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Article
The Mysterious Incident of the Missing Title: Why Did Titular Concern Vanish from Composition Studies?
Publications
  • John Lamothe, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Submitting Campus
Daytona Beach
Department
Humanities & Communication
Document Type
Website
Publication/Presentation Date
6-27-2019
Abstract/Description

How much time, if any, do first-year writing instructors spend in class discussing the importance of titles on their students’ papers? Without looking at a mountain of lesson plans or interviewing a plethora of instructors from across the country, it is impossible to know what is and what isn’t commonly taught in first-year composition courses. Admittedly, introductory writing and research classes can vary greatly from institution to institution and even from instructor to instructor within the same department. However, judging by an examination of current First-Year Composition textbooks, Rhet/Comp scholars place little importance on discussing the effect of titles on student papers. Out of the most popular rhetoric and composition textbooks in use now, only a handful give any direction, however miniscule it is, about how and why students should compose a title to their work. When they do say anything about titles, much of the instruction focuses on issues of citation or formatting (i.e., where to put the title) instead of an explanation of titles as rhetorical tool that students should carefully consider[1].

Publisher
Writing Commons
Citation Information
John Lamothe. "The Mysterious Incident of the Missing Title: Why Did Titular Concern Vanish from Composition Studies?" (2019) p. 1 - 2
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/john-lamothe/5/