Indiana University Style Guide
Contents
A
abbreviations
academic and administrative titles
academic degrees
addresses
advisor
Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity statements
African American
alumna, alumnae, alumni, alumnus
American Indian
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
ampersands
apostrophes
Asian American
B–C
Ballet Theater
bias-free content
Big Ten
black
building names
bursar
campus names
campuswide
capitalization
chairperson
colons and semicolons
commas
Commencement
course listings/titles
credit hours
curricula vitae, curriculum vitae
D–F
dashes
dates
decades
degrees
department names
display type versus running copy
Dr.
drop/add
ellipsis points
e-mail
emerita, emeritae, emeriti, emeritus
Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action policy of Indiana University
faculty
fall, fall semester
fax
fee courtesy
fee scholarship
first semester, first-semester courses
foreign words and phrases
forms and documents
Founders Day
freshman
full time
fund raising, fundraising
G–N
grade point average (GPA)
grades
Herbert, Adam W.
Hispanic
hyphens
Indiana University
Indiana University Art Museum
international students
Internet
italics
IU
Latina, Latino
libraries
links
lists
Native American
Netherlands, the
nondegree
nondiscrimination statement
numbers
O–S
off campus
office names
Opera Theater
orientation
part time
Pei, I. M.
percent
phone numbers
place names
plurals
possessives
president
professor
registrar
running copy, running text
Saint (St.)
semicolons
spacing
spring, spring semester
state of Indiana
summer, summer session
T–Z
telephone numbers
theatre
times
titles of people
titles of works
Trustees of Indiana University
United States, U.S., U.S.A.
university
university-wide
upperclassmen
vice chancellor, vice president
vita, vitae
Web
Web addresses
Wells, Herman B
word processing
work-study
This guide is based in part on widely accepted reference works, such as The Chicago Manual of Style, Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, and the Associated Press Stylebook and Briefing on Media Law. Though these sources are invaluable, they do not address all of the editorial concerns specific to Indiana University. Therefore, we’ve developed additional recommendations.
A
abbreviations
Avoid abbreviations in running text.
Professor Shin, not Prof. Shin
Note, though, that you can use abbreviations (including the ampersand [&]) in running text when they are part of official names.
The art museum was designed by I. M. Pei & Partners.
Oberle & Associates, Inc., constructed Mikesell Plaza.
If the name represented by an abbreviation may be unknown to some of your readers, spell it out the first time you refer to it.
The Indiana Memorial Union (IMU) is one of the nation’s largest student unions. The IMU contains restaurants, a computer center, a bookstore, a bowling alley, and more than 180 hotel rooms.
Abbreviations of degrees, time expressions, and countries’ names have periods. Note that there are no spaces between their elements.
B.A., B.S., M.B.A., Ph.D., Ed.D., A.D., R.N., C.P.A., p.m., U.S.A.
Multiple initials of personal names, however, are separated by a space or spaces. So are abbreviations of multiword personal titles. Abbreviations in both categories end in periods.
Kenneth R. R. Gros Louis
Rev. Dr. M. L. King Jr.
Initials that do not stand for longer names, though, are usually not followed by periods.
Herman B Wells, Byron K Smith
Acronyms for job titles and names of organizations, centers, buildings, forms, tests, and assorted other objects are generally spelled without periods.
CEO, HTML, XHTML, IU, UNESCO, FAFSA, TOEFL, UNIX, SAT, IMU
Pluralize such terms without apostrophes—unless the last letter of the acronym is an S, in which case an apostrophe is needed. This is one of the rare cases where a plural requires an apostrophe.
AIs, GREs, IDs, EKGs, LANs, W-2s, SOS’s
Abbreviations that contain more than one period generally have an ’s to indicate the plural (another rare case of apostrophe use in a plural).
M.A.’s, B.G.S.’s
In a list of names that are followed by degree abbreviations and other initialized credentials, select an ordering principle and apply it consistently throughout your publication. For example, the list below places professional credentials first and academic credentials after them.
Kiel, Judith L., O.T.R., M.S.
Koss, Joseph A., R.R.T., M.S.
LaReau, Janice G., M.T., M.S.
See also addresses, commas, and times.
