There are a lot of factors that might affect the scores of a student in criminology assignment some of which include lack of research skills, inability to proofread and write well, unclear concepts, and
poor grammar skills.
Not exact matches
Nothing turns guys off than girls who have
poor punctuation
skills and bad
grammar.
Despite starting out by helming some of the minor Val Lewton films (Isle of the Dead and Bedlam, the latter of which I've always thought is almost as good as I Walked with a Zombie), a resume that suggests
skill, Robson has a surprisingly
poor grasp of film
grammar.
It isn't about bad
grammar and
poor storytelling
skills, cuz even traditional authors do those things.
If high school students might lack knowledge of
grammar and
poor writing
skills, college students simply have no time to devote to essay editing.
Aside from the glaring fact that typos, misspellings, and
poor grammar reflect badly on your communication
skills, there's another, equally important reason to carefully proofread before posting content.
Information is not relevant to the job Wordy, vague, unfocused, rambling Focuses on responsibilities rather than achievements Lacks performance results — concrete ways your employers benefited from your
skills No examples of achievements or success — awards and promotions Lacks hard numbers to back up achievements Work history is spotty, fraudulent or missing Education is overemphasized Crucial
skills are buried and hard to find Layout is too difficult to read quickly Typos,
poor grammar, outdated terminology
If you write that your communication
skills are excellent but your resume shrieks of
poor communication in terms of spellings and
grammar, well, don't be surprised if you do not receive that interview you have been waiting for!