Editing Services
A manuscript assessment is a review of your draft to evaluate its suitability for purpose and to identify changes necessary to improve readability. A manuscript assessment considers your text at the highest narrative level: overall structure and length, internal structure, development and pace, point of view and voice, characterisation, dialogue, use of non-textual elements and overall suitability for the intended readership. It covers the same issues as a substantive edit (see below) but instead of the editor making changes in your manuscript you will receive a detail written analysis of those issues and suggestions to guide rewriting and improving the narrative.
Note: due to the high level of conceptual input involved in manuscript assessment, it is not compatible with thesis editing or other forms of editing for graded academic works.
Substantive editing (also called structural, content or developmental editing) aims to ensure that the structure, content, language and style of the document are optimal for its intended purpose and readership. This includes assessing the overall structure and organization of the content, identifying gaps, inconsistencies and redundancy in the narrative, and improving the style of the text at the chapter, section and paragraph levels. A substantive editor may suggest that chapters be rearranged, that a different voice or POV be employed, that sections be added or deleted, that non-textual elements (graphs, tables etc.) be used, that an index or glossary be included, and, for creative writing, that weaknesses in plot/subplot, characterisation, pacing and dialogue be addressed. Often a substantive edit will overlap to some extent with manuscript assessment, involving advice as much as changes, and it is often a preliminary to additional writing/rewriting of the draft.
Note: due to the high level of conceptual input involved in substantive editing, it is not compatible with thesis editing or other forms of editing for graded academic works.
Copyediting (sometimes called line editing) is primarily concerned with grammar, spelling, punctuation and style. Copy editors ensure proper usage, fix language and phrasing, identify inconsistencies in style or content, ensure meaning is clear and consistent on a sentence-by-sentence and paragraph-by-paragraph basis, and improve style on a more localised basis than the substantive edit (e.g., ensuring the same person is used throughout, adding missing transitions between sentences and paragraphs etc.). Copyediting also incorporates what is sometimes called ‘mechanical editing’ – ensuring that a document complies with any mandated style guides (including citation style guides).
Thesis editing combines elements of copyediting and proofreading and addresses the same issues: grammar, spelling, punctuation and style; clarity, ambiguity and redundancy; references and footnotes; layout and formatting; and compliance with mandated style guides (including citation styles). However, while copyediting may sometimes include correction of factual or conceptual errors, logical lapses and incorrect use of data, the scope of thesis editing is more circumscribed to protect the academic integrity of the thesis examination process. The limits of thesis editing are set out in the Guidelines for Editing Research Theses and will, in most cases, also be spelled out in the thesis policy of your university. See the Academic Editing page for more information on thesis editing.
Academic editing is editing for all non-graded research and scholarly works: books, journal articles, reviews, reports, conference papers, research propels etc. It can incorporate elements of all three levels of editing described above; because it does not involve graded work, the Guidelines for Editing Research Theses do not apply and the editor may correct errors of fact or reasoning and provide conceptual input. In addition to focus on style and empirical/logical coherence, academic editing often involves applying the house style and layout requirements for academic publishers and journal submissions.