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Kindergarten Geography, Developmentally Appropriate Geography
The articles Kindergarten Geography, Developmentally Appropriate Geography, and Google Earth
all discussed effective ways to teach geography to students. The first highlighted more multicultural
education, the second aimed at general education, and the last emphasized the use of technology.
Obviously, teachers design their lesson plans and implement teaching strategies to satisfy the needs
of their audience–the students. Educators need to connect the curriculum with the students' culture
and family, which leads to an increase of knowledge capacity. In the first article, Carlee successively
taught a group kindergarten students with an Islamic community by activating background
experience with international landmarks and family cultural background.
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Essay on HISTORY
Name:
Date:
Graded Assignment
Final Exam Part 2
I. Map
On this world map, indicate the following features:
Amazon Rainforest
Panama Canal
The Himalayas
The Ring of Fire
The Mississippi River
The Gobi Desert
(10 points)
II. Graphic Organizer
Fill in the table below about these five major world religions. Do not fill in the shaded boxes.
(10 points)
Religion
Name at least one Holy Text
How do you achieve enlightment? Describe their view about the afterlife.
Hinduism
Bhagvada Gata
Do good deeds to get good karma until you break the samsara or cycle of reincarnation and reach
enlightenment
Buddhism
Believe the Four Truths are true and real, follow the Eightfold Path, meditation is one of the major
steps to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Voting patterns even seem to follow where the ice age hit worst and where it didn't but this may
have nothing to do with the ice age andmerely just that the industrialized regions are interested in
different aspects of what each candidate hs to offer.
IV. Short Answer
Consider that Earth's population is projected to rise to 10 billion by the year 2050. The current
population is only around 6 billion. Most scientists predict global warming will be noticeable by the
year 2050 as well.
What parts of the world currently have the fastest and slowest population growth? (4 points)
Fastest  Sub–Saharan Africa
Slowest  Europe
What regions do you think will have the highest population densities in the year 2050? Explain why.
(6 points)
My best guess is India will have the highest population density because they are industrializing
quickly, have plenty resources and are working to get more and also they have lot of job
opportunities. In other places it does seem like there will be much industrialization such as Africa
which can cause the people to die out when they do nt have resources. Also the culture in India from
what I have seen is that people have many children and encourage big families and take care of each
other.
How do you think the population increase will affect urban areas in the world?
(5 points)
They will continue to
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The Relationship Between Physical Geography And Human...
How do physical geography and human geography overlap?
NAME: Alva GRADE: 10X
Maybe some people will think human geography has no relation between physical geography. But I
think human geography has a great effect on physical geography, and physical geography has a great
effect on human geography too.
As an intellectual discipline, geography is divided into the sub–fields of physical geography and
human geography, the latter concentrating upon the study of human activities, by the application of
qualitative and quantitative research methods.
Physical geography is that branch of natural science which deals with the study of processes and
patterns in the natural environment like the atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, and geosphere, as
opposed to the cultural or built environment, the domain ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
The earthquake made the nuclear leak, and the nuclear leak not only affected the human activities,
but also affected the environment as well. The nuclear radiation affects the soil and the sea around
the station. Many fish died and the sea was polluted.
It seems that the earthquake brought a trail of things that happen later. So we can learn for this that
physical geography and human geography are connected and affects each other almost every time.
And the third example is the population. If the population increase, people need more places to live.
They need more soil to grow the food. This will make the soil loose and the water may flood it
away. And the other activities of human will pollute the environment. However, the bad
environment will affect the human activities.
