Talk:Rubrics (education)

Aren't rubrics red letters at the start of chapters, as found in many old Books? -- 82.83.135.245 19:00, 12 Sep 2004 (UTC) a. A class or category: &#8220;This mission is sometimes discussed under the rubric of &#8216;horizontal escalation&#8217;... from conventional to nuclear war&#8221; (Jack Beatty). b.A title; a name. 2.A part of a manuscript or book, such as a title, heading, or initial letter, that appears in decorative red lettering or is otherwise distinguished from the rest of the text. 3.A title or heading of a statute or chapter in a code of law. 4.Ecclesiastical. A direction in a missal, hymnal, or other liturgical book. 5.An authoritative rule or direction. 6.A short commentary or explanation covering a broad subject. 7.Red ocher. http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=rubric

i'm disappointed in the article... i wanted to read about those fancy designs under Spanish (and others) signatures

merge proposal
Hi, I found this page : Rubric (academic) which is the same thing, no? Should they be linked together or something? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 69.156.91.84 (talk) 01:44, 23 December 2006 (UTC).
 * definitely needs merging - not sure which way it should go though as "rubric" should be in the singular so the page should be "rubric (education)" Madmedea 15:10, 9 January 2007 (UTC)


 * Yes. This article should definitely be at Rubric (academic) ; it's a singular and more general name there.  SnowFire 02:27, 13 April 2007 (UTC)