in the foreground are library shelves filled with books; in the background, a person sits on a low chair, their face buried in a book

Too many academics are given bad writing advice.



You're given it by people who don't know your disciplinary norms; you're given it by people who think that norms are rules; you're given it by average writers who don't know just how average their writing is.

This course is designed to help you better understand the techniques and patterns in your writing, so that you can make deliberate, intentional choices about how you want to convey your research. You can apply your learning from this course to your next article manuscript, monograph, grant application, tenure dossier, or op-ed.

Whether you're new to graduate school or going up for promotion to full, the quality of your writing matters. If you want it to be read, understood, cited, and funded, this course is for you.

Academics are regularly judged on your ability to communicate your research, rather than on the work you do in the lab, the archive, or the classroom. In this course, you'll learn evidence-based strategies to help you share your knowledge and ideas.


Writing well is a skill

As an academic, you aren’t judged on the work that you do in the lab, the archive, the field, or the classroom. Instead, you’re judged on how you write about that work--in journal articles, monographs, grant applications, and promotion & tenure dossiers.

Yet the bulk of resources and websites and coaches available in the academic support industry focus on getting writing done, instead of getting writing done well.

We trust that you'll figure out the process to get writing done that works best for you. This course will show you how to polish your writing so it is clear, efficient, and compelling.

Lesson Overview

  Introduction to "Becoming a Better Editor of Your Own Work"
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  Step 2: Starting with an Axe
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  Step 3: Constructing Sentences
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  Step 4: Verbing Well
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  Step 5: Simplifying Nouns
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  Step 6: Showing Relationships
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  Step 7: Breaking the Rules
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  Step 8: Checking Your Work
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  Next Steps
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Enrollment is open


Meet your instructor


Letitia Henville, PhD, is an award-winning instructor and freelance academic editor. She has experience working in-house as a grants editor, reviewing arts & culture grants for the Vancouver Foundation, and success in editing ~$4M of research funding proposals.

She's also the author of the academic writing advice column Ask Dr. Editor, published monthly in University Affairs. Letitia has taught academic editing and writing for Editors Canada, the Editorial Freelancers Association, Simon Fraser University, the University of British Columbia, the University of Manitoba, the University of Toronto, and Wilfrid Laurier University.

Letitia's work can be found at letitiahenville.com.

A picture of Letitia Henville, a white lady with black-and-grey hair who is wearing a gold nose ring, bright red lipstick, and a yellow sleeveless shirt.