Prepared For CDU Research Panel 1
Prepared For CDU Research Panel 1
Prepared For CDU Research Panel 1
What is involved?
Editing is all about making it easy for the reader to read your work.
The editing process involves looking at the work in three distinct ways:
- editing for structure – helps the reader follow the logic of your
argument
- editing for language and style – good use of grammar and
consistency in writing style help the reader concentrate on the
content
- proof reading – gets rid of the spelling errors, inconsistent
formatting and other annoying distractions to allow the reader to
remain focussed on your writing.
Where to start?
From the beginning – You need to start planning the structure and
style of your thesis before you start writing it. You will need to
find out the conventions required for your discipline, whether
there is a particular style manual you will be required to follow,
what referencing system needs to be used, etc. Deciding on and
finding out about these from the beginning will save you a lot of
time later on in the project.
At the end – if you have followed the planned structure and style, then
editing these facets of your work should be a relatively
straightforward check for consistency.
The proofreading side of the editing is the part that comes at the end
of writing the thesis. While you will be checking your work as you
go, the proof reading is where you stop writing and concentrate
on accuracy and consistency - dotting the ‘i’s and crossing the ‘t’s
- after you have written the text.
- Other people can help you with editing your thesis, providing the
level of editing is limited to proof reading and general advice on
structure, as set out in the CDU Guidelines on Editing of Theses.
- Your Supervisor will be able to provide advice on structure, style
and conventions. They will also be able to advise on assistance
available for improving skills in written English.
- Attend any available workshops/tutorials on Thesis Writing and
Thesis Editing.
- You can find further resources through the Library catalog and by
browsing the internet (see Further Resources section below).
- Other graduate students or work colleagues may be appropriate
people to read all or part of your thesis and provide editorial
advice, providing the level of editing is limited to proof reading
and general advice on structure, as set out in the Guidelines.
- A professional editor may be used, providing the level of editing is
limited to proof reading and general advice on structure, as set
out in the Guidelines.
- Any editorial assistance provided should be on hard copy, rather
than electronically.
- Any editorial assistance should be properly acknowledged in the
Acknowledgements section of the thesis.
Introduction
- does the introduction define the topic, state the purpose of the
work and present an outlineo f the argument?
Chapters
- are the chapters ordered logically
- are the chapters divided into appropriate sections
- does each chapter have appropriate introductory and concluding
sections
- is the material in the chapter ordered logically
- does the argument flow smoothly between paragraphs
- does each paragraph clearly state its topic
- does each sentence make sense
- are the details, examples and explanations adequately developed.
Conclusion
- are the introduction and conclusion linked?
- Does the conclusion sum up the argument presented in the thesis.
Layout
- Margins and indents, for main text and also for indented
quotations, bullet lists, notes, etc.
- Title page: the title should be prominent and the subtitle (if any)
less prominent. If the title runs across more than one line, make
sure it is broken up into logical chunks
- Headings and subheadings need to be accurate and consistently
formatted (font size, type, spacing before and after) throughout –
also check that numbering (if any) is consistent and that headings
are accurately reflected in the contents listing.
- Spacing – before and after headings, paragraphs, figures, etc.
- Font size / font style of headings, subheadings, captions, main
body of text, quotes, headers, footers, notes
- Numbering of pages, chapters, headings and subheadings,
figures, tables, notes, etc. needs to be consistent
- Headers (if any) should not appear on pages with titles (eg.
contents page, first page of each chapter, etc.)
Text
- The basics – all sentences start with a capital letter and end with
a full stop.
- Spelling – accurate and consistent throughout [use the spellcheck,
but be aware that it is not 100% accurate]
- Quotation marks: Check that all opening quote marks have a
corresponding closing quote mark.
- Brackets: check that all opening brackets have closing brackets.
- Be consistent in use of italics, eg. et al or et al throughout the
text for emphasis, for book titles, for ships, for foreign words
- Punctuation – eg. full stop at end of every sentence; all sentences
start with capital; all open brackets have closing bracket; all
opening speechmarks have closing speechmarks.
- References: check for consistency in use (or not) of italics for
titles in references; and in use (or not) of capitals for titles; check
that a consistent style is followed throughout.
- Abbreviations – check that these are spelt out in full the first time
they are used with the abbreviation put in brackets following.
Subsequently, the abbreviation only should be used.
- Lists of abbreviations – check for accuracy and consistency
- Lists of figures, tables, maps –check accuracy of titles and page
numbering
Further resources:
- You can find a number of useful resources through the CDU
Library. Try doing a search in the library catalog using keyword or
subject like ‘thesis writing’, ‘editing’, ‘copy editing’, ‘proof
reading’.
- Similarly, many university websites post useful resources on this
topic. To get a list of Australian universities, try searching ‘list of
Australian universities’; then try searching within some of the
university websites for, eg. ‘thesis editing’. For example, some