classification
Examples of classification in the following topics:
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Finding Materials in a Library
- To make things easier, libraries have adopted classification systems.
- The main systems of classification are the Dewey Decimal Classification, the Library of Congress Classification, and the Colon Classification.
- Though most public libraries use the Dewey Decimal Classification, all of the systems work in essentially the same way.
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Culture, Ethnicity, and Race
- An individual is usually externally classified (meaning someone else makes the classification) but individual may also self-identify with a particular racial group.
- Some of the social traits often used for ethnic classification include:
- individuals should be treated differently according to their racial classification (prejudice or bias)
- actually treating of individuals differently based on their racial classification (discrimination)
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Maximize Understanding
- Classification and grouping alike things to form a concept: First, you'll want to cite examples that are familiar to the audience and put them into the same classification.
- You can even help the audience generalize to create a classification.
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Sexual Orientation
- There are three main classifications of sexual orientation: heterosexual, bisexual, and homosexual.
- Define the three main classifications of sexual orientation: bisexual, heterosexual, and homosexual
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Gender Bias
- When you're talking about the biological classification of "male" and "female" you're referring to sex, not gender.
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Variations in Orality
- By contrast, only literary cultures have launched phenomenological analyses, abstract classifications, ordered lists and tables, etc.
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Different Lines of Reasoning
- The first premise states that all objects classified as "men" have the attribute "mortal. " The second premise states that "John" is classified as a "man"—a member of the class or group of "men. " The conclusion then states that "John" must be "mortal" because he inherits this attribute from his classification as a "man. " If both premises are true, the terms are clear, and the rules of deductive logic are followed, then the conclusion of the argument follows by logical necessity.