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Teaching Students About Headlines, Titles, and Subject Lines
It’s important, then, to teach students how to write strong headlines, titles, and subject lines—and I have a great technique you can use, based on an observation Guy Kawasaki shared on Google+. Kawasaki posted a screenshot from his blog indexing site, Alltop.com, and observed, “You can see who the good headline creators are when you see them side by side.” Indeed, you can. Try the technique yourself by clicking on the screenshot above. It shows headlines from four blogs on the Writing page on Alltop. Even with the limited number of titles in the screenshot, you can see that some headlines are better at catching your attention than others. I want to go read The Other N-Words, for instance. The blogs at the top of an Alltop page tend to be stronger, so there’s not an obvious dud in the image. If you visit the Writing page on Alltop though, you’re likely to find some headlines that don’t work. On the current page, for example, I’m uninterested in Exercise 9, 10, 11, or 12 from Aldys Fiction. Aldys Fiction may be a great site, but based on those headlines alone, there’s nothing to convince me to go read anything. To show students how to write strong headlines, titles and subject lines, just customize this activity a bit. Here’s a basic outline of what to do:
As you go through the activity, you may find the opportunity to review the rules for using capital letters in titles. You can point to the guidelines in your class text. For a thorough review, point students to the details on Capitalizing Titles from Grammar Girl. For a bit of fun, you can try out the SongCase - the song title capitalizer. So there you have it. It’s fairly simple, but it should influence the headlines, titles, and subject lines that you see after the class completes it. Do you have any tricks for teaching students about headlines, titles, and subject lines? Leave me a comment!
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Text + Image = Tagxedo: The Next Generation of Word Cloud Fun Wordle brought us word clouds a couple of years ago. Tagxedo, which I used to create this cat image from Poes “The Black Cat,” takes things to the next level. Tagxedo arranges the word clouds for the text into the shape of an image that you choose. You can customize the colors, contrast, and other features. Read more on my blog for details on how to use this tool in the classroom. |
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The 10 worst wives and girlfriends in literature | Guyism.com # 2010-04-20
I like to emphasize that students grammar, punctuation, and mechanics are not under scrutiny in online discussions, for instance. As long as we can figure out what the student means, its fine. If there are questions about such things, take them to a private message. Dont let fear of corrections silence conversation.