Showing posts with label Blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blog. Show all posts

September 16, 2009

"How to Write Well"

[Note: everything in the post except for this note, including the title, is taken directly from Greg Mankiw's Blog. Rather than linking to it I figure it is easier for me to just copy the text and cite the source. For those of you outside of the world of economics, Mankiw (sometimes referred to as variations on N. Gregory Mankiw) is a famous economist who headed the Council of Economic Advisers under Bush 43 from 2003 to 2005 and teaches at Harvard. The original post can be found here.]

When I was CEA chair, I sent the following guidelines to my staff as they started drafting the Economic Report of the President. A friend recently emailed me a copy, and I thought I would share them with blog readers. They are good rules of thumb, especially for economists writing for a general audience.

ERP Writing Guidelines

  • Stay focused. Remember the take-away points you want the reader to remember. If some material is irrelevant to these points, it should probably be cut.
  • Keep sentences short. Short words are better than long words. Monosyllabic words are best.
  • The passive voice is avoided by good writers.
  • Positive statements are more persuasive than normative statements.
  • Use adverbs sparingly.
  • Avoid jargon. Any word you don’t read regularly in a newspaper is suspect.
  • Never make up your own acronyms.
  • Avoid unnecessary words. For instance, in most cases, change
    o “in order to” to “to”
    o “whether or not” to “whether”
    o “is equal to” to “equals”
  • Avoid “of course, “clearly,” and “obviously.” Clearly, if something is obvious, that fact will, of course, be obvious to the reader.
  • The word “very” is very often very unnecessary.
  • Keep your writing self-contained. Frequent references to other works, or to things that have come before or will come later, can be distracting.
  • Put details and digressions in footnotes. Then delete the footnotes.
  • To mere mortals, a graphic metaphor, a compelling anecdote, or a striking fact is worth a thousand articles in Econometrica.
  • Keep your writing personal. Remind readers how economics affects their lives.
  • Remember two basic rules of economic usage:
    o “Long run” (without a hyphen) is a noun. “Long-run” (with a hyphen) is an adjective. Same with “short(-)run.”
    o “Saving” (without a terminal s) is a flow. “Savings” (with a terminal s) is a stock.
  • Buy a copy of Strunk and White’s Elements of Style. Also, William Zinsser’s On Writing Well. Read them—again and again and again.
  • Keep it simple. Think of your reader as being your college roommate who majored in English literature. Assume he has never taken an economics course, or if he did, he used the wrong textbook.

July 17, 2009

"The Jews and Their Lies."

Holy shit. I had no idea Michael Steele and the RNC could be so stupid as to create The Obama Card, a game that allows players to use their Obama credit card to purchase "Anti-semitic, anti-Latino, and overtly pornographic literature - with pictures to boot" (AMERICAblog). Apparently this material helps the public understand just how Obama's spending is destroying our country.

Using a search engine modeled after Amazon's, 'players' search for keywords relating to items they wish to purchase. A search for Jews brings up a set of thumbnail images including, you guessed it, "The Jews and Their Lies." One can also, with proper searching (as done by AMERICAblog), find items like "Sex Secrets of Escorts" and "Porn: Have Anal Sex and Call Her Best Friend for a Threesome". Seriously.

Also hilarious is the fact that certain words are banned: one must use homosexual instead of gay, and the word vagina is banned.

Check out the AMERICAblog post to see screenshots of some of the searches (for some reason Blogger won't let me upload these images).

March 18, 2009

November 14, 2008

Moving On

I apologize for the extent to which I hijacked the site for political rantings the last couple months. But now that the election is over I think we're all in agreement about the desire to have general discussions on a variety of interesting topics, political or not.

To that end, well, I need something to do. So if you have anything I can research, or analyze, or whatever, gimme some ideas. Does the stock market do better when Congress and the White House are controlled by different parties? Do the long travel distances mean that sports teams in the West get more of a home-field advantage? I dunno, I'll take anything.

October 24, 2008

I'm reverting some of the changes (UPDATED)

I just don't like them, and the "reactions" don't seem to be working anyhow. Feel free to tinker with anything you'd like though.

Update:
Did you know when creating a post, if you hit the "show all" button after the line where you enter labels it will show you all the labels used thus far? 'Cuz I didn't.

October 22, 2008

New Features

I'm playing around with "Blogger in Draft," so if you see some new features or something that looks funky, don't worry. Feel free to play around with it yourself.

Update: The "reactions" thing would be a cool idea if you could change it on a post-by-post basis.

September 26, 2008

Minor Improvement

I made it so the table in the corner is now a link to the homepage, so that if you click on it while viewing another page on the site you can just easily go back home. Note that clicking on the title accomplishes the same effect, but for now I've colored it the same color as the background because I wish we had a better one.

Also, just to note, I've invited Warren and Desiree to join us, though I don't know that they'll be contributing often.

September 25, 2008

Proposal

I think we should have a few running discussions going like, such as, and, one on the economy, or one for links, etc. All such semi-permanent threads should then have links on the permanent link list, and we can just keep one conversation going on pretty easily. Thoughts?

September 24, 2008

Thinking in advance

So what happens to the upper-right corner of this blog after the election? I figure we should start considering suggestions now so we have something we are happy with by the time mid-November rolls around. I would love to have more statistics up there, but: 1. don't really have a suggestion for the content; and 2. don't really have the skills to continue it.

Chris, if you will help teach me how to properly use Excel for statistics, I would greatly appreciate it and gladly help with the work that goes into the upper-right box.

September 12, 2008

Corner Pic

Instead of droning on to myself everyday about the Electoral College, I was thinking maybe I'd just try to keep this picture up here in the upper right corner and keep it updated. I'm not married to it, though, so feel free to rebel. Peace.

Oh, and btw, when I said yesterday I thought the election was about 70-30? Yep, I'm a badass.

September 08, 2008

Making Links

If this is too much work, I totally understand, but I figured I'd put it out there.

To make links on the comment page (why the same linking option doesn't appear to be available is beyond me) do the following.

Say you have a sentence like "... you should read this article to ..." and you want "this article" to be the link to, say, www.bob.com. Type the following:
read (a href="http://www.bob.com")this article(/a) to
(except you need <>'s instead of ()'s)

Not too much to it, just (a href="URL") and then (/a) once your linked text is over.

For reference, you can also use (b) (/b) for bold, (i) (/i) for italics, etc, as long as you use <>'s