managing the Sales Support System 229 Chapter 14: Creating Web Sites That Attract and Hold Customers 231 Chapter 15: Crafting Collateral: Using Supporting Materials 247 Chapter 16: Writing to Sell to a Business, Not a Consumer 263 Part V: Looking at Special Copywriting Situations 275 Chapter 17: Raising Money, Getting Votes, and Promoting Health and Education 277 Chapter 18: Solving Problems When Good Copy Goes Wrong 295 Chapter 19: So You Want to Be a Copywriter 309 Part VI: The Part of Tens 328 Chapter 20: Ten Things You Should Always Do Before Writing 329 Chapter 21: Ten Cures for Common Copywriting Problems 335 Chapter 22: Ten Fast Ways to Find Copywriting Inspiration 341 Index 347
£15.19
Copperhill Media Corporation A Comprehensible Guide to Controller Area Network
£14.25
Graywolf Press The Art of Daring: Risk, Restlessness,
Book Synopsis
£12.60
F&W Publications Inc Writing Irresistible Kidlit: The Ultimate Guide
Book Synopsis
£16.14
The University of Chicago Press The Subversive Copy Editor Second Edition
Book SynopsisLongtime manuscript editor and Chicago Manual of Style guru Carol Fisher Saller has negotiated many a standoff between a writer and editor refusing to compromise on the rights and wrongs of prose styling. Saller realized that when these sides squared off, it was often the reader who lost. In her search for practical strategies for keeping the peace, The Subversive Copy Editor was born. Saller's ideas struck a chord, and the little book with big advice quickly became a must-have reference for copy editors everywhere. In this second edition, Saller adds new chapters, on the dangers of allegiance to outdated grammar and style rules and on ways to stay current in language and technology. She expands her advice for writers on formatting manuscripts for publication, on self-editing, and on how not to be difficult. Saller's own gaffes provide firsthand (and sometimes humorous) examples of exactly what not to do. The revised content reflects today's publishing practices while retaining the
£15.00
The University of Chicago Press Bigger Brighter Louder 150 Years of Chicago
Book SynopsisThe first known Chicago Tribune theater review appeared on March 25, 1853. This book showcases early reviews of actors and shows that would go on to achieve phenomenal success, including a tryout of A Raisin in the Sun with newcomer Sidney Poitier and the first major review of The Producers.Trade Review"From Joseph Jefferson as Rip Van Winkle in 1868, to Claudia Cassidy (the notorious critic of the '40s and '50s), to the Goodman Theatre's The Iceman Cometh with Nathan Lane in 2012, Chris Jones writes a rich and rewarding history of Chicago theater. It's a must for any theatergoer." (Roy Leonard) "An invaluable addition to the history of our city." (Roche Schulfer, executive director of Goodman Theatre)"
£24.00
Peace Hill Press Writing With Skill, Level 1: Student Workbook
Book SynopsisThis groundbreaking new writing series combines time-tested classical techniques—the imitation and analysis of great writers—with original composition exercises in history, science, biography, and literature. Skills Taught: • One- and two-level outlining • Writing chronological narratives, biographical sketches, descriptions, and sequences across the curriculum • Constructing basic literary essays on fiction and poetry • Researching and documenting source material • First volume of four that will prepare students for high-level rhetoric and composition Features of the program: • Writing assignments are modeled on examples from great literature and classic nonfiction • All source material for assignments is provided—no other books are needed • This Student Workbook encourages independence by directing all assignments to the student • Instructor Text (sold separately) provides scripted dialogue to use when the student has difficulty, plus detailed guidance on how to evaluate the student’s work • First volume of four that will prepare students for high-level rhetoric and composition
£30.20
American Meteorological Society Eloquent Science – A Practical Guide to Becoming
Book Synopsis"Eloquent Science" evolved from a workshop aimed at offering atmospheric science students formal guidance in communications, tailored for their eventual scientific careers. Drawing on advice from over twenty books and hundreds of other sources, this volume presents informative and often humorous tips for writing scientific journal articles, while also providing a peek behind the curtain into the operations of editorial boards and publishers of major journals. The volume focuses on writing, reviewing, and speaking and is aimed at the domain of the student or scientist at the start of her career. The volume offers tips on poster presentations, media communication, and advice for non-native speakers of English, as well as appendices on proper punctuation usage and commonly misunderstood meteorological concepts. A further reading section at the end of each chapter suggests additional sources for the interested reader, and sidebars written by experts in the field offer diverse viewpoints on reference topics.
£999.99
Taylor & Francis Critical Reading and Writing in the Digital Age
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£39.99
The Institute of Scientific & Technical Communicators Current Practices and Trends in Technical and Professional Communication
£23.28
Silman-James Press,U.S. New Screenwriter Looks At the New Screenwriter
Book Synopsis
£15.29
Cambridge University Press The Biomedical Writer
Book SynopsisCo-authored by a leading ophthalmology researcher and a professor with fifteen years of experience teaching writing in the biomedical sciences, The Biomedical Writer addresses ways to use psychology and neuroscience to equip researchers and clinicians with an understanding of how effects like priming, primacy, recency, framing, and apparent paradoxes can make or break your articles and grant proposals. The Biomedical Writer covers everything from making sentences readable, effective, and memorable to working with collaborators under unforgiving deadlines. Going far beyond the basic structure and content of manuscripts and proposals, this guide to writing in biomedicine also focuses on topics that include handling negative results and the most important and neglected step in submitting manuscripts to journals.Table of Contents1. Writing: the most vital – and neglected – skill; 2. Writing for your reader's brain; 3. Before you begin: getting to so what? and who cares?; 4. Getting published: manuscripts, journals, and submissions; 5. Getting funded: applying for grants; 6. Collaborative writing: pass the baton; 7. Communicating with the public.
£999.99
New Village Press Undoing the Silence
Book Synopsis
£16.14
Broadview Press Ltd Digital Writing: A Guide to Writing for Social
Book SynopsisThis guidebook offers a rhetorical framework for writing and analyzing content for social media and the web. In the age of disinformation and hyper-targeted digital advertising, writers and teachers of writing must be prepared to delve into the digital world with a critical and strategic perspective. This book offers an interdisciplinary approach to writing scenarios with insights from classical and contemporary rhetoric, the philosophy of technology, and digital media theory. Special emphases are also placed on preparing for writing, marketing, and communications careers in the digital space, and on ethical issues related to digital and social media.Trade Review“In Digital Writing, Dan Lawrence skillfully blends ancient rhetorical concepts and contemporary philosophical thought with the pragmatic theories and best practices of the digital age. In this concise, accessible text, Lawrence speaks not only to students who aspire to writing careers, but also to teachers whose pedagogical development necessitates a nuanced understanding of the theories and machinations that underpin the digital world. Lawrence’s experience as a digital practitioner, his skill as a teacher, and the sophistication of his reflections permeate the book and promise to enrich the field of digital writing.” — Karla Saari Kitalong, Professor Emerita, Michigan Technological University“Dan Lawrence sets out to do some impossible things in Digital Writing: to use ancient techniques against modern technologies, and to apply ancient principles to a society that has lost touch with them. Lawrence uses a tried and true historical framework to provide solutions to problems which have become societal and for which we have precious few such helpful guides. Lawrence urges the reader to do the one thing advertisers, marketers, and tech companies do not want them to do, something it is harder and harder to do with each passing microsecond: to stop and think. Digital Writing will open a lot of eyes to the subtle arts of persuasion employed at every turn of the average person’s daily digital life, and will arm them with the resources to be more intentional in their participation and more sophisticated in their response.” — Andrew McLuhan, author of written matter (Revelore Press, 2021)Table of ContentsChapter 1: Introduction to Digital Writing 1.1 Introduction 1.2 What is Digital Writing? 