It’s time for our Year in Review! Check out our list of posts from 2018 and tell us your favourites in the comments.
Have you ever thought of writing an article for the Editors’ Weekly? We’re looking for articles on the following topics:
- How you got started as an editor
- Events you’ve attended, such as conferences and workshops
- Ways you’ve been inspired by other writers or editors
- How Editors Canada has helped your career
Send us an email if any of these resonate. Or tell us if you have a different idea for a blog post.
As we get ready to enter the new year, we’d like to thank everyone who contributed to the blog or read the blog in 2018. A special thank you goes to Erin Bankes, who proofreads posts, formats them in WordPress, chooses images and writes the social media announcements.
The Editors’ Weekly will be back on Jan. 8, 2018.
Happy Holidays!
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2018 Year in Review:
- Revisiting Verbal Boobery — Karen Virag
- The Perils of Not Knowing — Brendan O’Brien
- Editing Technical Instructional Material: Do You Need to Be an Expert? — Tracey Anderson
- Autonomes oui, mais partenaires — Micheline Fréchette
- The Inner Editor: Please Allow Me To … Interrupt You — Virginia Durksen
- “Broken” English – Shalini Khan
- Does Verbing Impact the Language? — James Harbeck
- PES in the Field: Raising (the Topic of) Our Standards — Standards Communication Task Force
- Learning Baby Talk — Marianne Grier
- Why Do So Many Teachers Become Editors? — Tracey Anderson
- Wasted Words: Salvaging a Thesis — Wilf Popoff
- Quick Topics: Books, Books, Books — Anna Williams
- The Perils of Blabbing — Brendan O’Brien
- Do you want to use a Germanic feature, or do you prefer a Celtic one? — James Harbeck
- An Academic Rock Star’s Advice for Editors — Rosemary Shipton
- Standards at Work: Academic Editing — Standards Communication Task Force
- Eating Frogs and the Tomato Technique: The Art of Getting Things Done — Marianne Grier
- Perks of Being a Federal Supplier Aboard ProServices — Marion Soublière
- Wasted Words: Exploration or Exploitation? — Wilf Popoff
- A Little Strategy, A Lot of Satisfaction — Frances Peck
- Review: Elements of Indigenous Style: A Guide for Writing By and About Indigenous Peoples by Gregory Younging — Sue Archer
- How Joining an Editorial Association Kickstarted My Career — Christina Vasilevski
- A Promising New Editor — Anita Jenkins
- Beginnings — Brendan O’Brien
- PerfectIt for Mac — Anna Williams
- Standards at Work: Memoir Editing — Shelley Egan
- Conferences Are for Everyone — Anita Jenkins
- The Roots of Disagreement — James Harbeck
- Sleep Tight, Don’t Let the Bed Bugs Bite — Marianne Grier
- English Editing in Quebec: Proofreading Bilingual Documents — Dwain Richardson
- On Community and Citizenship: How the Claudette Upton Scholarship Helped Bring My Career Into Focus — Heidi Waechtler
- Wasted Words: A Paean to Poetry — Wilf Popoff
- Is It All About the Author? — Brendan O’Brien
- Lifelong Learning for Mentors and Mentees — Trish Morgan
- Interview With Dr. Suzanne M. Steele, Part 1 — Virginia Durksen
- Eye Rhymes and iRhymes — James Harbeck
- More Twitter for Wordies — Letitia Henville
- New Federal e-Commerce Site: Direct Sales, Clients Galore — Marion Soubliere
- Standards at Work: Fiction Editing — Elizabeth d’Anjou
- Interview With Dr. Suzanne M. Steele, Part 2 — Virginia Durksen
- Pink, Blue and the Singular “They” — Marianne Grier
- One Step at a Time: Journey to a Dream Job — Lindsay Vermeulen
- Wasted Words: Sows’ Ears as Silk Purses — Wilf Popoff
- Working With Authors — Rosemary Shipton
- Winning in the Freelance Game — Brendan O’Brien
- Standards at Work: Technical Editing — Shelley Egan
- Interview With Dr. Suzanne M. Steele, Part 3 — Virginia Durksen
- My Brain Hurts! (Or I’ve been proofreading from right to left!) — Wendy Barron
- Wasted Words: The Rebound of Christmas — Wilf Popoff
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