News Reporting and Writing
Prepare yourself for a career as a reporter no matter the medium as News Reporting and Writing takes you through the essentias of reporting and writing, giving you a foundation fin the profession whether you end up working in print or digital media.

1126331291
News Reporting and Writing
Prepare yourself for a career as a reporter no matter the medium as News Reporting and Writing takes you through the essentias of reporting and writing, giving you a foundation fin the profession whether you end up working in print or digital media.

159.75 In Stock
News Reporting and Writing

News Reporting and Writing

by Missouri Group
News Reporting and Writing

News Reporting and Writing

by Missouri Group

Paperback(Twelfth Edition)

$159.75 
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Overview

Prepare yourself for a career as a reporter no matter the medium as News Reporting and Writing takes you through the essentias of reporting and writing, giving you a foundation fin the profession whether you end up working in print or digital media.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781319034818
Publisher: Bedford/St. Martin's
Publication date: 10/07/2016
Edition description: Twelfth Edition
Pages: 540
Product dimensions: 7.80(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

BRIAN S. BROOKS came to the Missouri School of Journalism in 1974 after working in Vietnam as an information officer (for which he received a bronze star) and as a reporter, copy editor and night city editor at the Memphis (Tenn.) Press-Scimitar. He served as news editor and then as editor of the Columbia Missourian before becoming director of the Journalism Network in 1989. Along with faculty member Phill Brooks, he was responsible for bringing a $15 million grant from IBM Corporation to the School of Journalism from 1989 to 1997. While on sabbatical from 1997 to 1999, Brooks was editor of The Stars and Stripes, the U.S. military newspaper in Europe. He directed that newspaper’s coverage of the Bosnia mission, the U.S. entry into Kosovo and the bombing of Belgrade. For this work, he was awarded the Department of Defense Civilian Distinguished Service Medal. For more than 30 years, Brooks has served as deputy director or director of the Dow Jones Newspaper Fund editing internship program at Missouri. Students from schools nationwide are trained at the summer workshop for careers as newspaper copy editors. Brooks was chairman of the school’s editorial department from 1999 until January 2003, when he became associate dean for undergraduate studies and administration. That same year he was named Outstanding Faculty Member on campus by the MU Greek system. He was inducted into the Missouri Press Association’s Newspaper Hall of Fame in 2009. Brooks holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the Missouri School of Journalism.

GEORGE KENNEDY worked for 10 years at daily newspapers in Delaware and Florida before joining the Missouri School of Journalism faculty in 1974. At Missouri, Kennedy has served as chairman of the Editorial Department and as associate dean. Many recent alumni know him best as managing editor of the school’s teaching newspaper, the Columbia Missourian — a position he held for almost 12 years. Kennedy’s academic interests center on journalistic practice and the future of the profession. He has been a Fulbright lecturer in New Zealand and a visiting professor in Slovakia and Spain. His most recent articles have appeared in The American Editor and Columbia Journalism Review, and he has co-authored three textbooks in reporting and writing. Kennedy holds a bachelor’s degree and a doctorate from Missouri and a master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

DARYL MOEN is the former editor of three daily newspapers and author or co-author of four journalism textbooks. He has redesigned 18 newspapers and given more than 200 seminars on writing and design in the U.S. and abroad.  Daryl has taught newspaper design, reporting, beginning and advanced editing, advanced writing, editorial writing, graduate problems courses and directs graduate professional projects and theses.  As a teacher, Daryl attempted to lead students to answers rather than provide them. He believes that showing is more powerful than telling, that finding the "why" gives students the tools to adjust to changing conditions for the rest of their careers and that doing is more effective than listening.  As a faculty member in a professional school, Daryl worked closely with his students to make industry contacts and find jobs. He helped scores of students find not only their first jobs but also their second and third jobs, and encouraged them to use the Missouri alumni network to find jobs.

