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9.2: Planning a Division and Classification Essay

  • Page ID
    223102
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    As you can see, careful attention to planning is vital to the Division/Classification essay. Proper pre-planning and attention to organization go a long way toward a successful essay, and a visual representation like a bubble chart, concept map, or outline can be a helpful tool.

    Similar to the Illustration essay, careful attention to explanation and audience becomes very important in division/classification. Just as you are learning about your subject and breaking it into parts in order to better understand the whole, so too is your reader. Just as you might have trouble telling the difference between a metatarsal and a phalange, so too might your audience. As you work your way through the essay, remember you are guiding your reader along as well, from larger whole to individual parts and back again.

    Speaking of guiding: you need to be mindful of the fact that systems of division and classification are often arbitrary. That is, different persons might divide or classify the same sets of information in different ways. For example, earlier we mentioned grocery stores, which are models of division and classification. Say you found yourself in front of a store you had never visited before, and you needed to buy coffee filters. Where would you look for them? In the coffee and tea aisle (because that’s where the coffee is), or in the paper goods section (because most filters are made out of paper), or perhaps even in the small appliances section (because filters are a needed accessory for coffee makers)? Even if you personally might not place the filters in the section where you eventually find them, someone somewhere decided they should be there and, more to the point, would be able to explain to you why they are there. In your own paper, then, if you should happen to be aware that others might approach your topic in a different way, you should mention that fact—and be ready to explain why your approach is more (or less) common, or more preferable.


    9.2: Planning a Division and Classification Essay is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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