So, as we are human, we can do something to protect the environment. It is good to ourselves. We
can do a very small thing like using less disposable goods in our daily lives. Since we cannot control
the environment, we should make some safeguards before the disaster
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The Themes Of Geography
Geography is the study of the earth surface or space as the home of humankind. Geography is not
simply about the study of maps and what is and where on the Earth, but also why it is there and not
somewhere else, sometimes referred to as "location and space distribution". It also studies whether
the cause is natural or human. There are generally two fields of Geography – first, Physical
Geography which studies geography and science to explain characteristics of earth such as
landforms; including mountains, rivers, glaciers, deserts, and ocean and climate that includes
temperature, rainfall, snowfall, humidity, and seasons, and things like natural resources, location of
countries and capitals, maps, features like latitude and longitude, and others ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
They are separated into new categories according to their main focuses of extent studies about Earth,
nature, or/and human. For example, within the physical geography, the study of the various forms of
the Earth especially, is called "geomorphology" and the study concerned with soils is called
"pedology". "Biogeography" emphasizes mainly on biology, botany, and ecology and spatial
relationship between animals and plants in the natural sciences, and "climatology" is the study of the
world's climates and their causes and effects in the past, present, and
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Geography And Human Geography
Geography is a science that deals with the description, distribution, and interaction of the diverse
physical, biological, and cultural features of the earth's surface (Websters). We study geography so
that we can better understand the locations of places, people, cultures, physical features of the Earth
and more around us and the world. Studying geography requires looking at all of Earth's systems.
Geography is used almost everyday in our daily lives. For example, using a global positioning
system to navigate to a certain location or even visualizing a map of the states to picture where a
state is located in the United States of America.
Geography is comprised of two branches, human geography and physical geography. Human
geography is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Continue down the road for two blocks, once you have passed Second Street I live in the third house
on the left."
The second theme of geography is, "place." Place describes the features that makes a site unique.
Every place on the Earth contains physical or cultural significances that distinguish them from other
places. For example, you can tell the difference between a school and a grocery store by the objects
and people that inhabit the location. A place is defined by the objects and people inside of it.
The third theme of geography is, "region." Regions are defined as areas that share certain similar,
physical or cultural characteristics. Physical characteristics could include climate or landforms
whereas cultural characteristics could include language or religion.
The fourth theme of geography is, "movement" which describes how people and religion or other
things move as well as why they move. There are two words to describe someone that moves from
one country to another and they are immigrant and emigrant. An immigrant is someone that moves
into a certain country. On the other hand, an emigrant is someone that moves out of a particular
country.
The fifth and final theme of geography is, "human–environment interaction." The study of the
interaction between humans and the environment around them informs how people and cultures
interact with their surroundings and how they differ from one another. It also includes how people
use
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Kim Jong-Un: An Authoritarian Government
What changes our lives? What determines what we achieve in our daily lives? Human geography
changes the way we act, what we spend most of our days, and what we know, physical geography
only changes what we wear and where we go. How we spend most of our days could be based off
our government and the kind we have. Depending on the leader of that group or country can really
adjust our schedule. Dictatorship is a type of authoritarian government, it is when one person leads a
group or country. Kim Jong–Un is a dictator in North Korea, he orders his followers to specific tasks
and if they do not obey or follow him they will get punished or brutally murdered. Being in a
democratic government is different than a dictatorship. Democratic government let the people
decide who is in charge. THis creates a good country and provides freedom and fairness for the
country. You can spend your life doing anything you want since there are no death threats addressed
to you. An authoritarian government is the general term of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
A traditional economy is when the people provide for themselves. When the people produce their
own needs they do not need to look for a job, so the people spend all their days growing their own
crops. The market economy directs our lives by either making money or producing products. This
economy has human's looking for jobs in order to make money to buy products or produce.Or
producing in order to sell and make money that way. A command economy in order to sell and make
money that way. A command economy is when people are controlled. A person in this economy will
not be looking for a job, but instead just achieving their given task by their leader. This economy
