The following three scenarios are common in transcription. Which of the below statements is TRUE? Type A, B, or C in the box below.
A) You are transcribing two people chatting at a restaurant about an upcoming election. A waiter comes up and takes their order. You DO NOT transcribe the dialogue between the two speakers and waiter because it is irrelevant to the main topic.
B) You are transcribing an interview where the interviewer is on the phone with an interviewee. At one point, the interviewer mutes the call and has a short conversation with someone in the room with him who does not speak at any other point in the file, and their conversation has nothing to do with the interview. You DO NOT transcribe this side conversation.
C) You are transcribing a group of adults chatting at a barbecue about their children's education. You can clearly hear an argument between a few children in the background, but they do not speak to the adults nor do the adults acknowledge their quarrel. You DO NOT transcribe the children because they do not interact with your main speakers in the file.
Answers
Answered by
12
fist is F and second is T and tharid is T
sift45:
what are you writing bro
A) He's a former member of the National Association of [Government?] [Archives?] and Records Administrators.
B) The apple [fell] from the tree and landed on his [foot].
C) He failed his [arithmetic class?] but aced advanced [chemistry?].
Answered by
11
Options B and C are true .Common rules of transcription
These are specific transcription guidelines that are provided to transcriptionists.
Our focus is to capture all spoken English content of the audio content and only and transcribe it into clean verbatim text format.
If your media comprise only song lyrics, or the language is foreign with subtitles on screen, the transcript effect should be [MUSIC] or [FOREIGN] respectively.
Customers are encouraged to indicate special guidelines if a different format is desired.
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