1.3 Rhetorical Framework for Digital Writing 1.4 Rhetoric, Audience, and Technology 1.5 Rhetoric in Application 1.5.1 Ethos 1.5.2 Pathos 1.5.3 Logos 1.6 Procedural Rhetoric 1.7 Careers in Digital Writing 1.8 How to Use This Text 1.9 Exercises Chapter 2: Writing for Social Media 2.1 The Digital Writing Process 2.2 Rhetoric and Social Media 2.3 Emulation 2.4 Interactivity 2.5 House of Language: The Language Game 2.6 What is Social Media? 2.7 Benefits of Social Media 2.8 Social Media in Business 2.9 Global Social Media Usage 2.10 Major Platforms: Facebook, Instagram, Twitter 2.10.1 Facebook 2.10.2 Twitter 2.10.3 Instagram 2.11 Digital Medi and Marketing 2.12 Marketing Departments 2.13 Marketing vs. Advertising 2.14 Conversions 2.15 Case Studies & Applications 2.16 Writing for Facebook 2.17 Writing for Twitter 2.18 Writing for Instagram 2.19 Exercises Chapter 3: Writing for the Web 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Global Internet Access and Usage 3.3 User Behavior and Time Online: What Are People Doing on the Internet? 3.4 Algorithms and the Black Box of Technology 3.5 Ethics, Data, and Privacy 3.6 Searchability/Findability 3.7 Disinformation 3.8 Writing Content for the Web 3.9 Web Traffic 3.10 Blogging 3.11 Search Engine Optimization 3.12 Content Writing 3.13 Landing Pages 3.14 Using Web Building Tools 3.15 Exercises Chapter 4: Digital-Visual Design 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Visual Rhetoric 4.3 Graphic Design 4.4 The Rise of Digital Video 4.5 Digital-Visual Design 4.6 Don’t Be Afraid of Adobe 4.7 YouTube and Video Advertisements 4.8 Aesthetics and Microgenres 4.9 Emergent Technology and the Reality of the Virtual 4.10 Exercises Chapter 5: Digital Writing Jobs 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Articulating Skills and Digital Skills 5.3 Acquiring and Claiming Skills 5.4 Specializations and What Employers Look For 5.5 Applying to Jobs 5.6 Networking and LinkedIn 5.7 The Digital Writer’s Resume 5.8 The Digital Writer’s Cover Letter 5.9 Conclusion5.10 Exercises Appendix Bibliography & Further Reading Pexels Imagery Credits
£25.60
John Wiley & Sons Inc APA Style Citations For Dummies
Book SynopsisWrite right in for scholarly success While world-renowned for the precision and clarity it lends to scholarly writing, keeping track of APA style's exacting standards can be demanding (at times even excruciating!) for initiates and seasoned writers alike. Created and governed by the American Psychological Association, it provides a universal style for formatting, citations, and footnotes in psychological research, behavioral and social science journals, and beyond. Getting up to speed is tough stuff, but once you've got it, your work will have that easy-to-follow scholarly authority that will get high marks from your professors and peers alike. Your friendly, frustration-free guide for this adventure in simplifying APA style is Joe Giampalmi, who has taught more than 100 APA-style composition courses to college students. He takes the pain of following APA style away by breaking it down to its essential elements and focusing on the important stuff students encounter most. You'll work through specific, real-life examples of using APA style for psychology, criminology, business, and nursing papers. In addition to demystifying the intricacies of formatting and citation, APA Style & Citations For Dummies has got you covered in all matters of grammar and punctuationas well as guidance on how APA style can help you negotiate issues around the ethics of authorship and the importance of word choice in reducing bias. Develop conciseness and clarityPay attention to flow, structure, and logic in your writingKnow when, why, how, and what to citeKeep your writing ethically conscious and bias-free Writing in APA style is something that almost all students will need to do at some point: APA Style & Citations For Dummies is a must-have desk reference to know how to win the approval of your professorsand earn the marks you need for success!Table of ContentsIntroduction 1 About This Book 1 Foolish Assumptions 3 Icons Used in This Book 4 Where to Go from Here 4 Part 1: Conforming to Standards: APA and the Academic Environment 5 Chapter 1: Capitalizing on Consistency: APA and the Academic Classroom 7 Understanding APA and Academic Standards 8 Standardizing how you handle topics 10 Respecting the academic environment 10 Comparing APA and MLA 13 Identifying Your Role in Academic Process 15 APA and high school classrooms 16 APA and college courses 17 APA and comp courses 18 APA and content courses 19 APA and online courses 20 Confronting Cultural Differences — APA and Nonnative English Students 21 Seeking a professor who supports language learning 22 Understanding that English isn’t easy 23 Making the transition seamlessly 24 Chapter 2: Updating and Debugging: APA Seventh Edition 27 Transitioning from the Sixth: APA for Today 28 Focusing on the Title Page and Page Organization 29 Running heads 30 Period spacing 30 Levels of headings 30 Font options 30 DOI and URL Formatting 31 Paper length 31 Bold section headings 31 Writing improvement plan 31 Page order 31 Eyeing the Changes with Citations and References 32 Addressing Bias-Free Writing Style and Updated Mechanics 34 Approaching APA Updates: Mindset 35 Student Publishing: Your Goal As a Serious Writer 37 Chapter 3: Understanding Expectations: APA and Discourse Communities 39 Understanding Academic Expectations in College 40 Figuring out what you want to achieve in college 41 Fulfilling your professors’ expectations: Your needs 42 Examining APA Expectations 47 Overcoming Adversity 48 Identifying Discourse Communities You’ll Encounter in College 49 College communities 50 Course communities 52 APA community 53 Graduation community 53 Chapter 4: Protecting Scholarship: Plagiarism 57 Academic Integrity: Get Your Sheepskin 58 Defining academic integrity 58 Looking at the research 59 Plagiarism and Academic Dishonesty: You Know Better 60 Cheating 60 Self-plagiarism 60 Patchwriting 61 Conflicts of interest 61 Unauthorized collaboration 61 Falsification 61 Plagiarism 62 Avoiding Plagiarism: Your Responsibilities 63 Manage your time wisely 63 Advocate academic integrity 64 Identify assignment limitations 64 Detail your research 64 Practice responsible citing 65 Utilize APA feedback resources 65 Steer clear of unreliable strategies 66 Closing Cultural Gaps: APA Strategies for Nonnative English Students 68 Grasping cultural differences in education 68 Utilizing additional APA strategies for non-native English students 69 Part 2: Earning Applause: APA Writing for the Academic Audience 71 Chapter 5: Writing for Success: APA Writing Style 73 Focusing on the Why and How: Audience and Purpose 74 Academic and assignment audience 75 Purpose 76 Zeroing In: Assignment Approach and Focus 77 Approach 78 Focus 79 Smooth Sailing: Transitions and Flow 80 Organizational flow 81 Transition strategies 82 Writing with Attitude: Tone 83 Recalling Sandbox Lessons: Respectful Language 86 Racial and ethnic references 87 Age and disability references 87 Gender and sexual orientation references 88 Socioeconomic references 90 Chapter 6: Creating a Foundation: The Principal Parts of Speech, Structure, and Usage 91 Shining the Spotlight on the Stars of the Show: Action Verbs 92 Using your voice 92 Being in agreement 94 Focusing on tense 95 Avoiding Anonymity: Nouns 96 Designating Replacements: Pronouns 97 Staying in agreement 97 Eyeing APA person preferences 98 Using the singular “they” 99 Building Basics: Structures 99 Sentences and paragraphs 100 Parallelism 101 Reducing Confusion: Problem Pairs 103 Problem pairs 103 Problem pronouns 104 Misplaced description 105 Chapter 7: Navigating Pages: Conventions of Style 107 Marking Cadence: Punctuation 108 End punctuation and spacing 108 Comma 109 Semicolon and colon 109 Dashes and slashes 111 Quotation marks 112 Parentheses, brackets, and ellipses 113 Seeking Attention: Special Conventions 115 Italics 115 Abbreviations 116 Numbers 117 Perfecting Appearance: Spelling 117 Spelling strategies 118 Possessives 119 Foreign forms 120 Hyphenation 120 Standing Tall: Capitalization 122 Proper nouns 123 Titles and headings 124 Chapter 8: Covering All Bases: Three-Level Revising 127 Revising: Why