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Is there any standard terminology to describe how advanced a topic is?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Is there a word to describe something that's perceived to be funny or clever only because it makes a reference that appeals to a certain group?What should be a term of an item in Knowledge Base structure?Is there a word to name being unable to think of “proper terminology” for something?What is the word to describe an advanced vocabulary?Are there any phrases, which describe 'lower eyes with shyness'What word describes a musical instrument's native character?Is there a name for a factually incorrect statement, made for instructional benefit?Is there any standard term for a file name, excluding the extension?Meanings of grammatical terminology to describe verbsTerminology to describe bell rope



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








1















Background:

I have been searching for succinct language for referring to how "advanced" a topic or skill might be. I've found things like Integrative Complexity and the Model of Hierarchical Complexity, which seems to describe a school of thought, but falls short of providing consistent language for comparing examples within that school of thought. By "advanced", I am intending to communicate a greater amount of pre-requisite knowledge and/or a higher degree of complexity.



I toyed around with some terminology such as "Depth of Knowledge Required" at first, but it seemed lacking to me for some reason.



Question:

Is there a published set of language one could refer to in order to describe the concept of how advanced/complex a particular topic or skill is?



Edit:

An example application where this terminology would be helpful could be in determining what the appropriate course of action would be to introduce a concept/topic to another person.
For clarification, how would I compare the following two examples:



Computational Genomics in general might require additional knowledge compared to biological taxonomy



Non-linear dynamics involves many more pre-requisites than does algebra.



It's not that either option can't be complex or involve high level work, but to engage with the topic for the first time one clearly would be more difficult to approach than the other.










share|improve this question









New contributor




WellThatBrokeIt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • What do you mean by topic and where is this topic, anyway?? Who is expounding it?

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago











  • @Lambie topic here was meant to describe a subject matter, in an academic sense. I suppose it could be broad or narrow. There was no one specific subject or skill in mind at the time of asking the question. Would a specific example help?

    – WellThatBrokeIt
    5 hours ago











  • Well....it seems to me that there are topics and topics. A topic can only be advanced in a specific context. Also, yes, I wonder what you actually mean. I think you mean: in-depth topics.

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago











  • @Lambie Added an edit with example. This has been challenging to communicate, thank you for your thoughts!

    – WellThatBrokeIt
    5 hours ago











  • Ok,well individuals have knowledge: beginner knowledge of a topic, intermediate knowledge of a topic and advanced knowledge of a topic. Can't see how else one might word this. So,to correct your question, it is not how advanced a topic is. It is how much knowledge an individual has of a topic. Right? And for the topics themselves, we get: advanced mathematics, advanced physics. graduate and post-graduate topics.

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago


















1















Background:

I have been searching for succinct language for referring to how "advanced" a topic or skill might be. I've found things like Integrative Complexity and the Model of Hierarchical Complexity, which seems to describe a school of thought, but falls short of providing consistent language for comparing examples within that school of thought. By "advanced", I am intending to communicate a greater amount of pre-requisite knowledge and/or a higher degree of complexity.



I toyed around with some terminology such as "Depth of Knowledge Required" at first, but it seemed lacking to me for some reason.



Question:

Is there a published set of language one could refer to in order to describe the concept of how advanced/complex a particular topic or skill is?



Edit:

An example application where this terminology would be helpful could be in determining what the appropriate course of action would be to introduce a concept/topic to another person.
For clarification, how would I compare the following two examples:



Computational Genomics in general might require additional knowledge compared to biological taxonomy



Non-linear dynamics involves many more pre-requisites than does algebra.



It's not that either option can't be complex or involve high level work, but to engage with the topic for the first time one clearly would be more difficult to approach than the other.










share|improve this question









New contributor




WellThatBrokeIt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • What do you mean by topic and where is this topic, anyway?? Who is expounding it?

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago











  • @Lambie topic here was meant to describe a subject matter, in an academic sense. I suppose it could be broad or narrow. There was no one specific subject or skill in mind at the time of asking the question. Would a specific example help?

    – WellThatBrokeIt
    5 hours ago











  • Well....it seems to me that there are topics and topics. A topic can only be advanced in a specific context. Also, yes, I wonder what you actually mean. I think you mean: in-depth topics.

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago











  • @Lambie Added an edit with example. This has been challenging to communicate, thank you for your thoughts!

    – WellThatBrokeIt
    5 hours ago











  • Ok,well individuals have knowledge: beginner knowledge of a topic, intermediate knowledge of a topic and advanced knowledge of a topic. Can't see how else one might word this. So,to correct your question, it is not how advanced a topic is. It is how much knowledge an individual has of a topic. Right? And for the topics themselves, we get: advanced mathematics, advanced physics. graduate and post-graduate topics.

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago














1












1








1








Background:

I have been searching for succinct language for referring to how "advanced" a topic or skill might be. I've found things like Integrative Complexity and the Model of Hierarchical Complexity, which seems to describe a school of thought, but falls short of providing consistent language for comparing examples within that school of thought. By "advanced", I am intending to communicate a greater amount of pre-requisite knowledge and/or a higher degree of complexity.



I toyed around with some terminology such as "Depth of Knowledge Required" at first, but it seemed lacking to me for some reason.



Question:

Is there a published set of language one could refer to in order to describe the concept of how advanced/complex a particular topic or skill is?



Edit:

An example application where this terminology would be helpful could be in determining what the appropriate course of action would be to introduce a concept/topic to another person.
For clarification, how would I compare the following two examples:



Computational Genomics in general might require additional knowledge compared to biological taxonomy



Non-linear dynamics involves many more pre-requisites than does algebra.



