Last time, you found the mistakes. Now you need a faster way to fix them using standard newsroom shorthand codes.
In the last chapter, you learned what copyreading is.
You learned that a copyreader carefully checks every word, sentence, and detail before a story is published.
You also spotted your first errorsβspelling mistakes, grammar issues, and unclear sentences.
But here's something important to think about.
Imagine you are a copyreader for a school newspaper. You have five stories to check before the deadline. That means many sentences and even more errors to fix.
You don't have time to write long explanations for every mistake.
So what do copyreaders do instead? They use symbols.
Copyreading symbols are simple marks used by editors to show corrections in a textβwithout writing full sentences.
Instead of writing "add this word," an editor uses a symbol. Instead of saying "capitalize this letter," they mark it directly on the paper. These symbols are fast, clear, and highly efficient (meaning they save time and effort).
Copyreading symbols are universally recognized in the journalism field:
Writing full sentences for every correction takes too long and makes the page messy. Symbols solve this problem completely. A single mark can tell the writer, editor, and layout artist exactly what to fix.
Think of it as a shared shorthand code used by journalists to communicate quickly and clearly on printed copy drafts.
Below are the most commonly used symbols in school papers and journalism contests, shown with red editing marks βοΈ:
Sometimes editors write short abbreviations in the margins to give direct feedback to the writer:
| Abbreviation | Meaning | Example & Correction |
|---|---|---|
| SP | Spell Out | Write numbers or abbreviations in full. β 2 sandwiches → β two sandwiches |
| WW | Wrong Word | Wrong word or homophone used. β they're notebooks → β their notebooks |
| REP | Repetition | A word or idea is repeated too much. β very very good → β very good |
| AWK | Awkward | Sentence phrasing sounds unnatural. β We thought there were good actors being in the film. → β We thought the actors in the film were good. |
| WC | Word Choice | A better, more vivid word is needed. β The kids were happy. → β The kids were thrilled. |
| R-O | Run-On Sentence | Two independent sentences incorrectly joined without proper punctuation. β The program ended, the students went home. → β The program ended. The students went home. |
| Symbol / Note | Meaning |
|---|---|
| ^ | Insert missing word or letter |
| Delete | Remove text |
| Capitalize | Change to uppercase (3 lines under) |
| Lowercase | Change to lowercase (slash through) |
| . | Insert period (circled period) |
| , | Insert comma |
| ? | Insert question mark |
| ' | Insert apostrophe |
| " " | Insert quotation marks |
| - | Insert hyphen |
| Close Space | Remove space (curved loops) |
| # | Insert space |
| ΒΆ | New paragraph |
| Transpose | Switch order (S-curve) |
| SP | Spell out |
| WW | Wrong word |
| REP | Repetition |
| AWK | Awkward |
| WC | Word choice |
| R-O | Run-on sentence |
Identify correct copyreading symbols and rewrite sentences using proper editing rules.
| What to Check | Done β | Try Again π |
|---|---|---|
| I can identify spacing errors (close space vs insert space) | β | β |
| I can use the correct punctuation symbols (period, comma, apostrophe, quote) | β | β |
| I can apply abbreviation codes like SP, WW, REP, and R-O | β | β |
Read the copyreading symbol or abbreviation. Match it to its correct meaning!
Now you know the symbols copyreaders use to edit stories fast. Next, learn the structure of a news storyβincluding the 5Ws, 1H, and the Inverted Pyramid!