Rewriting Is So Important 129 Seeking feedback when revising 130 Rewriting in action: A real-life example 130 Streamlining: Structural Organization 133 Opening: Working title, first sentence, and introduction 133 Middle 137 Closing 137 Paring: Paragraphs and Sentences 140 Sentence starters 141 Spoken-language wordiness 142 Wordy phrases and clauses 143 Whittling Words 144 Unnecessary and overused words 144 Verb and ly-adverb combinations 147 Superfluous verb endings 148 Chapter 9: Achieving Your Personal Best: Student Improvement Plan 151 Understanding What Makes a College Reader 152 Developing Lifetime Literacy Skills: Reading for Success 154 Reading to learn 154 Improving your reading plan 158 Writing As a Skill for Lifetime Success 162 Developing Lifetime Literacy Skills: Writing for Success 163 Writing to learn 163 Putting together your writing improvement plan 165 Part 3: Practicing Safe Cites: Writing and Citing Sources 169 Chapter 10: Gaining Insight: To Cite or Not to Cite 171 Crediting Sources: General Guidelines 173 Full and partial quotations 174 Block quotations 174 Summarizing and paraphrasing 175 Statistical data within the context of research 176 Terms specific to a field 176 Tables, Internet images, and clip art 176 Facts and figures that aren’t common knowledge 177 Controversial information that contradicts generally accepted truths 177 No citations required 178 Coordinating Citations: Common Elements 178 Citing author-date format 179 Citing repeated narratives 180 Sections of a source 180 Citing an unknown author 181 Citing numerous authors 181 Citing same author, same date 182 Citing authors with the same surname 182 Citing organization authors 182 Addressing Special Approaches: Personal, Authoritative, and Legal 182 Personal communication 183 Academic authorities 183 Legal reference 183 Citing Electronic Sources: Websites, Periodicals, Software, and Visuals 184 Evaluating Sources 185 Determining what makes a reliable source 185 Assessing the quality of the sources cited 186 Chapter 11: Preparing for Conflict: Source Engagement 191 Pre-Gaming: Gathering Sources 192 Rehearsing: Preparing Sources 193 Using signal phrases 195 Summarizing and citing correctly 196 Paraphrasing and citing correctly 197 Quoting and citing correctly 198 Synthesizing: Engaging with Sources 199 Author and source 200 Source and source 201 Source, source, and author 201 Source, source, and source 202 Primary sources as engagement 202 Post-Gaming: Verifying Information 203 Chapter 12: Formatting Last Impressions: Reference List 205 Playing by the Rules: General Guidelines 206 Coordinating Reference Elements: Author, Date, Title, and Source 208 Author 209 Date 210 Title 211 Source 212 Clarifying Elements: Reference Conventions and Abbreviations 213 Punctuating your references 213 Capitalizing references 214 Playing by the Rules: Specifics for Formatting Periodicals 215 Seeing Is Believing: Real-Life Reference Items 216 Books and reference works 217 Edited book Chapters and works in reference books 218 Periodical and journal articles 219 Reports 221 Audiovisual media and works 222 Online media 224 Conferences and presentations 225 Webpages and websites 225 Legal reference 225 Extending References: Annotated Bibliography 226 Part 4: Perfecting Presentation: Beginnings, Endings, and Other Writings 227 Chapter 13: Preparing Appetizers and Desserts: Front and Back Materials 229 Opening Impressions: Formatting Front Matter 230 Previewing your paper: Table of contents 231 Listing figures and tables 232 Focusing on abstracts 234 Including an executive summary 236 Closing Remarks: Formatting Back Matter 238 Wrapping up with appendixes 238 Ending with a glossary 239 Including footnotes and endnotes 241 Chapter 14: Acing a First Impression: Formatting Title Page and Page Layout 243 Naming Writes: Title Page and Titles 244 Recognizing title page elements 245 Strategizing for writing titles 247 Packaging Appearance: Formatting and Organization 249 Page formatting: Consistency is key 249 Page organization: Sequence is essential 251 Chapter 15: Understanding First Year Writing: APA Essays and Reaction Papers 257 Conquering College Comp: Essay Basics 258 Differentiating essays from research writing 258 Identifying the fundamentals of writing an essay 259 Focusing on Essay Structure and Formatting 262 Writing a memorable essay title 263 Starting your essay with a bang 263 Giving the body what it needs: Figurative language 265 Avoiding crash endings 266 Formatting your essay 266 Formatting your essay citations 267 Implementing Essay Variations: Common College Essays 268 Narrative 268 Cause and effect 269 Comparison and contrast 270 Expository 270 Persuasive 271 Descriptive 272 Reading and Responding: Reaction Paper Basics 272 Writing a successful reaction paper 273 Organizing a reaction paper 275 Formatting a reaction paper 276 Chapter 16: Mastering Advanced Writing: APA Review of Literature 279 Reviewing Literature: Searches and Steps 280 Starting the search 281 Focusing on the topic 284 Sequencing the process in four steps 285 Studying Samples: Introduction, Body, and Conclusion 289 Starting with the thesis: The introduction 289 Developing the thesis: The body 289 Ending with significant findings: The conclusion 293 Determining other major sections 295 Laying Out Pages and the Title Page of the APA Literature Review 296 Chapter 17: Perfecting Specialized Writings: APA Reports 299 APA Report Writing: Creating and Organizing 300 Eyeing the purpose and benefits of reports 300 Examining report characteristics 301 Writing Reports in Six Easy-to-Follow Steps 303 Step 1: Plan and focus 304 Step 2: Search for information 305 Step 3: Analyze the information 305 Step 4: Organize major and optional sections 305 Step 5: Write the report 305 Step 6: Revise 307 Adapting APA Formatting to Reports 307 Studying Report Samples: Introduction, Body, and Conclusion 309 Introduction 309 Body 309 Conclusion 311 Organizing Your Report: Other Essential Sections 311 Acknowledgments 311 Glossary 312 Executive summary 312 Transmittal memo 313 Table of contents 313 Methodology 313 Recommendations 314 Appendixes 315 Discussion 315 APA Report Writing: Specializing and Personalizing 316 Business reports 316 Education reports 317 Science reports 317 Periodic reports 317 Sales and marketing reports 317 Proposal reports 317 Feasibility studies 318 Recommendation reports 318 Technical reports 318 Academic reports 318 Project progress reports 319 Field reports 319 Research reports 319 Part 5: The Parts of Ten 321 Chapter 18: Ten Priorities for Proficient Academic Writing 323 Analyze Assignments 323 Focus on Audience and Purpose 324 Begin Assignments with Background Reading 325 Plan Projects 325 Focus on Specific Nouns and Action Verbs 326 Reference Sources Beyond Professors’ Expectations 326 Write Tight and Revise 326 Read and Read Some More 327 Write, Write, and Write 328 Develop a Writer’s Work Ethic 328 Chapter 19: Ten Strategies for Creative Source Engagement 331 Look for Power Language within Sources 332 Think Critically to Analyze Sources 332 Utilize Professors as a Source 333 Extend Conversations 334 Master a Variety of Signal Phrases 334 Use Source Engagement with Every Applicable College Paper 335 Engage Exclusively with Classic Sources 335 Engage with Anecdotes 336 Learn from Sources 337 Turn to Primary Sources 337 Chapter 20: Ten Tips for High-Scoring Research Papers 339 Form a Study Group 339 Peer Up 340 Include a Few Optional Parts 340 Schedule Reviews with Your Writing Center 341 Perfect Your Reference List 342 Select a Local Topic with a Global Application 342 Contact an Expert for an Interview 343 Create Checklists 343 Attend to Details 343 Utilize the Professor’s Office Hours 344 Index 345
£16.19
American Psychological Association Concise Guide to APA Style
