in what particular discipline the text you read belongs
It sounds like you’re asking how to answer a guide question like:
“In what particular discipline does the text you read belong?”
Here’s how to handle that clearly and confidently.
Core idea
You identify the discipline of a text by asking: “Which field of study does this text mainly talk about, and how does it talk about it?”
Typical academic disciplines include:
- Literature
- History
- Psychology
- Sociology
- Natural Sciences (Biology, Physics, Chemistry)
- Mathematics
- Engineering
- Economics / Business
- Philosophy
- Communication / Media Studies
Your answer should name one of these (or a similar field) and justify it with clues from the text.
Simple step‑by‑step method
When you read a text, look for four things:
- Main topic and questions
- What is the text trying to understand or explain?
- Example: If it analyzes characters, themes, and symbolism in a novel, that points to Literature.
- Key concepts and vocabulary
- Are there technical terms from a specific field?
- Words like “cognition,” “behavior,” “stimulus” suggest Psychology ;
“GDP,” “inflation,” “market” suggest Economics ;
“cell,” “organism,” “ecosystem” suggest Biology.
- Type of evidence used
- Experiments, surveys, statistics → often social sciences or natural sciences.
- Close reading of texts, themes, metaphors → humanities , especially Literature.
- Purpose of the text
- To interpret culture, art, or texts → humanities.
- To test hypotheses, measure variables → sciences or social sciences.
- To design or improve practical solutions → engineering , business , or applied fields.
Example answer formats
You can answer the guide question like this, depending on your text:
- “The text belongs to the discipline of literature because it focuses on analyzing characters, setting, and themes in a short story.”
- “The text belongs to psychology because it explains how memory works and uses terms like ‘short‑term memory,’ ‘long‑term memory,’ and ‘cognitive processes.’”
- “The text is in the field of public health because it discusses health policies, population data, and disease prevention strategies.”
If you’re still unsure
If you can’t easily tell the discipline:
- Check the source (journal name, textbook title, course name).
- Notice the questions it asks: Are they about society, mind, numbers, language, or art?
- Ask: “Which class would this text best fit in—science, math, literature, social studies, business, or something else?”
If you share the actual text (or a short description of it), I can help you decide its specific discipline and model a full answer in sentence form. Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.