typologies

Cards (26)

  • the 6 typologies of information
    1. Factual vs. Analytical
    2. Subjective vs. Objective
    3. Current Vs. Historical
    4. Scholarly vs. Popular
    5. Primary vs. Secondary
    6. Stable vs. Unstable
  • factual
    based on the evidence and findings provided by reliable sources or experts
  • factual
    more on academic text
  • factual
    books, encyclopedias, periodicals, or technical reports by agencies
  • analytical
    an analysis or interpretation of facts by an individual, usually an expert on the subject
  • analytical
    feature articles, commentaries, or reviews
  • DepEd, CHED, and TESDA
    factual information comes from agencies such as _____, _____, and _______
  • subjective
    based on personal opinions, interpretations, points of view, emotions, and judgment
  • subjective
    an example of this are newspapers
  • objective
    is fact-based, measurable and observable (no judgment!)
  • objective
    an example of this are technical reports
  • current
    refers how to up-to-date or how recent the information is (talks of trends!)
  • historical
    old information but very useful in providing insights and comparison of events (used as a pattern!)
  • scholarly
    research-based
  • scholarly
    comes from academic sources and a product of an author's expertise and study on the subject matter
  • scholarly
    EX: erik, academia.edu, google scholar, researchgate
  • popular
    mere hearsay
  • popular
    appeals to general interest
  • popular
    usually found in general circulation materials such as magazines, or online feature articles
  • primary
    original, first-hand information
  • primary
    hasn't been interpreted, analyzed, condensed, or changed
  • secondary
    written by someone other than the original researcher or author
  • secondary
    only interpret primary sources
  • stable
    no changes in information (not being updated)
  • stable
    will last for a long time
  • unstable
    still being updated