Book SynopsisConcise Guide to APA Style, Seventh Edition is the official APA Style resource for students. Written for high school and undergraduate students, instructors, and writers learning APA Style, this easy-to-use pocket guide is adapted from the seventh edition of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association. It provides complete guidance for new writers on effective, clear, and inclusive scholarly communication and the essentials of formatting papers and other course assignments. The seventh edition has been thoroughly revised and updated to reflect best practices in scholarly writing and publishing. Full color throughout Content relevant to a range of majors and courses, including psychology, social work, criminal justice, communications, composition, education, business, engineering, and more New chapter focused on student papers Sample student title page, paper, and annotated biblioTable of Contents1. Student Paper Types, Elements, and FormatGeneral Guidelines for Student Papers 1.1 Application of APA Style to Student Papers 1.2 Student Essays 1.3 Annotated Bibliographies 1.4 Dissertations and Theses 1.5 Student Paper Required ElementsPaper Elements 1.6 Title Page 1.7 Title 1.8 Author Name (Byline) 1.9 Author Affiliation 1.10 Abstract 1.11 Text (Body) 1.12 Reference List 1.13 Footnotes 1.14 AppendicesFormat 1.15 Importance of Format 1.16 Order of Pages 1.17 Page Header 1.18 Font 1.19 Special Characters 1.20 Line Spacing 1.21 Margins 1.22 Paragraph Alignment 1.23 Paragraph Indentation 1.24 Paper LengthOrganization 1.25 Principles of Organization 1.26 Heading Levels 1.27 Section LabelsSample Student Paper 2. Writing Style and GrammarEffective Scholarly Writing 2.1 Continuity and Flow 2.2 Transitions 2.3 Noun Strings 2.4 Conciseness and Clarity 2.5 Wordiness and Redundancy 2.6 Sentence and Paragraph Length 2.7 Tone 2.8 Contractions and Colloquialisms 2.9 Jargon 2.10 Logical Comparisons 2.11 AnthropomorphismGrammar and Usage 2.12 Verb Tense 2.13 Active and Passive Voice 2.14 Mood 2.15 Subject and Verb Agreement 2.16 First- Versus Third-Person Pronouns 2.17 Editorial “We” 2.18 Singular “They” 2.19 Pronouns for People and Animals (“Who” vs. “That”) 2.20 Pronouns as Subjects and Objects (“Who vs. Whom”) 2.21 Pronouns in Restrictive and Nonrestrictive Clauses (“That” vs. “Which”) 2.22 Subordinate Conjunctions 2.23 Misplaced and Dangling Modifiers 2.24 Parallel ConstructionStrategies to Improve Your Writing 2.25 Reading to Learn Through Example 2.26 Writing From an Outline 2.27 Rereading the Draft 2.28 Seeking Help From Fellow Students 2.29 Working With Writing Centers 2.30 Revising a Paper 3. Bias-Free Language GuidelinesGeneral Guidelines for Reducing Bias 3.1 Describe at the Appropriate Level of Specificity 3.2 Be Sensitive to LabelsReducing Bias by Topic 3.3 Age 3.4 Disability 3.5 Gender 3.6 Participation in Research 3.7 Racial and Ethnic Identity 3.8 Sexual Orientation 3.9 Socioeconomic Status 3.10 Intersectionality 4. Punctuation, Lists, and ItalicsPunctuation 4.1 Spacing After Punctuation Marks 4.2 Period 4.3 Comma 4.4 Semicolon 4.5 Colon 4.6 Dash 4.7 Quotation Marks 4.8 Parentheses 4.9 Square Brackets 4.10 SlashLists 4.11 List Guidelines 4.12 Lettered Lists 4.13 Numbered Lists 4.14 Bulleted ListsItalics 4.15 Use of Italics 4.16 Reverse Italics 5. Spelling, Capitalization, and AbbreviationsSpelling 5.1 Preferred Spelling 5.2 HyphenationCapitalization 5.3 Words Beginning a Sentence 5.4 Proper Nouns and Trade Names 5.5 Job Titles and Positions 5.6 Diseases, Disorders, Therapies, Theories, and Related Terms 5.7 Titles of Works and Headings Within Works 5.8 Titles of Tests and Measures 5.9 Nouns Followed by Numerals or Letters 5.10 Names of Conditions or Groups in an Experiment 5.11 Names of Factors, Variables, and EffectsAbbreviations 5.12 Use of Abbreviations 5.13 Definition of Abbreviations 5.14 Format of Abbreviations 5.15 Unit of Measurement Abbreviations 5.16 Time Abbreviations 5.17 Latin Abbreviations 5.18 Chemical Compound Abbreviations 6. Numbers and StatisticsNumbers 6.1 Numbers Expressed in Numerals 6.2 Numbers Expressed in Words 6.3 Combining Numerals and Words to Express Numbers 6.4 Ordinal Numbers 6.5 Decimal Fractions 6.6 Roman Numerals 6.7 Commas in Numbers 6.8 Plurals of NumbersStatistics and Equations 6.9 Presentation of Statistics 6.10 Statistical Symbols and Abbreviations 6.11 Spacing, Alignment, and Punctuation for Statistics 6.12 Presentation of Equations 7. Tables and FiguresGeneral Guidelines for Tables and Figures 7.1 Purpose of Tables and Figures 7.2 Design and Preparation of Tables and Figures 7.3 Graphical Versus Textual Presentation 7.4 Formatting Tables and Figures 7.5 Referring to Tables and Figures in the Text 7.6 Placement of Tables and Figures 7.7 Reprinting or Adapting Tables and FiguresTables 7.8 Principles of Table Construction 7.9 Table Components 7.10 Table Numbers 7.11 Table Titles 7.12 Table Headings 7.13 Table Body 7.14 Table Notes 7.15 Standard Abbreviations in Tables and Figures 7.16 Confidence Intervals in Tables 7.17 Table Borders and Shading 7.18 Long or Wide Tables 7.19 Relation Between Tables 7.20 Table Checklist 7.21 Sample TablesFigures 7.22 Principles of Figure Construction 7.23 Figure Components 7.24 Figure Numbers 7.25 Figure Titles 7.26 Figure Images 7.27 Figure Legends 7.28 Figure Notes 7.29 Relation Between Figures 7.30 Photographs 7.31 Figure Checklist 7.32 Sample Figures8. Works Credited in the TextGeneral Guidelines for Citation 8.1 Appropriate Level of Citation 8.2 Plagiarism 8.3 Self-Plagiarism 8.4 Correspondence Between Reference List and Text 8.5 Use of the Published Version or Archival Version 8.6 Primary and Secondary SourcesWorks Requiring Special Approaches 8.7 Interviews 8.8 Classroom or Intranet Sources 8.9 Personal CommunicationsIn-Text Citations 8.10 Author–Date Citation System 8.11 Parenthetical and Narrative Citations 8.12 Citing Multiple Works 8.13 Citing Specific Parts of a Source 8.14 Unknown or Anonymous Author 8.15 Translated, Reprinted, Republished, and Reissued Dates 8.16 Omitting the Year in Repeated Narrative Citations 8.17 Number of Authors to Include in In-Text Citations 8.18 Avoiding Ambiguity in In-Text Citations 8.19 Works With the Same Author and Same Date 8.20 Authors With the Same Surname 8.21 Abbreviating Group Authors 8.22 General Mentions of Websites, Periodicals, and Common Software and AppsParaphrases and Quotations 8.23 Principles of Paraphrasing 8.24 Long Paraphrases 8.25 Principles of Direct Quotation 8.26 Short Quotations (Fewer Than 40 Words) 8.27 Block Quotations (40 Words or More) 8.28 Direct Quotation of Material Without Page Numbers 8.29 Accuracy of Quotations 8.30 Changes to a Quotation Requiring No Explanation 8.31 Changes to a Quotation Requiring Explanation 8.32 Quotations That Contain Citations to Other Works 8.33 Quotations That Contain Material Already in Quotation Marks 8.34 EpigraphsCopyright and Permission 8.35 General Guidelines for Reprinting or Adapting Materials 8.36 Materials That Require a Copyright Attribution 8.37 Copyright Status 8.38 Permission and Fair Use 8.39 Copyright Attribution Formats 9. Reference ListReference Categories 9.1 Determining the Reference Category 9.2 Using the Webpages and Websites Reference Category 9.3 Online and Print ReferencesPrinciples of Reference List Entries 9.4 Four Elements of a Reference 9.5 Punctuation Within Reference List Entries 9.6 Accuracy and Consistency in ReferencesReference Elements (Author, Date, Title, Source) 9.7 Author Element 9.8 Format of the Author Element 9.9 Spelling and Capitalization of Author Names 9.10 Identification of Specialized Roles 9.11 Group Authors 9.12 No Author 9.13 Date Element 9.14 Format of the Date Element 9.15 Updated or Reviewed Online Works 9.16 Retrieval Dates 9.17 No Date 9.18 Title Element 9.19 Format of the Title Element 9.20 Series and Multivolume Works 9.21 Bracketed Descriptions 9.22 No Title 9.23 Source Element 9.24 Format of the Source Element 9.25 Periodical Sources 9.26 Online Periodicals With Missing Information 9.27 Article Numbers 9.28 Edited Book Chapter and Reference Work Entry Sources 9.29 Publisher Sources 9.30 Database and Archive Sources 9.31 Works With Specific Locations 9.32 Social Media Sources 9.33 Website Sources 9.34 When to Include DOIs and URLs 9.35 Format of DOIs and URLs 9.36 DOI or URL Shorteners 9.37 No SourceReference Variations 9.38 Works in Another Language 9.39 Translated Works 9.40 Reprinted, Republished, or Reissued Works 9.41 Religious and Classical WorksReference List Format and Order 9.42 Format of the Reference List 9.43 Order of Works in the Reference List 9.44 Order of Surname and Given Name 9.45 Order of Multiple Works by the Same First Author 9.46 Order of Works With the Same Author and Same Date 9.47 Order of Works by First Authors With the Same Surname 9.48 Order of Works With No Author or an Anonymous Author 9.49 Abbreviations in References 10. Reference ExamplesAuthor VariationsDate VariationsTitle VariationsSource VariationsTextual Works 10.1 Periodicals 10.2 Books and Reference Works 10.3 Edited Book Chapters and Entries in Reference Works 10.4 Reports and Gray Literature 10.5 Dissertations and Theses 10.6 Reviews 10.7 Informally Published Works Software and Tests 10.8 Computer Software and Mobile Apps 10.9 Tests, Scales, and Inventories Audiovisual Media 10.10 Audiovisual Works 10.11 Audio Works 10.12 Visual Works Online Media 10.13 Social Media 10.14 Webpages and Websites Legal References 10.15 Cases or Court Decisions 10.16 Statutes (Laws and Acts) 10.17 Constitutions and Charters 10.18 Treaties and International Conventions
£30.56
Berlinica Publishing LLC Berlin! Berlin!