DON RANLY became head of the magazine sequence in 1976 (a position he held until 2004), just two years after he joined the Missouri School of Journalism faculty. Before making Missouri his home, Ranly worked for eight years in Wisconsin, Ohio and Indiana as a newspaper reporter, a magazine editor, a weekly columnist, a radio host and a television producer, director and host. Ranly’s broad experience is also reflected in his education: he has master’s degrees in journalism and speech from Marquette University, a certificate in film, radio and television from New York University, and a doctorate from the Missouri School of Journalism. During his 30 years of service at the school, he has conducted nearly 1,000 writing and editing seminars for press associations, corporations, associations and individual newspapers and magazines. He has also authored or co-authored five books and published several audiocassettes and videos on reporting, writing and grammar. In 1995, Ranly received a Mizzou Alumni Association Faculty-Alumni Award and was named the O.O. McIntyre Distinguished Professor of Journalism. Three years later, he won a University of Missouri Golden Chalk teaching award and co-authored Publication Editing (Kendall/Hunt). In 2002, he was named a Fellow of the International Association of Business Communicators; in 2003 he won one of the University of Missouri’s most prestigious teaching awards, the William T. Kemper Fellowship. In 2012 Ranly was named an "Icon of Education" by Ingram’s Kansas City Business Magazine.

Table of Contents

Preface

PART ONE JOURNALISM AND JOURNALISTS

1 The Nature of News
Journalism and the News

    ► LaunchPad Solo: User Generated Content

Getting Information Today

     Hard News

     Soft News

     Features

Elements of a Good News Story

      Impact

     Conflict

    Novelty

     Prominence

     Proximity

    Timeliness

     Engagement

     Solutions

Convergence in Journalism

    ► LaunchPad Solo: Convergence and Essential Skills

The Role of Journalism

     Challenges to American Journalism

     ON THE JOB Journalists’ Responsibilities in a Democracy

Accuracy, Fairness and Bias

     Accuracy and Fairness

     Dealing with Bias

The Issue of Objectivity

What Is Not News

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

2  The Future of Journalism
Technology and Jobs in Journalism
The Impact of Digital Technology on Newspapers

    Sidebar: Delivering the News in New Ways

Newspapers: Still the Source of Most News

Other Legacy Media Are Affected, Too

New Models for Providing the News

   ► LaunchPad Solo: Internet Media Entrepreneurs: Newsy.com, with Jim Spencer

Embracing Citizen Journalism

   ► LaunchPad Solo: Newspapers Now: Balancing Citizen Journalism and Investigative Reporting

