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Writing Guides
- General Writing
Guides
-
- Elements of
Style (Bartleby Library, Columbia University)
- William Strunk, Jr., 1918
http://www.columbia.edu/acis/bartleby/strunk/
- Grammar and
Style Notes (Jack Lynch)
- http://www.english.upenn.edu/~jlynch/grammar.html
- Guide
to Grammar and Writing (Charles Darling, Professor of
English/Humanities,CapitalCommunity-Technical College, Hartford,
CT)
- This site is a compendium of English grammar, usage, and
writing information at the sentence, paragraph, and essay levels.
Each section contains easily understood information about
concepts related to the topic. This site has quizzes as well as a
searchable index.
http://webster.commnet.edu/HP/pages/darling/original.htm
- Notes on
Writing Papers and Theses (Ken Lertzman, Simon Fraser
University, British Columbia)
- Resources
for Teachers (Online Writing Lab (Purdue U.))
- http://owl.english.purdue.edu/lab/teachers/index.html
- The
King's English (Bartleby Library, Columbia
University)
- H. W. Fowler, 1908
http://www.columbia.edu/acis/bartleby/fowler/
- Yale C/AIM
Web Style Guide (Patrick J. Lynch, Yale Center for Advanced
Instructional Media)
- http://info.med.yale.edu/caim/manual/index.html
- Specialty Writing
Guides
-
- Gramar,
Punctuation, and Capitalization: A handbook for technical writers
and editors (Mary K. McCaskill, Langley Research Center,
Hampton, Virgina))
- Note: Large PDF document. Requires Acrobat reader.
- Instructions to
Authors in the Health Sciences (Raymon H. Mulford Library,
Medical College of Ohio)
- http://www.mco.edu/lib/instr/libinsta.html
- World Wide
Web (WWW) Server Standards and Guidelines (U.S. Department of
Education)
- Institutions and organizations needing to standardize their
Web efforts might use this as a model for a style guide for
online content. It provides an idea of the scope that is required
-- covering such issues as navigation/organization and
style/markup, and includes links to the guides of other agencies
as well as to hypertext style guides from many sources.
http://www.ed.gov/internal/wwwstds.html
- Writing
and Publishing Resources for Health Services and Public Health
Practitioners (Compiled by Elizabeth Briskin with assistance
from Laura Larsson.)
- Information on authorship, copyright, and writing
styles.
- Style
Manuals
-
- A
Brief Citation Guide for Internet Sources in History and the
Humanities (Version 2.1) (Melvin E. Page, East Tennessee
State University)
- http://www.nmmc.com/libweb/employee/citguide.htm
-
Bibliography Style Handbook (Writers' Workshop,
UIUC)
- This Handbook summarizes and illustrates the bibliographical
formatting rules for three different citation styles: the
American Psychological Association (APA) style, the new Modern
Languages Association (MLA) style, and the old MLA style.
- Citing
OMIM (OMIM)
- Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man, OMIM (TM). Center for
Medical Genetics, Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, MD) and
National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library
of Medicine (Bethesda, MD), 1999.
- Electronic
References (APA)
- Excerpted from the new 5th edition of the Publication
Manual
-
Guide to Citing Internet Sources (Phil Cross and Karen
Towle)
- Citation formats suggested here are based on the book by Xia
Li & Nancy B. Crane: Electronic style: a guide to citing
electronic information, 2nd ed., Mecklermedia, 1995; and the
draft of ISO standard 690-2: Information and documentation:
Bibliographic references: Electronic documents or parts
thereof.
- How to
Cite ACP Journal Club (ACP-ASIM)
- The citation styles reflect ACP Journal Club's new status
as an independent publication, beginning with the
November/December 1994 issue. Citation of material published in
earlier issues should follow the citation guidelines published in
those issues.
- The
Columbia Guide to Online Style (Columbia University
Press)
- Part 1 of The Columbia Guide to Online Style by Janice R.
Walker and Todd Taylor (Columbia UP, 1998) presents a guide to
locating, translating, and using the elements of citation for
both a humanities style (i.e., MLA and Chicago) and a scientific
style (APA and CBE) for electronically-accessed sources. The
unique element approach used makes this a useful reference book
for citing electronic sources regardless of the specific
bibliographic style you may be required to use.
- Uniform Requirements for
Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals (International
Committee of Medical Journal Editors)
- Sometimes referred to as the Vancouver Style. Updated May,
2000. http://www.icmje.org/
-
Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical
Journals (American College of Physicians Online, Annals of
Internal Medicine, January 1997))
- Sometimes referred to as the 'Vancouver Style".
http://www.acponline.org/journals/annals/01jan97/unifreqr.htm
- Web Extension to
American Psychological Association Style (WEAPAS)
- http://www.beadsland.com/weapas/