£15.71
WW Norton & Co Little Seagull Handbook with Exercises
Book SynopsisWrite. Research. Edit. Everything students need in an affordable handbook they truly use.
£24.70
Legare Street Press Thomas Mann gesammelte Werke
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£29.40
Taylor & Francis Ltd How to Read Economic News
Book SynopsisClosely examining how the news media reports economic and financial matters, this book equips students with solid methodological skills for reading and interpreting the news alongside a toolkit for best practice as an economic journalist. How to Read Economic News combines theory and practice to explore the discourse surrounding economics in the mass media and how this specialised form of reporting can be improved. Beginning by introducing major concepts such as financialised economic reporting, media amnesia and loss of trust, the book goes on to help students to interpret, understand and analyse existing news discourse and to identify subtle biases in news reports stemming from hegemonic belief systems. The final section puts this analytical knowledge into practice, providing students with methods for the critical production of news and covering such skills as identifying newsworthiness, story sourcing, achieving clarity, and using complex datasets in news stories. <Table of ContentsList of Figures List of Tables List of ContributorsChapter 1: Introduction – How to Read Economic NewsHenry SilkeFergal QuinnMaria Rieder Part I: Connecting economic theory, ideology and journalismChapter 2: Economic Imaginaries, Economics Theories And The Role Of Economic Journalism Hendrik TheineChapter 3: What can journalism learn from Heterodox EconomicsAndrea GrisoldChapter 4: Ideology, Economics and JournalismHenry SilkeChapter 5: Journalism Studies and Crises: Economic, Environmental and Political - Towards a political Economic Approach.Paschal PrestonPart II: Methodological approaches for evaluation of economy-related media outputChapter 6: Using Content Analysis to study Economic JournalismFergal QuinnMuireann PrendergastChapter 7: Analysing Economic News Sources: Who gets to speak? Henry SilkeChapter 8: Corpus Linguistics and Economic Media researchBrian ClancyElaine VaughanChapter 9: Breaking Down the Discourse, Exposing Power in Economic Journalism – Critical Discourse AnalysisMaria RiederHendrik TheineChapter 10: Deconstructing Economic Discourses on Broadcast NewsCiara GrahamBrendan O’RourkeChapter 11: Deconstructing Discourse: Applying Interview Research in the Economic NewsroomSophie KnowlesNadine StraußChapter 12: Researching Audiences: Understanding how economic news is receivedMike BerryPart III: News production: Best practices for investigating economic and business stories Chapter 13: Making sense of economic dataDonal PalcicDarragh FlanneryChapter 14: Economic news approachesAudrey GalvinBrian HurleyChapter 15: Where theory meets practice - tips for BETTER economic journalism Fergal QuinnMaria RiederHenry SilkeIndex
£34.19
LEGARE STREET PR The Writing of the Short Story
£14.09
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group Artful
Book SynopsisAli Smith melds the tale and the essay into a magical hybrid form, a song of praise to the power of stories in our livesIn February 2012, the novelist Ali Smith delivered the Weidenfeld lectures on European comparative literature at St. Anne’s College, Oxford. Her lectures took the shape of this set of discursive stories. Refusing to be tied down to either fiction or the essay form, Artful is narrated by a character who is haunted—literally—by a former lover, the writer of a series of lectures about art and literature. A hypnotic dialogue unfolds, a duet between and a meditation on art and storytelling, a book about love, grief, memory, and revitalization. Smith’s heady powers as a fiction writer harmonize with her keen perceptions as a reader and critic to form a living thing that reminds us that life and art are never separate. Artful is a book about the things art can do, the things art is full of, and the quicksilver nature of all artfulness. It glances off artists and writers from Michelangelo through Dickens, then all the way past postmodernity, exploring every form, from ancient cave painting to 1960s cinema musicals. This kaleidoscope opens up new, inventive, elastic insights—on the relation of aesthetic form to the human mind, the ways we build our minds from stories, the bridges art builds between us. Artful is a celebration of literature’s worth in and to the world and a meaningful contribution to that worth in itself. There has never been a book quite like it.
