Proofreading Secrets
Proofreading Secrets
Proofreading Secrets
Proofreading Secrets
by Elizabeth Macfie
Contents
What makes a good proofreader? ................................................................................... 1
How fast is a good proofreader? ..................................................................................... 1
Why not have the author proofread her own work? ....................................................... 2
What does a proofreader look at? ................................................................................... 3
Using checklists .............................................................................................................. 6
Preparing to proofread .................................................................................................... 7
How proofreading differs from reading.......................................................................... 7
Comparison proofreading ............................................................................................... 8
Tricks of the trade ........................................................................................................... 9
Traps ............................................................................................................................. 10
Text Elements
1. Non-standard grammar or usage
What gets corrected depends on your level of authority. But the proofreader should spot
any mistakes in grammar, and if not authorized to automatically correct them, flag them.
5. Faulty references
This refers to footnotes, endnotes, illustrations, tables, figures, etc. In general, tables,
figures, and illustrations should be placed after and as close to their first reference in the
text as is practical. All referenced matter should correspond to its description (the
superscript footnote 12 should refer to the content in the text of footnote 12). The
sources listed in footnotes and endnotes should match their bibliography listings.
If the text says, See Section 2.4, make sure that Section 2.4 is the correct reference. Be
especially wary of actual page references, as in, ...as discussed on page 112.
6. Faulty headings
Sometimes the most inappropriate headlines, running heads, titles, captions, and so on
arent caught until the last minute.
Errors hide in titles. As a reader, you see a headline or title as introducing the material to
come, so you turn on your alertness after you read the title. And in all-caps titles, the
words lack their usual profile that would alert you to errors.
Visual Elements
To see and correct these errors, you may have to know what production process is being
used.
1. Mechanical faults
Watch for blurred or fuzzy copy or uneven ink colour. Check for rivers or lakes (white
spaces due to justification of text).
2. Spacing errors
Look for inconsistencies in analogous items, particularly when you have no
specifications for indention, justification, line spacing, margins, column width and depth,
word spacing, or letter spacing.
3. Positioning faults
Look for knotholes, stacks, and faults in horizontal and vertical alignment, as well as
inconsistencies in the register, position of folios, running heads, and any displayed
matter.
8. Poor graphics
Look for incorrect placement or sizing, poor reproduction, flopped (reversed) photos
(if you can see any writing in the picture, such as signs or lettering on shirts, read it to
see if its reversed), and incorrect or missing captions or titles. Count the number of
people named in the caption and the number of faces in the photo. If theyre not equal, a
name might be missingor its the wrong list of names.
In text describing screen captures in software manuals, make sure the content and
wording match whats in the illustration.
Using checklists
Even short documents should be proofread in separate passes, because capturing visual
and text faults requiresliterallya different point of view. Most visual faults are best
seen by taking in the page as a whole or even viewing several pages side-by-side. Most
text faults are more likely to be discovered by a line-by-line, word-by-word, or letter-byletter review.
Even if you are an experienced proofreader who proofreads on a regular basis, write
down checklists that group related items pertinent to the document to be proofread.
Make anywhere from three to a half dozen systematic passes, depending on the length of
the document.
Your first pass might review visual elements: format, alignment, indention, etc. Your
second pass might be a word-by-word comparison reading. Your third pass might verify
the sequence of references and their callouts, cross-references, etc.
For bilingual documents, add these to your checklist: are the contents, fonts, type sizes,
graphics, etc. the same in both versions? Was all the content translated? Does each
version mention where readers can obtain a copy in the other official language?
Preparing to proofread
Understand your level of authority, the clients priorities, the production stage, and all
deadlines.
Know what dictionary, style sheet, style guides, and specifications are being used.
Verify that you have received the entire document.
Make backups or photocopies.
Gather whatever tools you require, including reference books: In addition to whichever
dictionary is specified and whatever style sheet, if any, is provided, these are often
necessary: The Chicago Manual of Style, The Canadian Style, and Editing Canadian
English.
Decide how many passes you will make and what you will look at in each one.
our noticing it. To read infrastructure, we see enough of the word to realize what it is,
and then move on.
Here is one of the secrets of proofreading: turn off your brains automatic correction
function. Learn to s-l-o-w d-o-w-n so you can focus on every letter of every word, every
punctuation mark, every element of the layout, and every cross-reference. Youre not
reading for meaning. Youre reading to make sure that every required letter, punctuation
mark, visual element, etc., is present. Read out loud (whether actually out loud, or in
your head.)
Comparison proofreading
Comparison proofreading is a comparison between the latest version of a document (the
live copy) with the previous version (dead copy). Comparison proofreading can be done
solo or as a team.
Maintain a steady pace, not too slow, but not so fast that you miss errors. Know your
attention span and take breaks accordingly, even if the break is simply raising your eyes
and shrugging your shoulders.
Do different tasks separately. Set up a checklist of tasks. If possible, do things in the
same order each time you proofread.
5. Keep notes
If no style is specified, keep notes, especially on capitalization, compounds, and
numbers. If you have no spec sheet for head levels, type size, spacing, and so on, make
your own from what you see.
Traps
These items are fraught with proofreading perils:
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