     When Citizen Journalism Fails

     Forms of Citizen Journalism    

Prospects for Journalism Grads

Sidebar: Engaging the Community

ON THE JOB The Lure of New Media

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

PART TWO REPORTING TOOLS
3 Interviewing
Preparing for the Interview

     Interviewing for the News Story

   Interviewing for the Profile

   ON THE JOB Getting the Tough Interview

   Interviewing for the Investigative Story

         Gathering Information

         Requesting an Interview

Doing an Audio or Video Interview

   ► LaunchPad Solo: Radio: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow

Using the Telephone, Email, Instant Messaging or Skype for Interviews

Setting Up the Interview

Preparing Questions

    Researching Questions

    Phrasing Questions

   Open-Ended Questions

    Closed-Ended Questions

Establishing Rapport

    Interview Approaches

    Other Practical Considerations

Ensuring Accuracy and Fairness

    Using a Recorder

    Taking Notes

   Verifying Information

    Observing

    Asking Follow-Up Questions

    Using Other Techniques

Ending the Interview

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

4  Handling Quotations and Attributions
What to Quote Directly

     Unique Material

         Use Good Judgment in Selecting Quotes

         Don’t Use Direct Quotes for Straight Facts

         Use Quotes That Move the Story Forward

     Consider Using Dialogue to Tell Part of the Story

     The Unique Expression

     Important Quotes by Important People

Accuracy and Fairness in Direct Quotations

     ANNOTATED MODEL Using Quotes Effectively

     Verification

    ►LaunchPad Solo: Computer Assisted Reporting

     Quoting from Email, Social Media, the Internet and Chat Rooms

     Using Someone Else’s Direct Quotations

     Practicing Prepublication Review

     ON THE JOB Reinventing a Career

Altering Quotations

     Paraphrasing Quotes

    Using Partial Quotes

     Capturing Dialect or Accent

     Mixing and Matching Questions and Answers

     Correcting Grammar in Quotes

            The Case for Correcting Grammar

            The Case Against Correcting Grammar

     Removing Redundancies

     Deleting Obscenity, Profanity and Vulgarity

    Avoiding Made-Up Quotes

Attributing Direct and Indirect Quotes

     ANNOTATED MODEL Using Attributions

     When to Attribute

    ANNOTATED MODEL Using Anonymous Sources

     How to Attribute

     BOX: He Said, She Said—Punctuating Direct Quotations

     Attributing Written Sources

Handling On- and Off-the-Record Information

    Problems with Anonymous Sources

     Disagreement About Terminology

     Background Interviews

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

5   Gathering and Verifying Information
Accurate Information: The Basis of a Good Story

     LaunchPad Solo: The Objectivity Myth

     The Discipline of Multiple Sources

    ANNOTATED MODEL Integrating Multiple Sources into a Story

     The Discipline of Verification

Online Sources of Information

    News Archives: The Place to Start

    Search Engines

     News Sites, Social Media and Content Aggregators

   ► LaunchPad Solo: Media Effects Research

     Commercial Database Services

    Government Databases

    Special-Interest Databases

     Custom Databases

     On the Job The Challenges of Editing for the Web

Traditional Sources of Information

     The Traditional Newsroom Library

    Other Traditional Sources

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

6   Using News Releases as Sources
The Importance of News Releases

Types of News Releases

    ► LaunchPad Solo: Filling the News Hole: Video News Releases

    Announcement Releases

     ON THE JOB Reading News Releases: Sweat the Small Print