£17.00
Useful Books Ltd Write Useful Books: A modern approach to designing and refining recommendable nonfiction
£14.25
Taylor & Francis Ltd FirstPerson Journalism
Book Synopsis A first-of-its-kind guide for new media times, this book provides practical, step-by-step instructions for writing first-person features, essays, and digital content. Combining journalism techniques with self-exploration and personal storytelling, First-Person Journalism is designed to help writers to develop their personal voice and establish a narrative stance. The book introduces nine elements of first-person journalismpassion, self-reporting, stance, observation, attribution, counterpoints, time travel, the mix, and impact. Two introductory chapters define first-person journalism and its value in building trust with a public now skeptical of traditional news media. The nine practice chapters that follow each focus on one first-person element, presenting a sequence of voice lessons with a culminating writing assignment, such as a personal trend story or an open letter. Examples are drawn from diverse nonfiction writers and journalTable of ContentsContentsPreface: Personal Journalism for Challenging Times PART ONE: What Is First-Person Journalism?Chapter 1: How I Became a First-Person Journalist Defining first-person journalism Permission to say "I" Is it ever too personal? Self-reporting: "What do I know?" How to use this book Why gonzo got it wrong—and right Chapter 2: The Ethics of Personal Reporting He said, she said The limits of objectivity Liars, thieves, and postmodernists Fictional selves versus true selves Embracing the active "I" PART TWO: Developing an Active "I" Voice Chapter 3: Locating Your Passion: What do I want to write about? Don’t bore yourself Don’t perform your emotions Don’t scream at readers Cultivating curiosity: passion for facts Responding to the world Personal story: write about a "wart" Chapter 4: Investigating Yourself: How do I know my own story is true? Why memories are not facts Fact checking the basics Fact checking with family and friends Reporting on your "I" Reporting on what you haven’t said Admitting what you’ll never know Memory essay: write about an early memory Sample story: "Hurricane Warnings" Chapter 5: Establishing Your Stance: How close am I to the story? From POV to first-person stance Determining your emotional distance Personal example: reining in myself Addressing readers: five stances Rethinking voice: active response Review: your personal take on a media work PART THREE: Reporting Beyond the SelfChapter 6: Observing Real Life: How do I describe people and places? Relevance versus vagueness Three kinds of details Conveying the feel of a place Reporting what people do and say Direct reporting of events The art of capsule description Local profile: write about a neighborhood place Chapter 7: Attributing Sources: Where do my facts come from? What is attribution? Sources in first-person features Attribution tags and linking Danger! Avoid voice hijacks The curse of knowledge How-to piece: explain with three tips Chapter 8: Convincing Readers: What’s my argument and who disagrees? The curse of unconscious feeling Point-counterpoint Not all experts are the same Establishing first-person authority Open letter: address a public figure or topic PART FOUR: Storytelling to Make an ImpactChapter 9: Moving Through Time: How have I and the world changed? Sequence: what comes first? Chronology: orienting readers in time Time machine: shifting between past and present selves Trends: personal and cultural Personal trend story: write about changes in food, music, or weather Chapter 10: Organizing a Story: How do I mix everything together? What’s in the mix? Classic feature formula: lead + nut graf Scene breaks and dramatic tension Essays: emotional journeys New mix: feature or essay? Sample outline: "Why I’ll Never Surf Again" Chapter 11: Revising for Impact: What do I really want to say? Test your idea: pitching Focus your idea: taglines Focus your voice: cutting and selecting Connect to the world: your impact Story revision: complete a feature or essay Impact Plan: how do you know? End Note: Witnessing the World with Empathy25 Rules for First-Person JournalismIndex
£34.99
Broadview Press Ltd The Broadview Pocket Guide to Citation and
Book SynopsisCompact and convenient, The Broadview Pocket Guide to Citation and Documentation, Third Edition includes information on MLA, APA, Chicago, and CSE styles of citation and documentation. Based on the “Documentation” chapter in the acclaimed Broadview Guide to Writing, this volume has been expanded with additional examples and has been fully updated to cover recent changes such as the 2020 APA and 2021 MLA updates.The book discusses summary and paraphrase as well as direct quotation, and it includes an extensive treatment of how to integrate quoted material into the text of an academic paper. There is coverage, too, of what constitutes plagiarism—and of how to avoid it.Trade ReviewCOMMENTS ON THE SECOND EDITION "This is an extraordinarily useful, usable, and affordable reference and supplement for students, writers, and editors. More and more, professionals and students are being called upon to document materials in varying styles, especially in MLA, Chicago, and APA, and this guide offers a convenient and clear reference for the most oft employed styles. In particular, the MLA update is extremely welcome given the guide's inclusion of the new approach to documenting in MLA as well as multiple specific examples of both traditional sources (like print books and academic journal articles) and more recent source types (such as graphic narratives, tweets, and online video). I was particularly impressed with the entries that provided different examples for sources based on the access or presentation model for the source, such as an interview published in print in a newspaper versus an interview accessed via an online video posting." - Brian Gastle, Western Carolina University"The Broadview Pocket Guide [to Citation and Documentation] is an efficient and effective tool for all kinds of learners in all academic disciplines and successfully demonstrates the most-used citation styles of the academic curriculum. The Pocket Guide is particularly insightful in terms of defining and avoiding plagiarism with real-world examples of its professional and academic consequences. Its multiple-view approach includes descriptions, examples, and online links which accommodates all student learning styles. Especially welcome are its practical elements-charts of signal phrases, citation tables that help use the new MLA style, bullet points at the end of each section which highlight the most significant elements of each style, and sample essays-all of which provide quick and easy access for students as they write and edit academic papers." - Aleksondra Hultquist, Stockton University"The second edition of Broadview's Guide to Citation and Documentation incorporates everything you need for referencing across style guides into one efficient handbook. The editors include recent changes adopted by the MLA and provide citation information for an expanded variety of digital and live media, from online videos to entries in a wiki. Much appreciated is the extended section on plagiarism, which clearly explains when, and not just how, to cite quoted material-indispensable for students at all levels of research." - Tabitha Sparks, McGill UniversityTable of Contents Documentation and Research Avoiding Plagiarism-and Choosing When and What to Quote Citation and Documentation Incorporating Sources Summarizing Paraphrasing Quoting Directly Formatting Quotations Short Prose Quotations Long Prose Quotations Verse Quotations Quotations within Quotations Adding to or Deleting from a Quotation Using square brackets to add to a quotation Using an ellipsis to delete from a quotation Integrating Quotations Avoiding 'dumped' quotations Signal Phrases MLA Style About In-Text Citations in-text citations no signal phrase placing of in-text citations in-text citation when text is in parentheses page number unavailable one page or less multiple authors corporate author more than one work by the same author cited multi-volume works two or more authors with the same last name indirect quotations short poems longer poems novels or short stories plays works without page numbers sacred texts works in an anthology or book of readings tweets About Works Cited MLA Core Elements Author Title of Source Title of Container Other Contributers Version Number Publisher Publication Date Location MLA Optional Elements Date Of Original Publication City of Publication Books in a Series Unexpected Type of Work Date of Access Examples single author two authors three of more authors corporate author, no author identified works with an anonymous author two or more works by the same author works under a pseudonym edited works works in translation selections from anthologies or collections of readings cross-references for works from the same collection or anthology multi-volume works different editions republished sources reference work entries works with a title in the title material from prefaces, introductions magazine articles newspaper articles journal articles book reviews periodical publications in online databases illustrated books graphic narratives films or television episodes online videos radio broadcasts podcasts recorded music live performances works of visual art interviews online projects e-books information databases entry in a wiki blog post e-mail message tweet comment posted on a webpage MLA Style Sample APA Style Incorporated Sources in APA Style Summarizing Paraphrasing Quoting Directly Formating Quotations Short Quotations Long Quotations Quotations within Quotations Adding to or Deleting from a Quotation Using square brackets to add to a quotation Using an ellipsis to delete from a quotation Integrating Quotations Avoiding 'dumped' quotations Signal Phrases About In-text Citations in-text citation no signal phrase (or author not named in a signal phrase) titles of stand-alone works titles of articles and chapters of books placing of in-text citations citations when text is in parentheses electronic source-page number unavailable two or more dates for a work multiple authors corporate author author not given date not given two or more works in the same citation two or more authors with the same last name works in a collection of readings or anthology indirect source private and personal communications About References book with single author two to seven authors more than seven authors corporate author works with unknown author two or more works by the same author edited works works with an author and a translator selections from anthologies or collections of readings electronic version of a print book journal articles abstract of a journal article magazine articles newspaper articles book reviews reference work entries films and video recordings episodes from television series podcasts music recordings interviews documents on a website blog posts entries in a wiki tweets other Web references maps or charts APA Style Sample Chicago Style About Chicago Style notes titles: italics/quotation marks multiple references to the same work page number or date unavailable two or more dates for a work two or three authors four or more authors author unknown/corporate author/government document works from a collection of readings or anthology indirect source two or more works by the same author edited works translated works e-books magazine articles newspaper articles journal articles films and video recordings television broadcasts sound recordings interviews and personal communications book reviews blog posts websites online videos tweets Chicago Style Sample CSE Style In-text Citation List of References CSE Style Sample Sample Essay (MLA Style) Sample Essay (APA Style)
£16.10
NewSouth Publishing Level Up Your Essays: How to get better grades at
Book SynopsisLevel Up Your Essays is the essential guide to essay writing for university students. Written by the people who mark your essays, it will show you step-by-step how to write high quality essays that will get you top marks.This book will guide you through all the stages including your essay plan, developing research strategies, writing with distinction, and getting your editing and referencing right every time. Bursting with insider tips and tricks on what markers look for, this clear and easy-to-use guide includes: Over 20 worksheets with exercises and checklists The secret formula for a good essay (yes, there is a formula!) Practical knowledge on digital tools to help you with research, writingand referencing Guidelines for writing in academic English Common mistakes and missteps and how to fix them Straightforward information for international students Successful time management strategies so you never hand in an essaylateNo matter what grades you get now, this book you will revolutionise your essay writing – and get you the marks to prove it.
