Any course on dominant group is likely to serve as a suggestion for reading through, studying, and researching "what is dominant group?", or perhaps "what are dominant groups?"

Ruffles and lace are dominant in the fashions of the day. Credit: SLQbot.

Hopefully, as each student reaches an apparent terminus on their course to understand and perhaps successfully cope with dominant groups as they find them, they will also come to appreciate the need to reduce domination where or when it is harmful and increase it when or where it is beneficial.

Prerequisites edit

Having prerequisites for a course on or about dominant group is a bit like a course on exploitation. If you have been exploited all your life, you've probably acquired all the prerequisites you need to start to understand it, research it, and benefit from it.

Completion levels edit

These courses are dynamic. Changes and additions should help to improve the depth and quality of the resources involved.

Lectures edit

The category of dominant group lectures contains many of the efforts to discover and explore the literature where dominant group and its synonyms have been found.

Quizzes edit

Quizzes exist and more are being generated to challenge you regarding what dominant groups are and to explore the concepts behind dominance and its synonyms such as ruling.

Laboratories edit

These include at least one example. The idea is for you to construct an experiment regarding a dominant group, then record, discuss, and conclude about your results.

Lessons edit

These are participatory original research projects focused on one hypothesis each about dominant group.

Problem sets edit

Can you tell when you are a member of a dominated or dominate group? These problem sets may help you to identify "unfair advantages", slavery, despotism, or other aspects of dominant group behavior.

Student participations edit

Dominant group has been the number ten Wikiversity project two years (2014 & 2015, statistics on projects are not available for 2016) in a row.

Hypotheses edit

  1. A member of a dominated group can "turn the tables" on a dominant group.

See also edit

External links edit

{{Dominant group}}{{Radiation astronomy resources}}