Policies and Procedures
PROCEDURE 1A.4/12 - Communication Style Sheet
for Policy 1A.4
Anoka-Ramsey Community College Style Sheet
For Aid in Writing, Typing, and Proofreading Guidelines
- The name of our institution is hyphenated: Anoka-Ramsey
Community College. The exception is in the stylized logo
where all four parts of the name are run together and the
symbol (or mark) is included.
- Color and B/W versions of the college logo can
be accessed at the college’s internal web site at http://www.ar.cc.mn.us/intranet . When printing the log, please adhere to the guidelines
found in the Visual Standards Guidebook available from
the PR and Marketing Office. Following is an example of
the college’s logo:
- Abbreviation of our name: ARCC. This is not hyphenated;
periods and/or slash marks are not used.
- Names of our buildings are capitalized:
| Business/Nursing |
Humanities |
Student Center |
| College Services |
Library |
Technology |
| Fine Arts |
Performing Arts Center |
Training and
Development Center |
| Gymnasium |
Science |
|
- Titles:
- Official and department titles are capitalized
when we refer to specific persons or titles on our
campus. Those of others generally are not. For example:
Correct:
| Our President is Patrick Johns. |
| Anoka-Ramsey Community College’s Dean
of Educational Services will be there. |
| If you enroll in our Accounting Program,
these are the requirements. |
|
In general, a college president is responsible for setting campus policy. |
- Fall Semester (not Fall semester) when referring
to a specific semester and definitely when using
the year,
as in Fall Semester 2002. Summer Session
I, II (not summer school.)
-
Specific titles of other agencies are also
capitalized. These are correct:
| Coon Rapids Fire Department |
Anoka-Hennepin
District No. 11 |
| Anoka Technical College |
Coon Rapids Athletic
Association |
Titles used just before names are also capitalized,
such as President Johns and Dean Holland.
-
Academic subjects and degrees:
-
Capitalize titles of specific
courses, but do not capitalize general subjects,
except those
referring to a language:
Marge took Biology 1101 last year; this
year she needs another biology course
and one in English.
-
Academic
degrees are generally
not capitalized:
Bob thought he’d never earn his associate in arts degree, but he’s
gone on to earn a bachelor’s. (Note the appropriate apostrophe in bachelor’s.)
He earned an AA degree.
Rules
- Spelling
The following are correct and/or preferred:
| a lot (always two words) |
acknowledgment |
all
right (not alright) |
| employee (not employe) |
harassment |
catalog |
| judgment |
commitment |
coursework (one word) |
- Capitalization:
- When in doubt, do not capitalize.
- Capitalize major words in a title.
- In a title, capitalize the first word of
a hyphenated compound. As a rule, capitalize
the word
following
the hyphen if it is a noun or proper adjective
or if it is equal in importance to the first word:
| Long-Range Plan |
Student Handbook |
Lower Level College Services |
| Annual Report |
Board Office |
|
| Room 203 |
Sino-American Treaty |
|
- Short prepositions and articles are not capitalized
within titles:
Follow-up Report Report on Enrollment Activities with Ten or More Participants
- The following are not capitalized: history
class, college, academic year, noon, holiday,
seasons, faculty, counselor, teacher, instructor,
coach, secretary, faculty secretary, administrator,
etc.
metro area (when followed by a noun, it is hyphenated: metro-area college)
employee (unless used in contacts in legal terms)
state of Minnesota (unless used in a legal document or as an employer)
contract (unless used in the name of a specific contract: MSCF Contract)
- Punctuation:
- Apostrophe:
- “It’s” is used only when
it is the abbreviation of “it
is” or “it has.” Example: “It’s too soon
for its daily recharging.”
- Men’s, women’s, three years’ experience, etc. in
possessives.
- For plurals of letters such as Fs, and
of numbers such as 2s, see The Gregg Reference
Manual
- Hyphens
- Compound adjectives: up-to-date records,
part-time work, full-time students, long-range
plan,
on-campus classes, off-campus classes,
two-story building,
three-credit class. (Use no hyphens in sentences like “The
report was up to date.” The
following is correct: full- and part-time students)
- Use in nouns beginning with the prefix “self”: self-esteem,
self-defense.
- No hyphen is needed in postsecondary, audiovisual,
recordkeeping, bookkeeping.
- Use in numbers from twenty-one to ninety-nine.
- Quotation Marks
In all cases, commas and periods go inside the
quotation marks: The package was marked “Handle with Care.” The play is “Dancing at Lughnasa,” directed
by Jack Bibee.
- Commas
Not needed in March 2001. Needed when the day is
given: “March 19, 2002,
was the date.” Needed when using “etc.” “That
comes in different styles, colors, etc., and you may order
until Wednesday.”
- Numbers:
The game is September 10, not 10th unless you write “10th
of September.” He came in first, not 1st.
- Grammar: Use of his/her/their. (See The Gregg Reference
Manual.)
- Abbreviations, initials:
| etc. |
p.m. (not P.M. or PM) |
pc (photo copy) |
BN (Business/Nursing) |
| c (copy) |
No. (number) |
p. (one page) |
H 121 (not H121) |
| vs. (versus) |
pp. (two or more pages) |
Rm 203 |
Ph.D. (no space) |
- Frequent mistakes or misuses:
- Splitting an infinitive (to + verb) should
be avoided, e.g., “He intended to write the
letter correctly.”
- Specific words.
| percent (not per cent) |
audiovisual (one word) |
| eager (as opposed to anxious) |
less (with things that cannot be counted) “less
funding” |
| orient (not orientate) |
fewer (with things
that can be counted) “fewer students” |
Bad is an adjective, badly is an adverb: “I
feel bad (not badly) that he was badly injured.”
Miscellaneous
- ARCC names and titles such as follows:
College Advisory Committee (not Community or Citizen’s
Advisory Board athletic fields (not play fields)
Minnesota State Colleges and Universities division coordinator
(not director)
- Course – a series of instructional classes dealing
with a subject. (Usually used when we refer to credit classes) – “The
English course is for freshmen.”
Class – may be used instead of “course,” although
we usually use it to refer to one class meeting.
- At the end of a letter, type the secretary’s initials
in lower case. The writer of the memo should already have
his/her name in a signature section.
- Write 12 noon or 12:00 noon, not 12 p.m. or a.m.
Noon is not capitalized.
- Numbers ten and under are written out. Numbers
eleven and over are numerals, unless they begin a sentence.
-------------------
History:
| 3/04 |
Technical changes made to incorporate new logo |
For Minnesota State Colleges
and Universities (MnSCU) policies and procedures, go to www.mnscu.edu/Policies/PolicyIndex.html
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