There’s a Bird in Your Hands! by Shannon Vallina

There’s a Bird in Your Hands! by Shannon Vallina

There’s a Bird in Your Hands! is a story of two magical creatures who teach kids how to keep germs away through an imaginative handwashing method. It teaches children to turn their hands into the shape of a bird by placing their thumbs together and laying their fingers out like wings. The story then walks children through the process of thoroughly washing the “bird” in a memorable and magical way that kids love. The whimsical rhymes make this an engaging read aloud story that is colorful, entertaining, and educational!

 

Project Gutenberg

Project Gutenberg

Project Gutenberg is a website dedicated to making out-of-print, non-copyrighted books available again to the public via e-books—and completely free! Currently there are over sixty thousand e-books available on the site.

Project Gutenberg is run entirely by volunteers. Once volunteers hunt down old books, they’re scanned in and converted into e-books. Before the books are turned into e-books for the public, Project Gutenberg relies on Distributed Proofreaders to help proofread the text.

I volunteer time to this worthy project in order to build additional proofreading experience.

Check out this organization! It’s a great resource for book lovers.

General Proofreading + Grammar Refresher: courses for editors

General Proofreading + Grammar Refresher: courses for editors

Metalinguistic awareness—the fancy term for a person’s ability to consciously reflect on the nature of language—is essential to those of us who work with words. Wordsmiths should always be learning. It takes a posture of humility, active engagement, and plenty of practice to master skills. That’s why specialized training, ongoing education, and shiny new certificates are a few of my favorite things.

I’ve taken two courses this year to sharpen my editing skills that I’m quite pleased with.

The first was a course in General Proofreading from Proofread Anywhere. This course offered hands-on practice in the major types of errors that proofreaders need to catch, including capitalization, apostrophes, hyphens, semicolons, commas, subject/verb agreement, question marks, italics, noun/pronoun agreement, numbers, commonly misused words, and American vs. British spelling variations.

As part of this training, I proofed fifty practice essays in different genres on a variety of topics. I completed additional practice workouts offered by the Chicago Manual of Style to deepen my familiarity with this style guide. It was an excellent investment and has been a source of networking and industry knowledge, to boot. To earn my certificate, a 90% or above on the course exam was required.

Behold, my beautiful certificate.

 

Karla Hess - General Proofreading Certification - Australia- US Dialect Localization (Maitland)

The second worthwhile course I took this year was Grammar Lion’s Grammar Refresher. Deepening my knowledge of grammar behooves me as an editor and a teacher of English. This course covers:

  • parts of speech
  • mixed up words
  • contractions and possessives
  • subjects and predicates
  • sentence fragments
  • run-on sentences
  • standard verb forms
  • pronouns
  • agreement
  • shifts in person, tense and structure
  • clarity, concision, diction and logic
  • capitalization and punctuation
Karla Hess Variant Editing Australia - Proofreading - Editor

I really appreciated instructor Ellen Feld’s accessible way of presenting these concepts with clarity.

I recommend both of these courses for writers and editors.

Have you taken any good courses lately? I’d love to hear about them.