similar to an authoritarian government, however the person doesn't get punished they do not get
paid. The economy actuates the human's lives by if they work and how they work, the biome might
only change the types of jobs around that
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Sir Richard F. Burton's Trip To Congo
Geographers are known to research both the human and physical geography of foreign lands. They
make connections of the information gathered between human and physical geography through their
experiences. Geographers must interact with people and be aware of their own views of the world
and should aspire to communicate unbiased opinions and understanding of the people's cultures. In
their writing authors ability to understand and work across cultural boundaries is the framework for
an individual to attain knowledge while engaging in the culture and develop cross–cultural
competence. On a "Trip to Congo" Sir Richard F. Burton writes a story during his exploration to the
Yellalla or Cataracts of the Congo leaving some detail insights of the customs and behavior of the
African communities. He only gives his point of view from an imperialist position and sometimes
denigrates and diminishes the people and their culture. Even though Burton had a translator
throughout his trip the language barrier prohibits interaction with the communities and the ability to
empathize with the natives. Interaction and understanding is the key to appreciate their behaviors,
instead Burton ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Froude's imperialistic and ethnocentric point of view manifests the differences between the "inferior
race", the blacks and the minority group, the British. His beliefs of superiority of his own culture are
shadowed through a forceful and aggressive tone by using "we" to get the message of white
supremacy across to the reader. His views on the superiority of the British rule despite the white
majority are expressed through his despiteful tone throughout the excerpt. He describes the Greater
Antilles as "weak nations" that are "subject to the rules of others who are at once powerful and just"
diminishing the natives
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Physical And Cultural Themes Of Geography Throughout The...
Geography is the "mother of sciences". (Wickramaratne, 2015) Geography studies the physical and
cultural characteristics of different places and how they affect one another. Geography is considered
a social and physical science and is taught in classrooms throughout the United States. Geography is
taught in hope that someone can "see the meaning in the arrangement of things on Earth's surface
and be able to see relations between people, places, and environments, who uses geographic skills,
and who applies spatial and ecological perspectives to life situations." (Heffron & Downs, 2012)
When Geography is being taught it is broken down into five themes: location, place, human–earth
interaction, movement, and regions.
Themes
A location is where ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Human–Earth interaction uses two main ideas, accessibility and connectivity. Accessibility is how
easily we can reach other places, but connectivity is the way places remain connected: roads, train
tracks, telephone lines. Transportation and technology has made traveling between cities easier
allowing trade and movement to be possible on larger scale. Movement studies people's ability to
transport goods and themselves around the earth and to what impact. Globalization is making
movement more rapid. People connect and interact with each other and their environments in an
instant; allowing new technologies and fashions the ability to move around the world with a push of
a button. Many trends will start in one region and make their way to another allowing movement to
be created.
Regions are areas that have consistent characteristics by no fixed boundaries. Regions can include
deserts, countries, fairs, grocery stores and all different types of areas. There are four types of
regions geographers use to describe areas: administrative, formal, functional, and perceptual.
Administrative regions are dictated by the rules and laws of the land. States boundaries are defined
and dictated by laws and mapped showing exact
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Social And Cultural Geography : Explain How People Make...
Social and Cultural Geography: Explain how people make and transform place
Social and cultural geography is the study of how people affect or are affected by spatial areas.
Cultural geography is the study of variations of culture and cultural norms across different regions
and places (Anderson, 2015). Whereas social geography is based around the social factors within a
space. Both of these factors can be directly linked to show transformation within a place. Places are
made by human endeavours in order to create a social structure that allows for growth and
prosperity of a community whether this be creating a rural sector that allows for increased
production or a city with high population and high economic turn over. These places are also created
via boundaries which cause a location to exist that includes the area. They have a locale due to the
culture of a community that influences style of infrastructure and this fluctuates between places and
also a sense of place which is invoked on a region by its community's culture and emotional
connection to the area but is also influenced by the outside world's judgement on the place either
due to past events or stereotypical views. People develop and make place through many means
including culture, religion. Politics, and physical change to geography all in combination that creates
a unique feel and structure of place due to the varying attribute that are included to create place.
