College applications demand time and effort. To some, they feel tedious at best and miserable at worst. You work to recount everything about your life to multiple strangers who decide your admission ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. As the CEO of Command Education, I write about emotionally intelligent leadership and education. Students shouldn’t use AI to ...
On this week’s episode of Working, June Thomas spoke with Shayne Bushfield, aka Thorsten A. Integrity, about LearnedLeague, the online trivia empire that he founded and runs. They discussed the ins ...
Okay. Let’s get this out there: your first draft of anything is going to be bad — I mean, really bad. Because that’s the job of a first draft. To be bad. And your job is to write it. Once you write ...
As third-party cookies come to an end, brands are focusing on collecting more zero-party data directly from their customers and prospects so they can better understand their needs and wants. Although ...
On any given day, I write somewhere in the ballpark of 10,000 words–and the genres are all over the board. I have a journal for poetry and quick ideas that I keep with me at all times, in my backpack.
Welcome to a new series, “The Public Writing Life,” about how to write for a popular audience (and get paid for it) when you are part of the academy. There’s plenty of good writing advice out there, ...
“Do you have any advice for writing about people who do not look like you?” I was at the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference this summer, on a panel of writers of color. We talked about our concerns, from ...
Matt Whittle has experience writing and editing accessible education-related content in health, technology, nursing and business subjects. His work has been featured on Sleep.org, Psychology.org and ...
Using an interview can be an effective primary source for some papers and research projects. Finding an expert in the field or some other person who has knowledge of your topic can allow for you to ...