£14.20
LID Publishing The Storytelling Workbook: A nine-week programme
Book SynopsisThe Storytelling Workbook is a nine-week programme (based on Anthony Tasgal's 'rule of three') to help you learn to better tell your own narrative and present your story whether it be for your CV, your dating apps or your own personal writing. It is an entertaining, instructive and interactive guide to becoming a better storyteller across all facets of your personal and professional life. Including a mix of case studies, advice and exercises, this workbook is structured into three sections: before, during and after. In the before section, you will learn to free yourself from reductionism, obsession with numbers, facts, data and 'messaging'; in the during section, you will concentrate on finding simplicity, meaning and depth; while finally, in after, you will come to understand how to write less and think more and ultimately to keep writing again and again.
£12.56
Open University Press The Handbook of Academic Writing A Fresh Approach
Book SynopsisThe Handbook of Academic Writing offers practical advice to busy academics who want, and are often required, to integrate writing into their working lives. It defines what academic writing is, and the process of getting started through to completion, covering topics such as: Gaining momentum Reviewing and revising Self-discipline Writing regularly Writers' groups and retreats Academic writing is one of the most demanding tasks that all academics and researchers face. In some disciplines there is guidance on what is needed to be productive, successful writers; but in other disciplines there is no training, support or mentoring of any kind. This book helps those in both groups not only to improve their writing skills and strategies, but, equally importantly, to find satisfaction in engaging in regular and productive writing. Underpinned by a diverse range of literature, this book addresses the different dimensions of writing. The fresh approach that MurraTable of ContentsAcknowledgementsPrefacePart I Defining and understanding academic writing Advancing your writing: Starting, gaining momentum and engaging creatively in the academic writing process Retreating: Reviewing, revising, crafting and enhancing your writing Disciplinarity in academic writing Part II Retreating to advance: Planning, running and participating in writers' retreats for academics A writing for publication programme Writers' groups Part III Redefining academic writing practices Integrating writing into your life Using writing to reconcile teaching-research tensions. Advancing and retreating: The essential dynamic of academic writing BibliographyIndex
£21.84
American Psychological Association Reporting Quantitative Research in Psychology
Book Synopsis This updated edition offers practical guidance for understanding and implementing APA Style Journal Article Reporting Standards and Meta‑Analysis Reporting Standards for quantitative research. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Chapter 1. Reporting Standards for Research in Psychology: Why Do We Need Them? What Might They Be? Chapter 2. Setting the Stage: Title Page, Abstract, and Introduction Chapter 3. Detailing What You Did: The Method Section Chapter 4. Describing Your Research Design: Studies With and Without Experimental Manipulations Chapter 5. Summarizing Your Data and Statistical Analyses: The Results Section Chapter 6. Reporting Other Design Features: Longitudinal Studies, Replication Studies, Studies With One Subject, and Clinical Trials Chapter 7. Interpreting Your Results: The Discussion Section Chapter 8. Reporting Research Syntheses and Meta-Analyses Chapter 9. How the Journal Article Reporting Standards and the Meta-Analysis Reporting Standards Came to Be and Can Be Used in the Future Appendix. Abstracts of the 16 Articles Used as Examples in Text References Index About the Author
£32.00
HarperCollins Publishers AQA GCSE 91 English Language Writing Papers 1 2 Revision Guide
£999.99
Oxford University Press, Canada Writing English
Book SynopsisCrafting a piece of writing, for any variety of rhetorical purposes, requires a fundamental understanding of English. Offering unparalleled guidance to the intricacies of the language, Writing English: The Canadian Handbook is an essential tool for writers, students, business people, and anyone who works with the written word in Canada.In a single volume, this guidebook explains basic rules of grammar, spelling, punctuation, and style; how to write comprehensive sentences and organize paragraphs; how to document your work and avoid plagiarism; and much more. The first chapters offer a detailed overview of the conventions of language and parts of speech, giving readers a strong foundation on which to build. Particularly useful is a section devoted to persuasive writing, including advice on developing an argument and using logical reasoning. Filled with numerous Canadian examples to illuminate and clarify, Writing English: The Canadian Handbook is the ultimate authority on Canadian English from the country''s reference publisher.Trade Review"While comprehensive, Writing English provides advice for a wide array of writers that is flexible and alert to context." --Margery Fee, author of the Guide to Canadian English UsageTable of ContentsPreface ; 1. Understanding Sentences ; 2. Parts of Speech ; 3. Writing Strong Sentences ; 4. Punctuation ; 5. Mechanics and Spelling ; 6. Diction ; 7. Principles of Composition ; 8. Research and Writing ; Appendix A: Reference Sources ; Index
£999.99
Taylor & Francis Ltd Legal Writing
Book SynopsisLegal Writing guides students comprehensively through this vital legal skill and addresses a range of assessment methods from exam questions to final essays and problem answers. It considers how to deconstruct essay and problem questions and how to conduct and apply legal research to answer set questions.Lisa Webley explains how to reference others' work clearly and correctly, making this book a useful tool for students concerned about issues of plagiarism. Legal Writing also focuses on how to develop critical thinking and communicate legal arguments, with both good and bad examples of written work considered and discussed in the text. Legal Writing is particularly useful for undergraduate students, especially at the beginning of degree studies, as well as for those preparing for the SQE exams. This fully revised fifth edition includes: Guidance on how to avoid plagiarism, including examples of the best and worst practices WorkTable of ContentsAn Introduction to Legal Writing 1. How to Do Well in Assessments 2. Answering Problem Questions 3. Essay Writing 4. Writing Extended Essays and Dissertations 5. How to Apply Research Findings in Your Writing 6. Correct Referencing 7. Completing, Polishing and Presenting Your Work 8. How to Prepare for Exams 9. Using Feedback to Improve Performance Answers to Questions
£35.99
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Report Writing
Book SynopsisPractical and concise, this is the essential guide to writing effective reports. It shows students how to tailor report structures and conventions to different audiences and purposes and how to manage changes in format and requirements, so that they have the tools and understanding to write reports with confidence. It includes real-life examples of student reports to illustrate the features of good report writing, and a comprehensive checklist to keep students on track. This is an invaluable resource for students of all levels who are required to write reports as part of their course. New to this Edition:- Contains a new section on demonstrating critical analysis in the key parts of a report, including the literature review, methodology and findings- Additional guidance on effective writing styleTable of ContentsAcknowledgements Introduction The Purpose of Reports Gathering Your Information Structuring Your Report Business Plans, Project Proposals and Dissertations Presenting Your Findings Demonstrating Critical Thinking in Reports Writing Concisely Report Writing at Work References Useful Sources Index.