Return to Topacademic and administrative titles
See titles of people.
academic degrees
See degrees.
addresses
Use official names of offices and departments in university addresses.
Office of the Bursar, not Bursar's Office
Spell out names of buildings. In many cases, it is acceptable to leave off the first name of a person for whom a building, center, etc., was named. For instance, use Franklin Hall rather than J. A. Franklin Hall. However, use the full names for Ernie Pyle Hall and Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts.
When listing mailing addresses, use the two-letter postal abbreviation for the state, unless the context is formal (such as in an invitation), in which case spell out the state name. (It's also okay to spell out state names in running copy.) Use the full nine-digit zip code whenever possible. Abbreviate compass designations (N., S., E., W.), but spell out Street, Avenue, Road, etc.
IU addresses should follow this format:
person or office
institution name
building and room
street address
city, state zip codeKelley School of Business
IUPUI
Business/SPEA Building 3024
801 W. Michigan Street
Indianapolis, IN 46202-5151Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences
Indiana University
Psychology Building 120
1101 E. Tenth Street
Bloomington, IN 47408-7007
For addresses in running copy, use commas to separate elements, including U.S.A.
Direct inquiries to International Admissions,
Indiana University, 300 N. Jordan Avenue,
Bloomington, Indiana 47405-7700, U.S.A.
See also numbers.
advisor
Two correct spellings exist for this word: adviser and advisor. The Office of Creative Services previously used the -er spelling because it has long been the preferred spelling in most of our recommended reference works. Advisor, however, appears to be the preferred version for everyday use. Advisor is also widely used inside IU to refer to academic counselors and to officials who advise some of the campuses. For these reasons we now recommend the -or spelling.
Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity statements
Indiana University is committed to a policy of equal opportunity in its admission and employment programs. An Affirmative Action statement—either the long or short version—must be used in all recruitment publications, bulletins, and employment materials. The short version of the statement is as follows:
Indiana University is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity institution.
If using the long version of the statement, which follows, you may include all three paragraphs or just the first paragraph of the statement.
Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Policy
Indiana University pledges itself to continue its commitment to the achievement of equal opportunity within the university and throughout American society as a whole. In this regard, Indiana University will recruit, hire, promote, educate, and provide services to persons based upon their individual qualifications. Indiana University prohibits discrimination based on arbitrary consideration of such characteristics as age, color, disability, ethnicity, gender, marital status, national origin, race, religion, sexual orientation, or veteran status.
Indiana University shall take affirmative action, positive and extraordinary, to overcome the discriminatory effects of traditional policies and procedures with regard to the disabled, minorities, women, and Vietnam-era veterans.
An Affirmative Action office on each campus monitors the university’s policies and assists individuals who have questions or problems related to discrimination.
African American
No hyphen is used for either the noun or the adjective. Both African American and black are acceptable although they are not always interchangeable; we use both terms.
See also black.African American students, African Americans, Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies
alumna, alumnae, alumni, alumnus
Note that alumnus is the singular, masculine form; for references to women, use alumna (singular) or alumnae (plural). Alumni serves as the plural for a group that is composed of men only or of men and women together.
Anyone who has attended Indiana University is an alumnus or an alumna, even if he or she left without earning a degree.
Matt is an IUPUI alumnus. Lawanda is an IPFW alumna. Matt, Scott, and Pam are alumni, and Lawanda and Melissa are alumnae.
Use the abbreviation alum advisedly. It may be too casual for some contexts.
American Indian
Currently, American Indian is the most commonly used term, but Native American also may be acceptable in certain contexts. In many cases, the tribal affiliation is the most appropriate term.
See also Native American.
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
To comply with the ADA, printed and electronic publications should be considerate of and accessible to persons with disabilities. For advice on how to make your printed and electronic publications compliant, contact the disability services office on your campus.
ampersands
In printed publications, do not substitute an ampersand (&) for the word and unless referring to an official name that contains an ampersand.
School of Public and Environmental Affairs
but: I. M. Pei & Partners
Ampersands are used more freely on the Web.
apostrophes
See abbreviations, plurals, and possessives.
Asian American
No hyphen is used for either the noun or the adjective.
Asian American students, Asian Americans

