
What kind of help do you need?
You have done most of the work. You have had feedback from your supervisor and have read over your work endless times. What do you need to do before you finally submit your work for assessment, your journal article for review, or your paper or proposal for acceptance?
These three final stages can be surprisingly time consuming, and difficult to complete successfully without an 'extra pair of eyes', able to spot any errors and inconsistencies you have missed.
Where are you in the process and how can I help you?
After years of work, long nights and missed vacations, it is almost time to submit your PhD or Masters research findings, or that journal article for peer review. Copy-editing is your first stop on the road to finally completing your thesis, dissertation or research paper.
You’ve finished a full draft of your PhD thesis or article and you are generally happy with the content. Now you need to go back through your work to check the clarity of your argument and the consistency of your language, to correct any errors in spelling, grammar, punctuation, vocabulary choices, academic conventions, referencing, and so on.
Finding errors in your own writing is surprisingly difficult. Errors are difficult to see as your writing is so familiar to you that your eyes no longer see it clearly. That is where an experienced copy-editor can help.
What is a copy-editor looking for?
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Clarity of the argument: this includes structure, logic, and spotting gaps, overlaps and inconsistencies
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Academic tone: checking that the tone of voice is appropriate, and that terms are consistently and correctly used
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Grammar and punctuation: spotting grammar and usage errors, or inconsistencies that may impact meaning and clarity
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Language refinement: checking nuance, expressions of certainty and for unnecessary wordiness
As a professional copy-editor, I can review your writing and suggest the changes that will increase readability and academic credibility.
If English is not your first language, professional academic editing can really help ensure your research is understood and evaluated on its true merits.
This stage on the road to final submission is potentially frustrating and can be very time consuming. It requires great attention to detail and often some serious word processing skills, working with inbuilt styles and chaptering.
Examiners and academic peers want evidence that you have earned your place in their community. Part of this is proving you have complied with the often highly detailed requirements of formatting, referencing and layout that characterise credible research.
Your institution, journal, or conference may provide you with detailed guidance on standards and expectations. Most will conform to widely accepted referencing systems – like APA or Harvard – but some may have more challenging expectations that you need to consider. If you have a lot of tables and figures, this can involve some tricky numbering. You also have to consider footnotes and reference lists.
All these requirements can eat into a lot of time, and at a stage when you feel you have little energy left to give!
Your finished work should establish you as an accepted member of the academic community. As a professional copy-editor, I can work through this stage and focus on the details that ensure your finished product reflects the hours of work you have done.
You have made it to the final step. It is almost time to submit your work for assessment.
Error-free work gives the reviewers or examiners a good initial impression of you as a student or academic and allows them to focus solely on the quality of the content of your work. Every minor change or reformat earlier on in the writing journey has the potential to inadvertently introduce a new error. That is why proofreading is always the final check before you submit your work.
Finding errors in your own writing can be tricky. Errors are difficult to see as your writing is so familiar to you that your eyes no longer see it clearly when you try to read through.
As with copy-editing and formatting, a fresh pair of eyes can help you be confident that your work is complete, correct and professionally presented.
Proofreading checks of all the 'mechanics' of your thesis or article:
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All spellings are correct and consistent
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All formatting, spacing, layout, fonts are consistent and compliant
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Punctuation is correctly used and correctly spaced
Proofreading does not normally:
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Change words or meanings
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Move sentences, alter structure, or reword content