     Cause-Promoting Releases

     Image-Building Releases

Handling News Releases

     Rewriting an Announcement Release

     Rewriting a Cause-Promoting Release

    Rewriting an Image-Building Release

Rewriting a News Release — An Example

     Read the News Release Carefully

     Check for Accuracy and Fairness

     Do Additional Research and Interviews

     Get Back to the News Release Contact with Questions

     Write the Story

     ANNOTATED MODEL Integrating News Release Information

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

7    Reporting with Numbers
Proportion

     Percentages and Percentage Change

          Populations, Samples and Margins of Error

           Percentage Change and Percentage Points

     Averages and Medians

     Rates

Interest and Compounding

Inflation

Taxes

     Sales Taxes

    Income Taxes

    ON THE JOB Working with Numbers

     Property Taxes

Budgets

     Budget Basics

      Finding Stories in Budget Changes, Trends and Comparisons

Financial Reports

Mixing Numbers and Words

    ► LaunchPad Solo: Freedom of Information

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

PART THREE    STORYTELLING

8     The Inverted Pyramid
Importance of the Inverted Pyramid Story

   ► LaunchPad Solo: Magazine Specialization Today

Finding the Lead

     Writing the Inverted Pyramid Lead

     Emphasizing Different News Values

     ANNOTATED MODEL A Sample Inverted Pyramid Story

     What, So What and What’s Next

Variations on the Inverted Pyramid Lead

    The "You" Lead

    The Immediate-Identification Lead

     The Delayed-Identification Lead

     The Summary Lead

    The Multiple-Element Lead

     ON THE JOB Inverted Pyramid — A Basic Tool

     Danger Signals

      Leads with Flair

Story Organization

       The One-Subject Story

      The Memo-Structure Story

      ANNOTATED MODEL A Single-Subject Inverted Pyramid Story

      ANNOTATED MODEL A Memo-Structure Story

     The Multiple-Element Story

Writing a Story Across Media Platforms

       Tweeting Breaking News

     Initial Online Story

     ANNOTATED MODEL The Classic Inverted Pyramid Story

      Full Story with Ongoing Updates

Checking Accuracy and Attributions

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

9     Writing to Be Read
     ►LaunchPad Solo: Community Voices: Weekly Newspapers

Good Writing Begins with Good Reporting

      ON THE JOB Setting the Hook in the Opening

Accurate, Specific Details

      Use Concrete Examples

      Show, Don’t Just Tell

      Use Words Precisely

Coherence

      Decide on the Order of Elements

      Select the Proper Sentence Structure

     Use the Precise Conjunction

      Use Transitions

      ANNOTATED MODEL Using Transitions

Conciseness and Simplicity

      Be Concise

      ANNOTATED MODEL Editing for Conciseness

     Keep It Simple

Correct and Effective Language

     Figures of Speech

      Careful Word Choice

      Bias-Free Language

      Correct Grammar and Punctuation

The Tools of Narration

      Scenes

     Dialogue

     Anecdotes

      Foreshadowing

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

10     Alternatives to the Inverted Pyramid
Chronology

     Where to Start

     A Sample Outline

      The Nut Paragraph, Foreshadowing and the "To Be Sure"

     The Ending

News Narrative

      News Narrative with News Emphasis

     ANNOTATED MODEL News Narrative with News Emphasis

     News Narrative with Narrative Emphasis

Focus Structure

     ANNOTATED MODEL News Narrative with Narrative Emphasis

      Writing the Lead

     Writing the Setup

      The Transition and the Nut Paragraph

      Foreshadowing

      The "So What"

      The "To Be Sure"

