Do NOT try and select it.
Here's what you should do:
1. WRITE DOWN the essential parts of what it is you want to research;
2. Put them in a logical sequence;
3. That becomes your table of contents. So take virtually those EXACT words, and then make it your title. I'm dead serious about using virtually the exact words. In about 95% of the cases, a student will give me some over-generalized title, but when I look at the actual paper, the table of contents is very different from the table of contents. THAT'S A TRAP;
4. As pointed out in the "How to Cut…" document, you can create your title by making the table of contents FIRST.
5. Here's an oversimplified example. A student will create an over-generalized title, such as "Weapons of Mass Destruction" but I look at the table of contents, it will have:
What Ricin Is;
How It Works.
What the title should have been is: Ricin: What It Is; How It Works.
6. Get the absolute MAIN FOCUS into just one, or a very few words, and put that word/ words as the BEGINNING of the title, following by the colon sign. Example: Ricin:
7. THEN, take each of the segments (chapter headings from the table of contents), and put them right behind the colon. Each segment will end with a semicolon, except for the last one, which will end with a period.
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