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Who Can Be A Freelance Editor Or Proofreader?

Anyone can be a Freelance Editor or Proofreader. That is, anyone with a good grasp of the English language, or native language if you want to edit non-US documents.

Do you cringe at typos and grammatical errors in newspapers, magazine articles, Internet articles and web sites? Do you find yourself correcting the errors as you read along? Then being a freelance editor or proofreader might be the home-based business for you.

It's true that many freelance editors have college degrees with an English Major. Or at the very least, they've taken a good number of English classes. However, having a degree is not a requirement for being a freelance editor. The only real requirement is a good, no a great, grasp of the English language. There are many successful freelance editors today, who have taken some classes, but have no degree. Those editors have a great grasp of the language.

Be careful though. There are many confusing properties of the English language. There are many different parts to a sentence, a paragraph, and an entire paper. It's important to know about spelling and capitalization; but it's just as important to know when to use a comma versus a semi-colon, and what exactly a dangling modifier is.

If you think that just because you use a program that checks spelling and grammar, you're all set, you're dead wrong. These programs are limited in their capabilities. They can't check a writer's intonation, intended purpose, or desired outcome. These programs often check to ensure a word is spelled correctly, but can't determine if it is the proper word to use in a statement.

For instance, the sentence below was marked as correct using a spelling/grammar-checking program:

Incorrect: The birds were in each of there nests. Correct: The bir

ds were in each of their nests.

You can probably see the error, but these so-called "expert” programs cannot. And if you can't see the difference, then walk, no run to the nearest door!

Seriously though, I read an article awhile back that proposed only using programs with spelling/grammar checkers. The article indicated that this would be all you need to put a professional document on the Internet - document meaning article or web page.

I am in no way stating you shouldn't use these programs. I use them all the time, but only as a backup resource. I depend on my own knowledge of the language to edit a document. Once my corrections are noted, I then run the document through the spell/grammar checker. Sometimes it finds things that I missed; sometimes it finds things that are correct, yet marks them wrong. But they are very good at finding statements written with a passive voice. For that I give them credit.

Yet, I digress. If you are considering becoming a freelance editor or proofreader, I applaud you. There is nothing like the satisfaction of knowing you've helped someone provide a professional (edited) document for publication.


Julie Jessen, owner of A1 Secretarial Service, http://www.a1secretarial.com, has been providing virtual administrative, bookkeeping and editing services to clients for the past five years. She has helped many advertise their Internet presence in search engines, directories and through articles and blog entries.


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