    ON THE JOB Tips for Writing

    Writing the Body

    Writing the Ending

Service Journalism

   ► LaunchPad Solo: Narrowcasting in Magazines

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

PART FOUR    WRITING FOR SPECIFIC MEDIA
11   Writing for Digital Media

The Web as a Unique Media Form

Readers’ Expectations of the Digital Media

     Readers Want the News Right Away

    ► LaunchPad Solo: Going Viral: Political Campaigns and Video

      Readers Want to Have Their Say

      Readers Want Multimedia Variety

      Readers Want the News Upfront

      Readers Want to Customize Content

     The Big Story: An Alternative Approach

      The Audience Is International

      Structure Is All-Important

     ANNOTATED MODEL Layering Content on the Web

      ON THE JOB An Online Career

Guidelines for Writing for the Web

      Think Immediacy

     Save Readers Time

     Provide Information That’s Quick and Easy to Get

      Think Both Verbally and Visually

     Cut Your Copy

      Use Lots of Lists and Bullets

      Write in Chunks

      Use Links

             Internal Connections

             External Connections

      Give Readers a Chance to Talk Back

Writing with Search Engines in Mind

Writing for Blogs

      Wide-Ranging Subject Matter

    ► LaunchPad Solo: Net Neutrality

      Professional Standards

The Roles of Social Media

      Verifying Information

      Reaching Readers

      Writing Effectively and Correctly

      Benefiting as a Journalist

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

12       Writing News for Radio and Television
     ► LaunchPad Solo: Going Visual: Video, Radio and the Web

What Radio and Television Do Best

Criteria for Selecting Radio and Television News

       Timeliness

       Information Rather Than Explanation

       Audio or Visual Impact

       Emphasis on People

Writing Radio and Television News

       Characteristics of Radio and Television News Writing

           Immediacy

       ANNOTATED MODEL Use of Verb Tenses in a TV Story

           Conversational Style

            Tight Phrasing

           Clarity

       Story Structure

          Writing the Radio and Television Lead

           Writing Lead-Ins and Wrap-Ups

           Writing to the Video

       ON THE JOB Writing News for Radio, Television and More

Using Social Media in Radio and Television

      ► LaunchPad Solo: Television Networks Evolve: Cable, Satellite, Broadband

       Blending Online with On-Air

       Guidelines for Using Social Media

       ON THE JOB Be Ready to Meet the Challenge

Preparing Radio and Television News Copy

       Format

       Names and Titles

      Pronunciation

       Abbreviations

        Symbols and Numbers

       Quotations and Attributions

      Punctuation

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

PART FIVE BASIC STORIES

13 Covering a Beat

Importance of Beat Reporting

   ► LaunchPad Solo: Agenda Setting & Gatekeeping

Principles for Reporters on a Beat

     Be Prepared

         Reading for Background

         Talking to Sources

     ON THE JOB His Beat: The White House

      Be Alert

      Be Persistent

        Insisting on a Responsive Answer

        Following Up on Slow Developments

    Be There

     Be Wary

Beat Reporting Across Media Platforms

     The Benefits and Challenges of Reporting Across Platforms

     ANNOTATED MODEL A Crime Story Across Media Platforms

     Using Social Media to Find Sources—and Audiences

    ►LaunchPad Solo: Newspapers and the Internet: Convergence

Covering the Most Important Local Beats

     City and County Government

     The Schools

     Higher Education

     Police

     Sports

         Sports Reporting Is Beat Reporting

         Developing Contacts

        Digging for the Real Story

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

14    Speeches, News Conferences and Meetings
    ► LaunchPad Solo: What Makes Public Television "Public"?

Distinguishing Among Speeches, News Conferences and Meetings

Getting Ready to Cover the Story

     Preparing for the Speech Story

     Preparing for the News Conference Story

     Preparing for the Meeting Story

Covering Speeches, News Conferences and Meetings

     The Medium Matters

     Getting the Content Correct

     Describing the Participants

     Being Observant

     Arriving, Positioning Yourself and Staying On

Structuring and Writing Your Story

     Writing the Speech Story

     ANNOTATED MODEL Analyzing a Speech Story

     Writing the News Conference Story

     Writing the Meeting Story

     ON THE JOB Speeches, News Conferences and Meetings

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

15   Other Types of Local Stories

Your Preparation

     Preparing for the Crime Story

     Preparing for Accident and Fire Stories

     Preparing for the Court Story

Writing the Story

     The Crime Story

     ANNOTATED MODEL Comparison of a Breaking News Story and a Follow-Up Story

     Accident and Fire Stories

     The Court Story

         Avoiding Libelous Statements

     ON THE JOB "Every Story Is Important"

        Types of Courts and Cases

Reporting a Case Step-by-Step— An Example

     A Breaking-News Tweet

     A Typical First Story

      Follow-Up Story: First Court Appearance

     Follow-Up Story: Preliminary Hearing

     Follow-Up Story: Arraignment

     Follow-Up Story: First Day of the Trial

     Follow-Up Story: Trial Testimony

     Follow-Up Story: Verdict

     Sentencing and Appeals

Other Issues in Crime and Court Reporting

     The Free Press/Fair Trial Controversy

     Gag Orders and Closed Trials

     Covering Sex Crimes

          Sex Crime Victims

          Sex Crime Offenders

     Press-Bar Guidelines

     Cameras in the Courtroom

     Coverage of Minority Groups

    ► LaunchPad Solo: Fake News/Real News: A Fine Line

      Coverage of Terrorism

     Crime and Social Media

     Issues of Taste and Ethics

            Reporting Details of a Crime

            Reporting Confessions and Prior Convictions

           Identifying Juveniles

Obituaries and Life Stories

      Crafting a Lead

      Building the Story

      Writing Life Stories

     Sources of Information

           The Mortuary Form

           The Newsroom Library

           Interviews with Family and Friends

      Cause of Death

      Private or Embarrassing Information

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

16    Business and Consumer News
The Growing Importance of Business Journalism

     Specialized Business News

    ► LaunchPad Solo: The Money Behind the Media

      Global Reach

       Wide Range of Topics

How to Report Business Stories

      Avoiding Jargon and Finding the "So What"