£10.13
The Dundurn Group The Feisty Freelancer
Book SynopsisBuild your writing business into a thriving and satisfying career.Are you a feisty, creative person? Independent, ideas-driven, and ready to work hard for the lifestyle you deserve? If so, you may be a feisty freelancer. Freelancing is not for the faint of heart, but it offers many rewards: control over your own schedule, the opportunity to choose projects that excite you, and the potential to build a satisfying business and lifestyle. Whether you're a new writer or transitioning to freelance, this book will guide you through the practicalities of setting up a business, developing an online presence, finding clients, and creating a solid plan for success. You'll even hear from other freelancers in enlightening Q&As.Your leader through this journey is the original self-proclaimed feisty freelancer, Suzanne Bowness, who brings over twenty years of experience as a freelancer, plus fifteen years of teaching writing courses, and unlimited amounts of unsolicited ad
£999.99
Springer International Publishing AG English for Academic Research Vocabulary
Book SynopsisThis book is based on a study of referees' reports and letters from journal editors on reasons why papers written by non-native researchers are rejected due to problems with English (long sentences, redundancy, poor structure etc.). It draws on English-related errors from around 5000 papers written by non-native authors, around 3000 emails, 500 abstracts by PhD students, and over 1500 hours of teaching researchers how to write and present research papers.The exercises are organized into thirteen chapters on: adjectives and adverbs (e.g.actualvscurrent,differentvsseveral,continuallyvscontinuously), link words (e.g.on the contraryvson the other hand,despitevsnevertheless), nouns (e.g.dangervshazard,measurevsmeasurement), prepositions (e.g.amongvsbetween,invsinto,withvswithin), verbs (e.g.checkvscontrol,composevscomprise,arisevsraise,excludevsruleout), false friends and synonyms, spelling, useful phrases, inclusive vocabulary, emails, using Large Language Models for correcting, paraphrasi
£17.09
BS Publications Soft Skills: Essential Key for Corporate
Book Synopsis
£999.99
Open University Press How to Write Well A Guide for Health and Social
Book SynopsisGood writing skills are essential for study, but many students find that they struggle to write well. Written especially for health and social care students, this book demystifies academic writing, giving you a better understanding of what good writing looks like, and how to achieve it.Topics covered in this accessible book include: How to plan and write pieces to deadlines How to copyedit and proofread your own work How to develop good writing behaviours and find motivation How to write effective and safe service user records This user-friendly guide includes examples of good and bad writing, activities to work through, handy hints and tips at the end of each chapter and personal experiences from students, making it a must-read for any health and social care students looking for the skills and confidence to master good academic writing. Contributors: Michael Baksh, Amanda Clarke, Elizabeth Cooper, James Greaves, Dasha Koneva, Jane Quigley, VictoTable of ContentsChapter 1: IntroductionChapter 2: Preparing to Write Chapter 3: Basic Writing and Essay Planning Skills Chapter 4: Advancing Your Writing Skills Chapter 5: What is reflective writing? Chapter 6: Writing for Practice Chapter 7: Presenting your writing in different formats Chapter 8: Students’ experiences of writing Chapter 9: Eight Simple Rules for Writing in Health and Social Care
£19.94
Open University Press Succeeding with Your University Essay
Book SynopsisLearn the craft of writing a high-quality, high-mark university essay with this step-by-step guide. Suitable for all students â from making the transition to university study that much easier to refining your technique for the final year â this accessible and concise book leads you through the complete essay-writing process in five straightforward steps. The book is packed with best practice tips, common student mistakes (and how to avoid them!), and practical templates that have been designed to help you write your university essays. You will discover new techniques for deconstructing essay questions, like GALA; a complete Harvard Referencing catalogue, showing you how to properly record sources and references; and a generic essay template to help you cover everything necessary for those top marks. Once you read this book, you will never have to ask the following questions â because you will know the answers:â What is this question askiTable of ContentsPART 1 GRASPING THE BASICS: FROM LANGUAGE TO LEARNING1 The language that you use: The formal stuff2 The language that you use: The fancy stuff3 Give credit where credit is due4 The hierarchy of essay questions PART 2 PLANNING AND BUILDING A GOOD UNIVERSITY ESSAY 5 Step 1: Deconstruct the essay question6 Step 2: Create a roadmap7 Step 3: Introduce your essay8 Step 4: Write the main body9 Step 5: Conclude your essayPART 3 LEARNING FROM EXPERIENCE 10 Feedback11 Summary essay template of good practice
£17.09
Open University Press The Pocketbook Guide to Report Writing
Book SynopsisDaisy Bogg is a qualified and HCPC-registered social worker who has worked within mental health and addiction services for over 20 years, for the NHS, local authorities and voluntary sector organisations.***Report writing is a key skill for social work and one in which many practitioners receive little formal training or preparation. Fully revised and updated, the new edition of this handy pocketbook for social workers provides key advice for busy practitioners to help them to write clear, professional and well-structured reports. This includes practical advice, hints and tips to improve your report writing and ensure you adhere to best practice in your written communications.Social workers will find this guide invaluable for creating high-quality reports for a range of common situations. This useful book includes:â A range of report templates for a variety of situations, practice contexts Table of Contents1. Report Writing: An Introduction 2. Good Practice in Report Writing3. Report writing with adults 4. Report writing with children Further reading and resources References Appendix 1: Example generic adult report template Appendix 2: Social circumstances reports - Practice Directions Appendix 3: Mental Health Act assessment: suggested report template Appendix 4: Safeguarding adults: suggested report template Appendix 5: Case conferences: suggested report template Appendix 6: Example PLO Letter Appendix 7: Children’s Social Care Report: suggested template Appendix 8: Schedule 3, Regulation 27, Fostering Services Regulations 2002 Appendix 9: Form F report template
£15.19
IFD Publishing How to Write a Sizzling Sex Scene
Book Synopsis
£8.50
Cambridge University Press The Handbook of Journal Publishing
Book SynopsisThe Handbook of Journal Publishing is a comprehensive reference work written by experienced professionals, covering all aspects of journal publishing, both online and in print. Journals are crucial to scholarly communication, but changes in recent years in the way journals are produced, financed, and used make this an especially turbulent and challenging time for journal publishers - and for authors, readers, and librarians. The Handbook offers a thorough guide to the journal publishing process, from editing and production through marketing, sales, and fulfilment, with chapters on management, finances, metrics, copyright, and ethical issues. It provides a wealth of practical tools, including checklists, sample documents, worked examples, alternative scenarios, and extensive lists of resources, which readers can use in their day-to-day work. Between them, the authors have been involved in every aspect of journal publishing over several decades and bring to the text their experience workTrade Review'I [am] struck by how up to date this book feels - thanks in part to a chapter about the future of journal publishing … I have no hesitation in recommending [The] Handbook of Journal Publishing as the best single resource I know on the subject. I learnt much from reading it.' Anthony Hayes'The advice is clearly grounded in hard-won experience and much of it benefits from being actual, attributed examples from real publishers … what we have here is a hard-working, no-nonsense sort of a colleague.' Mark Ware, Learned Publishing'… a comprehensive reference guide written by four knowledgeable authors. It covers all aspects of contemporary journal publishing for both online and print titles … the book provides solid information that will guide all editors through best practices in this often-overlooked part of the publishing industry … Essential. Graduate students, researchers, and professionals/practitioners.' J. Rodzvilla, Choice'… a thorough, easy-to-read guide that will help readers quickly get up to speed both on important events and hot button issues in the history of journal publishing, and equip them to jump into running existing titles, or launching new projects.' Journal of Electronic PublishingTable of ContentsPreface and acknowledgements; 1. Introduction to journals; 2. Managing journals; 3. Editing; 4. The production process; 5. Journal metrics; 6. Marketing and sales; 7. Fulfilment; 8. Journal finances; 9. Subsidiary income; 10. Contract publishing; 11. Copyright and other legal aspects; 12. Ethical issues; 13. The future of scholarly communication; Appendix 1: glossary; Appendix 2: resources; Appendix 3: vendors.
£25.64
Cambridge University Press En Contexto
Book SynopsisWritten entirely in Spanish by instructors with years of experience, this textbook is a comprehensive guide to essay writing in Spanish. It provides advanced students of Spanish with the necessary tools to write fluently and effectively, both developing their reading, writing and critical thinking skills, and teaching them to practically analyse the rules of spelling, punctuation and grammar. It is organised into six chapters, progressing in level and complexity, which take students step-by-step through the writing process. Each chapter contains a number of features such as lists of new vocabulary, assessment checklists, questionnaires, and activities based on writing samples. It also includes an accompanying web resource, which features additional exercises for students, and a lesson plan and downloadable PowerPoint presentations for teachers. By drawing on the principles of grammar, this essential resource will help students become proficient writers, across a range of textual genresTable of Contents1. Alfabetización digital; 2. Escritores optimistas; 3. El consumo en la era digital; 4. Emanciparse en tiempos de crisis; 5. El reto de afrontar la crisis climática; 6. La publicación científica bajo la lupa.
£75.99
Cambridge University Press En Contexto
Book SynopsisWritten entirely in Spanish by instructors with years of experience, this textbook is a comprehensive guide to essay writing in Spanish. It provides advanced students of Spanish with the necessary tools to write fluently and effectively, both developing their reading, writing and critical thinking skills, and teaching them to practically analyse the rules of spelling, punctuation and grammar. It is organised into six chapters, progressing in level and complexity, which take students step-by-step through the writing process. Each chapter contains a number of features such as lists of new vocabulary, assessment checklists, questionnaires, and activities based on writing samples. It also includes an accompanying web resource, which features additional exercises for students, and a lesson plan and downloadable PowerPoint presentations for teachers. By drawing on the principles of grammar, this essential resource will help students become proficient writers, across a range of textual genresTable of Contents1. Alfabetización digital; 2. Escritores optimistas; 3. El consumo en la era digital; 4. Emanciparse en tiempos de crisis; 5. El reto de afrontar la crisis climática; 6. La publicación científica bajo la lupa.
£27.99