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Writing & Photography & Proofreader Correspondence Courses

Tuesday 19 February 2013

Take the first step today. ___Watch this short film.


Before you study ANY course or take any training, decide what is your PURPOSE. Speak to Brian Morris the Principal  0800 - 801994. There's a free test of your aptitude for writing or proofreading or photography. Check your skill level. Begin something worthwhile. Career options await you. Download the free information package. There's no obligation. When you've done that, click here and watch this 7 minute film. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHD7QbbzQno

Category: General
Posted by: Brian Morris

Brian Morris will explain how to turn your writing and spelling and photography skills into income-earning opportunities.

Being a good speller and a person who knows grammar means you can get work as a proofreader or editor. Call for details and our free reports on these opportunities. Toll free calls 0800-801994. Telephone is open 24/7. Even if it's 2am, call and leave a message. We will call you back in the morning.

Gain work skills.  Call 0800-801994, Monday to Friday.

By the way, congratulations to our student Karen Phillips who won her category of the Katherine Mansfield Short Story Competition.

Karen Phillips entered her short story in the Katherine Mansfield Short Story Competition. Then got on with her NZIBS correspondence course.

   She won the novice section for previously unpublished authors. There were 662 entries. Later, Karen entered the Heartland 1000 Competition and she won that competition also, with a different story. Her tutor was almost as thrilled as she was.

   “Out of the blue I was invited to fly to Wellington for the results announcement” said the quiet school administrator from Ahipara, just south of Ninety Mile Beach. Her job at the local school involves administration and acquiring teachers’ resource materials. After family and domestic duties, Karen says “I read and write whenever I can find time to do it.”

   Her short story The Visit was described by competition judge Carl Nixon as “A very simple story, shorter than many entries at under 1500 words, but full of subtle emotions. It is a deserving winner that could hold its own with some of the best of New Zealand fiction.”

   "Karen’s tutor, Joan Rosier-Jones, recognised her third assignment story was good enough to enter in the Katherine Mansfield competition," said Brian Morris, Principal at New Zealand Institute of Business Studies, where Karen is his student.

   “Joan has been a competition judge herself many times, so she instantly saw the quality of the story. Other writing course students of the Institute have flooded praise upon Karen with comments like ‘Your win inspires the rest of us’.”

“Two other students have achieved Highly Commended citations in other competitions recently, so there is a real buzz going around the Institute.”

   “A special friendship develops among students on the online Student Discussion Board. Our students study by correspondence and they don’t usually meet in person” explained Brian Morris. “But it means a student living in the Far North is in the same supportive writing circle with someone in Rakaia or Akaroa. Writers without borders!”

   If you would like to read Karen’s winning short story, call the Institute and a free copy will be posted to you. Telephone 0800-801994 toll free. Or email ‘Karen's winning short story please’ to registrar@nzibs.co.nz
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Janice Marriott attended the KM Awards night

I was at the Katherine Mansfield Awards, New Zealand’s most prestigious annual event for short story writing. The winner of the novice category was NZIBS student Karen Phillips. This winning story, The Visit, started as an exercise in Assignment 3 of the course which asked for a story with a beginning, a middle and an end, a limit of four characters, and 400 - 500 words. After Karen wrote it her tutor suggested she extend the dialogue and enter it in the KM awards - and the rest is history.

You are an inspiration to us all, Karen. Our congratulations to you, and to tutor Joan Rosier-Jones.

Link to Karen’s short story >>>
http://www.bnz.co.nz/static/www/docs/2009-KMA-The-Visit-Novice.pdf

Click here to read the winning KMA stories of recent years.

http://www.bnz.co.nz/about-us/sponsorships/bnz-literary-awards#source=RD+literaryawards-PDF

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Hang around publishers and work comes
Victoria Munro’s husband, Sam Barnes, is a scuba diver, fisherman and freelance contributor to NZ SPEARO, the new glossy magazine for underwater spear fishers.
Lesson one: If you hang around with the people who produce magazines they’ll soon find work for you.
Lesson two: Mention you’re studying proofreading at NZIBS. No prizes for guessing what your work will be.
Result: Victoria Munro is listed on the magazine masthead credits as Chief Sub-Editor.
   “One of the best techniques I use from my course is creating a Style List. I also use Track Changes.”
Victoria is not surprised when Muphry’s Law kicks in. But she’s proud to be part of the team producing a world class magazine.
   Brian Morris,  Principal 
PS: Muphry is the fellow who put the mistakes into Murphy’s Law. 
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Don’t overlook the LUCK factor
  I derive a lot of my inspiration from sports. Take the US Masters Golf Tournament as a case in point. Three players tied with exactly the same score after four days of high-pressure golf. This produced a sudden death play-off.
  One player, Angel Cabrera from Argentina, a country which has never produced a high profile golfer, was up against two hugely popular Americans. Commentators were calling the odds and the former poor-boy and one time caddy wasn’t on their list.
Angel’s drive landed among the trees in an extremely difficult lie. He went for the brave shot, straight through the forest. We heard his ball go CRACK against solid tree trunk.     
  Disaster? The ball could have angled off deeper into the forest. But LO! It deflected on to the green, giving him a dream position.
  Luck was on his side. But only because he didn’t go for the safe shot. He went for the daring shot. He went on to win.
                       Brian Morris,  Principal
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Mother & daughter work well together
The new ‘dynamic duo’ is Jenny Anderson (L) and Vicki Wong (R) of Invercargill. Mother and daughter have worked together for nine months gathering news, writing the text and making the photos. So far they have concentrated on gardening and lifestyle block farming topics.
“Mum does all the hard work” says Vicki. “She gets the story ideas, talks to the people, gathers all the facts and she writes the copy and captions. I just make the photos.” Jenny graduated as a NZIBS Freelance Journalist.  Vicki will graduate from her Photography course in April.
Their features have appeared in Weekend Gardener and Organic New Zealand. Other media are on their target list.
“But now I’m taking a bunch of good photos and I’ll let Mum create the story around them afterwards,” said Vicki. She is on assignment photographing the lovely gardens of Christchurch in their autumn colours.
 Brian Morris,  Principal

 



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