      Putting Sources at Ease

      Watching Out for Biases and Conflicts of Interest

     ON THE JOB Translating Business into English

Where to Find Business Stories

      Records and Reports

          Corporate Data

          Investment Data

          Financial Ratios

          Company Filings

         Trade Press

         Newsletters

         Court Records

          Local Regulators

          Other Sources

     Human Sources

         Company Executives

          Public Relations Sources

          Academic Experts

         Trade Associations

          Chamber of Commerce Officials

          Former Employees

          Labor Leaders

          Other Sources

      Announcements and Meetings

     Reporter Enterprise

Looking at the Numbers

Covering Consumer News

      Where to Find Consumer News

          Government Agencies

         Consumer Groups

         Private Businesses

      How to Report Consumer Stories

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

PART SIX SPECIALIZED TECHNIQUES

17     Investigative and Data-driven Reporting
Investigative Reporting: An American Tradition

     ► LaunchPad Solo: Investigative Reporting Resources

The Process

      Beginning the Investigation

      Carrying Out the Investigation

      Getting It Right

      Writing the Story

         Selecting an Effective Story Structure and Lead

          Including Proof of the Story’s Credibility

          Striving for Clear, Simple Explanations

       ON THE JOB Investigative Skills for All

       Planning the Multimedia Aspects of the Story or Series

The Sources

       Human Sources

       Written Sources

         Public Records

          Nonpublic Records

      ► LaunchPad Solo: Shield Laws and Non-Traditional Journalists

          Problems with Written Sources

Computer-Assisted Reporting

     ►LaunchPad Solo:
The Power of Images: Amy Goodman on Emmett Till

       ON THE JOB Driving Investigations with CAR

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

18      Working in Public Relations
Public Relations: A Different Approach to News

       Defining Public Relations

      A Range of Interests

       Objectivity and Public Relations Writing

     ► LaunchPad Solo: Give and Take: Public Relations and Journalism

The Main Focus of Public Relations Writing

       The Message

       The Audience

       ON THE JOB Know Why You Are Communicating

      The Media

          Television, Radio and Newsstand Publications

          The Internet: An All-in-One Medium

          Social Media

          Internal Publications, Brochures and Billboards

Persuasive Writing

      Your Attitude

       Credibility and Trust

News Releases That Get Attention

      Know What News Is and How to Write It

       Know the Structure and Operations of Newsrooms

       Know the People in the News Media and the Jobs They Hold

       Know the Style of Writing That Fits the Medium

       Know How to Distribute Information Online

Digital News Releases

      ANNOTATED MODEL News Release Responding to a Crisis

       ANNOTATED MODEL Social Media News Release

Some Final Advice

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

PART SEVEN      RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES
19       Media Law

The First Amendment: Journalists’ Rights and Responsibilities

Libel

      Identifying Libel

       Libel Suit Defenses

          Truth

         Privilege

          Fair Comment and Criticism

         The Actual Malice Test and Public Officials

          The Actual Malice Test and Public Figures

      ON THE JOB The Keys to Avoiding Libel

          The Negligence Test and Private Citizens

      Libel Remains a Danger

       Libel and the Internet

Invasion of Privacy

       Trespassing

       Portraying in a "False Light"

      Causing Unwanted Publicity Offensive to a Person of Ordinary Sensibilities

Protection of Sources and Notes

      ► LaunchPad Solo: Bloggers & Legal Rights

Access to Courts

Copyright and Fair Use

Suggested Readings

Suggested Websites

Exercises

20       Ethics 
The Public Perception of Journalism Ethics

      ► LaunchPad Solo: Journalism Ethics: What News Is Fit to Print?

        Bloggers as Watchdogs

        Journalism Codes of Ethics

Three Ethical Philosophies

       The Ethics of Duty

       The Ethics of Final Ends or Consequences

        ON THE JOB Develop Your Ability to Identify Ethical Situations

       Situation Ethics: The Ethics of Specific Acts

            No Moral Absolutes

            Love of Neighbor

           The Greatest Good for the Greatest Number

           Ayn Rand’s Rational Self-Interest

Resolving Ethical Issues

Ethical Problems for Journalists

       Deceit

        Conflicts of Interest

            Friendship

           Payola

            Freebies

            Checkbook Journalism

        ON THE JOB Nurturing a Healthy Ethical Process in an Ever-Changing Environment

            Participation in the News

       Advertising Pressure

        Magazines and "New Financial Pillars"

        Invasion of Privacy

            Crime Victims

            Juvenile Offenders

            Victims of Child Abuse and Their Families

            Sexual Orientation

            Public Figures

            Photos and Video

        Withholding Information

        Incorrect and Incomplete Information

Plagiarism
Social Media Ethics
Suggested Readings
Suggested Websites
Exercises

Appendix 1     20 Common Errors of Grammar and Punctuation
Appendix 2    Wire-Service Style Summary
Appendix 3    Society of Professional Journalists’ Code of Ethics
Glossary
Index
Annotated Models
Copy Editing and Proofreading Symbols
Videos
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