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Ask Dr. Editor

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 08 AOÛT 19

The singular “they” and your power to choose as an academic writer.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 10 JUILLET 19

There are many tools that measure readability scores, but few contexts in which they’re useful for academics.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 18 JUIN 19

The political and persuasive significance of being intentionally hard to understand.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 09 MAI 19

How to immerse yourself in the linguistic world in which your readers live, write, and think.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 05 AVRIL 19

When authoring together, be innovative in language and structure, but conform to convention as you submit your work to be published.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 01 MAR 19

How three free algorithms can help you to edit efficiently.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 06 FEV 19

Strategies to surprise and excite your audience.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 11 JAN 19

The IMRAD, hourglass and inverted pyramid structures are all options you can use – it is up to you to find which works best for your article.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 07 DÉC 18

Your discipline and its conventions shape how you do research. How might they also shape your approach in the classroom?

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 13 NOV 18

Be conscious and deliberate with how you occupy the landscape of your writing.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 16 OCT 18

Many academics are chronically sleep deprived. When you’re writing your most important documents, ensure your formatting makes it easy for tired brains to process your words.

par LETITIA HENVILLE | 19 SEP 18

When you can’t tell how to conjugate “to be,” your lay summary isn’t laying correctly.

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