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Teaching Geography

Teaching Geography

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Teaching Geography. 5 Themes. Location Place Region Movement Human-Environment Interaction. Location. Where is it? Absolute location vs. relative location Longitude and Latitude Prime Meridian, Equator, Tropics Google Earth, of course. Maps and their messages. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 2: Teaching Geography

5 Themes• Location• Place• Region• Movement• Human-Environment Interaction

Page 3: Teaching Geography

Location• Where is it?• Absolute location vs. relative location• Longitude and Latitude• Prime Meridian, Equator, Tropics• Google Earth, of course

Page 4: Teaching Geography

Maps and their messages• Different types (political, climate,

topographical, etc)• Different uses and projections

Page 5: Teaching Geography

Mercator Projection

Page 6: Teaching Geography

Robinson

Page 7: Teaching Geography

Peters Projection

Page 8: Teaching Geography

What’s up with this?

Page 9: Teaching Geography

Place• What is it like there?• Landforms, rivers, climate, etc.• Have students draw and label

physical features on a blank map

Page 10: Teaching Geography

Landform sample

Page 11: Teaching Geography

Climates• Steppes, Savannah, permafrost,

rainforest, boreal forest, desert and desertification, etc.

• What are these places like and why does it matter?

• How does the climate affect the culture?

• What would you pack if you went there?

Page 12: Teaching Geography

Steppe

Page 13: Teaching Geography

Savannah and Boreal Forest

Page 14: Teaching Geography

Desertification

Page 15: Teaching Geography

Location: what are the people like?

• Government• culture• language• religion • Economics• History• natural resources • education, population density, birth/death

rates, etc.

Page 16: Teaching Geography

Possibilities• Lots of great activities for exploring

these things– Learn about and practice customs– Read and interpret charts and graphs– Best source:

www.nationalgeographic.com

Page 17: Teaching Geography

Region: how do we identify larger areas?

• Like place, but on a bigger scale• Do regions really exist?

– What is Africa?– Why is Europe a region?– Why do we call it the Middle East?

Page 18: Teaching Geography

Movement• How do goods, people, and ideas

move from one region to another?• Transportation• Cultural exchanges• Immigration• Disease

Page 19: Teaching Geography

Human-Environment Interaction

• A two-way street• How do people adapt to the

environment?– Irrigation, dams, mining, farming,

desalination,etc.• How does the environment adapt to

us?– Global warming– Deforestation– Water scarcity and water stress– Pollution

Page 21: Teaching Geography

Project ideas• What could your students do about

these issues?• Water in developing nations?• Pollution?• Deforestation?

Page 22: Teaching Geography

What about the location of natural resources?

• How does this affect power relationships?

• See article on the Arctic and oil• What about Central Asia?• Where will power be located in the

future?• Where will future conflicts be?• Future business opportunities?