This course is your complete guide to mastering Grammarly, the world's most powerful AI writing assistant. It's designed to take you from a basic user to a pro, ensuring your writing is not just correct, but also clear, confident, and compelling. You'll learn to go beyond fixing typos and use Grammarly's advanced features to refine your style, strengthen your arguments, and tailor your message for any audience.
Through a series of hands-on lessons, you'll gain a deep understanding of how to leverage Grammarly's full suite of tools, from its foundational grammar checker to its cutting-edge generative AI. You'll discover how to use the Tone Detector to strike the perfect note, set custom goals for every document, and use AI to overcome writer's block. Whether you're a student, a professional, or a content creator, this masterclass will give you the skills and strategies to make every piece of writing shine.
By the end of this course, you will not only write with greater accuracy but also with newfound confidence and a distinct, professional voice.
Here's what you'll
✍️ Master the Correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation with precision and ease.
✨ Refine Your Make your writing more concise, engaging, and powerful by eliminating wordiness and passive voice.
🎯 Command Your Use the Tone Detector to ensure your message is received exactly as you intend.
🚀 Integrate AI for Use Grammarly’s generative AI to brainstorm ideas, draft content, and rewrite sentences instantly.
🛡️ Protect Your Confidently use the built-in plagiarism checker to ensure the originality of your content.
John Taylor is Professor of Physics and Presidential Teaching Scholar at the University of Colorado in Boulder. He took his B.A. in mathematics from Cambridge University and his Ph.D. in physics from the University of California at Berkeley, where he studied the theory of elementary particles. He has taught at the Universities of Cambridge and London in England, and at Princeton. and Colorado in the U.S. He first came to Colorado in 1966. Since then he has won five university and departmental teaching awards. He is the author of three text books: a graduate text on quantum scattering theory; an undergraduate text on error analysis, which has been translated into German, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Russian, and Spanish; and an undergraduate
text on modem physics. The second edition of the book on error analysis appeared in 1997. His research interests include quantum scattering theory and the foundations of quantum theory, and he has published some fifty articles in journals such as the Physical Review and the Journal of Mathematical Physics. For several years he was Associate Editor of the American Journal of Physics. For the past eighteen years he has given his "Mr. Wizard" shows to some 60,000 children on the Boulder campus and in many towns in Colorado. He received an Emmy Award for his television series "Physics for Fun", which aired on KCNC TV in 1988 -1990. In 1989 he was awarded the Distinguished Service Citation of the American Association of Physics Teachers. In the same year, he won one of eleven Gold Medals in the national "Professor of the Year" program and was named Colorado Professor of the Year. In 1998, at the invitation of the International Science Festival in Dunedin, he toured New Zealand and gave IS "Mr. Wizard" shows in various museums and colleges.