Title

The title of a resource is often the first thing a user will notice when browsing resources, regardless of the resource display. Check out a few examples around QUBES, and notice how prominent the titles are:

Best Practices for Writing Titles

  1. Title includes no author names.
  2. Title is unique.
    1. Not an exact copy of the original title
    2. Not an exact copy of another adaptation's title 
  3. Title includes a distinguishing feature.

Look at the titles of the examples below. The original is followed by two adaptations:

Students use small mammal data from the National Ecological Observatory Network to understand necessary steps of data management from data collection to data analysis by estimating small mammal population sizes using the Lincoln-Peterson model.
data management, spreadsheets, small mammals community dynamics, NEON, Capture mark-recapture, National Ecological Observatory Network
8.8K
13.4K
2
0
06.2018
This adaptation consists of three exercises that introduce students to 1) format spreadsheet data tables, 2) carry out spreadsheet quality control, and 3) count/sort/filter data of interest in order to conduct a pilot analysis on NEON small mammal data.
data management, spreadsheets, mammals, Capture mark-recapture
2.8K
1.3K
0
0
05.2018
Students use vegetation structure data from the National Ecological Observatory Network to understand necessary steps of data management from data collection to data analysis by correlating vegetation biomass across nine forest sites to climate metrics.
forest ecology, data management, spreadsheets, Community Dynamics, NEON, DIG, National Ecological Observatory Network, biomass
2.0K
1.0K
0
0
12.2018

While there are similarities, of course, the titles provide you with information about how the adaptations are distinct from the original.

Next: Writing Abstracts