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mil 2
typologies
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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