It's not that either option can't be complex or involve high level work, but to engage with the topic for the first time one clearly would be more difficult to approach than the other.










share|improve this question









New contributor




WellThatBrokeIt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Background:

I have been searching for succinct language for referring to how "advanced" a topic or skill might be. I've found things like Integrative Complexity and the Model of Hierarchical Complexity, which seems to describe a school of thought, but falls short of providing consistent language for comparing examples within that school of thought. By "advanced", I am intending to communicate a greater amount of pre-requisite knowledge and/or a higher degree of complexity.



I toyed around with some terminology such as "Depth of Knowledge Required" at first, but it seemed lacking to me for some reason.



Question:

Is there a published set of language one could refer to in order to describe the concept of how advanced/complex a particular topic or skill is?



Edit:

An example application where this terminology would be helpful could be in determining what the appropriate course of action would be to introduce a concept/topic to another person.
For clarification, how would I compare the following two examples:



Computational Genomics in general might require additional knowledge compared to biological taxonomy



Non-linear dynamics involves many more pre-requisites than does algebra.



It's not that either option can't be complex or involve high level work, but to engage with the topic for the first time one clearly would be more difficult to approach than the other.







single-word-requests phrase-requests terminology






share|improve this question









New contributor




WellThatBrokeIt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




WellThatBrokeIt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 5 hours ago







WellThatBrokeIt













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WellThatBrokeIt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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asked 5 hours ago









WellThatBrokeItWellThatBrokeIt

62




62




New contributor




WellThatBrokeIt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor





WellThatBrokeIt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






WellThatBrokeIt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • What do you mean by topic and where is this topic, anyway?? Who is expounding it?

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago











  • @Lambie topic here was meant to describe a subject matter, in an academic sense. I suppose it could be broad or narrow. There was no one specific subject or skill in mind at the time of asking the question. Would a specific example help?

    – WellThatBrokeIt
    5 hours ago











  • Well....it seems to me that there are topics and topics. A topic can only be advanced in a specific context. Also, yes, I wonder what you actually mean. I think you mean: in-depth topics.

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago











  • @Lambie Added an edit with example. This has been challenging to communicate, thank you for your thoughts!

    – WellThatBrokeIt
    5 hours ago











  • Ok,well individuals have knowledge: beginner knowledge of a topic, intermediate knowledge of a topic and advanced knowledge of a topic. Can't see how else one might word this. So,to correct your question, it is not how advanced a topic is. It is how much knowledge an individual has of a topic. Right? And for the topics themselves, we get: advanced mathematics, advanced physics. graduate and post-graduate topics.

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago


















  • What do you mean by topic and where is this topic, anyway?? Who is expounding it?

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago











  • @Lambie topic here was meant to describe a subject matter, in an academic sense. I suppose it could be broad or narrow. There was no one specific subject or skill in mind at the time of asking the question. Would a specific example help?

    – WellThatBrokeIt
    5 hours ago











  • Well....it seems to me that there are topics and topics. A topic can only be advanced in a specific context. Also, yes, I wonder what you actually mean. I think you mean: in-depth topics.

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago











  • @Lambie Added an edit with example. This has been challenging to communicate, thank you for your thoughts!

    – WellThatBrokeIt
    5 hours ago











  • Ok,well individuals have knowledge: beginner knowledge of a topic, intermediate knowledge of a topic and advanced knowledge of a topic. Can't see how else one might word this. So,to correct your question, it is not how advanced a topic is. It is how much knowledge an individual has of a topic. Right? And for the topics themselves, we get: advanced mathematics, advanced physics. graduate and post-graduate topics.

    – Lambie
    5 hours ago

















What do you mean by topic and where is this topic, anyway?? Who is expounding it?

– Lambie
5 hours ago





What do you mean by topic and where is this topic, anyway?? Who is expounding it?

– Lambie
5 hours ago













@Lambie topic here was meant to describe a subject matter, in an academic sense. I suppose it could be broad or narrow. There was no one specific subject or skill in mind at the time of asking the question. Would a specific example help?

– WellThatBrokeIt
5 hours ago





@Lambie topic here was meant to describe a subject matter, in an academic sense. I suppose it could be broad or narrow. There was no one specific subject or skill in mind at the time of asking the question. Would a specific example help?

– WellThatBrokeIt
5 hours ago













Well....it seems to me that there are topics and topics. A topic can only be advanced in a specific context. Also, yes, I wonder what you actually mean. I think you mean: in-depth topics.

– Lambie
5 hours ago





Well....it seems to me that there are topics and topics. A topic can only be advanced in a specific context. Also, yes, I wonder what you actually mean. I think you mean: in-depth topics.

– Lambie
5 hours ago













@Lambie Added an edit with example. This has been challenging to communicate, thank you for your thoughts!

– WellThatBrokeIt
5 hours ago





@Lambie Added an edit with example. This has been challenging to communicate, thank you for your thoughts!

– WellThatBrokeIt
5 hours ago













Ok,well individuals have knowledge: beginner knowledge of a topic, intermediate knowledge of a topic and advanced knowledge of a topic. Can't see how else one might word this. So,to correct your question, it is not how advanced a topic is. It is how much knowledge an individual has of a topic. Right? And for the topics themselves, we get: advanced mathematics, advanced physics. graduate and post-graduate topics.

– Lambie
5 hours ago






Ok,well individuals have knowledge: beginner knowledge of a topic, intermediate knowledge of a topic and advanced knowledge of a topic. Can't see how else one might word this. So,to correct your question, it is not how advanced a topic is. It is how much knowledge an individual has of a topic. Right? And for the topics themselves, we get: advanced mathematics, advanced physics. graduate and post-graduate topics.

– Lambie
5 hours ago











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