Classifying definition

Classifying is the act of placing a position in a class and shall be construed to mean that each position in the classified service shall have an appropriate designated title, a regular minimum number of assigned hours per day, days per week, and months per year, a statement of the specific duties required to be performed in each such position, and the regular monthly salary range for each such position.

Examples of Classifying in a sentence

  • Classifying data stored or transmitted between computing platforms (e.g. PC, servers, mainframe) and networks; • Provide incident response and related training; • Exercise/simulate incident response scenarios; • 24/7 incident response assistance • Vulnerability management • Policy/procedure development; • Provide operational and analytical support related to security for computing platforms (e.g. PC, servers, and mainframe) and networks.

  • Patent No. 6,112,181, Systems and Methods for Matching, Selecting, Narrowcasting, and/or Classifying Based on Rights Management and/or Other Information, issued 8/29/00, priority date 11/6/97.

  • These incidents will most often include, but are not limited to: ● Infrastructure Downtime ● Fraud ● Application Malfunction Management of Incidents Classifying the risk The person involved in or witness to the incident must immediately make an initial assessment of the actual impact that the incident has had.

  • The Board is hereby authorized to assign members of the Board in office at the Classifying Date to such classes.

  • No. 2,293,650 WO 99/24928, Systems and Methods for Matching, Selecting, Narrowcasting, and/or Classifying Based on Rights Management and/or Other Information.

  • Prior to the exportation of waste (including fill or soil) from the site, the waste materials must be classified in accordance with the provisions of the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997 and the NSW DECC Waste Classification Guidelines, Part1: Classifying Waste (July 2009).

  • The classification process will also take into consideration the University’s Classifying Positions Procedure (as amended or replaced).

  • Classifying psychiatric disorders after traumatic brain injury and orthopaedic injury in children: adequacy of K-SADS versus CBCL.

  • Classifying degenerate loop agreement tasks is explored to characterize their computational power: two tasks are in the same class if and only if they can implement each other.

  • Classifying the extra run as a cancelled extra run and receiving his/her choice of the extra runs available from the next week’s extra run list.