- Learn to love double spaces papers, and hate single-spaced papers.
- 12 point fonts are fine.
- New Times Roman is the default choice for a reason.
- The professor's style guide is best. Do not argue.
- Oxford commas are impactful, important, and helpful.
- Staples are not a good idea, they should be the law.
- Number multiple-page documents even when stapled.
- Use the school directory to look up the professor's name. Spell it correctly.
- Add your own name to spell check.
- Do not merely spell check.
- Do not use contractions.
- "Extremely" and "huge" both mean "I need a thesaurus".
- Dates do not have apostrophes.
- "Very" is unnecessary.
- "Interesting" is not.
- "Toward" is United States usage, "Towards" is British, and Buffalo, NY usage.
- History does not repeat, but sometimes it rhymes.
- "Etc." is not worth using. There are better ways.
- Foreign words are in italics. Foreign means it is not in an English dictionary.
- No first OR second person, unless the professor requires it. Thank them when they do.
- The past is always in the past tense.
- Do not confuse British for English. The same goes for others. If in doubt, look it up.
- Do not confuse name places for countries.
- "Would" is a crutch or a mistake. Be careful.
- "Led" is more apparent than "Would lead".
- Passive voice is painful, but not avoidable.
- When comparing situations implicitly link subjects to periods.
- Do not hide verbs.
- Learn how to write citations from memory.
- Do not use clichés.
- Learn how to type special characters and accent marks manually.
Bonus: "Thank you" means "thank you". "You're welcome" means "you're welcome". They are not interchangeable.
No comments:
Post a Comment