"While the word 'place' has been used as long as
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Meaning Of Geography Vs Geography
"History rhymes, but geography endures." was once stated by Andrew C. Katen. History, in fact,
does not repeat itself. However, it does seem to have recurring events. With geography, on the other
hand, the learning possibilities are endless. As people continually change, it causes the environment
around us to change, which makes geography an ongoing happening. For example, the population is
always increasing and decreasing because of the number of births and deaths. So therefore, more
and more space is being taken up to provide living space for the large amount of humans on Earth.
Geography deals with not only maps, compasses, and landforms, but with people of different
cultures and how they interact with the space around them. Many geographers feel that geography is
how people adapt their environment to fit their culture (and vice–versa), while other geographers
feel as though geography is about how different factors make the earth diverse and how things are
laid out based on the diversity of the earth. According to some geographers, the definition of
geography is how people adapt, or change, their environment to fit their culture. In document one, it
states, "...Geography emphasizes people, their ways of life, their divisions, and their endeavors to
solve their problems and to adapt the regional environmental conditions to their ways and means..."
This basically is saying that people change the environment around them so that it is able to go
together with their goals,
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Cultural Geography Classes
My classes are going well so far. I am doing well in English and Cultural Geography. I am doing
well in these classes because in English I get everything done on time, like the homework and class
assignments. I am also doing well because my vocab quizzes and retakes are helping my grade as
well and I am starting to participate and ask more questions. I am proud of my English grade. I will
continue to do well in English class by completing all of my work, participating and do my very best
to keep succeeding in that class. I am also doing well in Cultural Geography. I am doing well in
Cultural Geography because I am prepared for the map quizzes and am starting to participate a lot
more and ask questions as well. I am also completing assignments
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Why Geography Matters More Than Ever By Harm De Blij
Geography is an important factor to consider when you look at this worlds past, present, or future.
So whether it be the earths physical geographic features, the geopolitics stirring up trouble across
the globe, or the economics of growing or shrinking countries; geography plays a major role. In
todays society, geographic knowledge is one of the most important and valuable tools to possess.
Without it, we are victims of ignorance and endanger ourselves, others, and the world. This
ignorance, possessed by many, is posing a great risk of self–destruction. The author of "Why
Geography Matters More Than Ever", Harm de Blij, makes many strong points on this matter, but
occasionally makes unsupported and unclear statements which tend to stray off topic. "Lets get right
to the point. There is no such thing as "global" warming." This provocative statement presented by
the author makes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He feared the Soviet Unions "deviationism" ha tainted his Maoist communism. So he mobilized
young people in china, forming the Red Guards and shutting down schools. These kids were
encouraged to attack "bourgeois" and root out enemies of the system, including family members.
The results of this were devastating. The economy was left struggling to survive, people and elders
were mistreated for things they didn't do, and there were as many as 30 million casualties. After
explaining this and how Maos death practically saved china, the author makes this statement. "On
July 28, 1976, twin earthquakes struck near the city of Tangshan...the death toll...may have exceeded
700,000 people...The chairmen for life died on September 9, just six weeks after Tangshan. It
probably was no coincidence." This quote suggests that a political reaction was connected to Maos
death. Practically a conspiracy theory, the author never backs it up with any evidence, proof, or
reason. This weakens the overall topic and distracts from his main
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English And Cultural Geography: The Habit Of Heart And Mind
Last semester, the classes I think I've grown the most in are English and cultural geography because
I payed a lot more attention close to the end of the first semester. The Habits of Heart and Mind that
I have improved on, or begun to use more are responsibility and think. How I have gotten better at
these habits are by paying attention in class. What continues to be a struggle for me is math and
biology because I do not seem to understand to topics very quickly. What I am most proud of myself
for accomplishing is passing my geography exam because it's the only exam I passed for finals.
Something I wish I could go back and do differently is study a lot more for my English, math and
biology exams because if I would have studied more I would ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The Habit of Heart and Mind I want to work to get better at next semester is confidence, effort, and
apply. One of the classes I think I've grown in is English because if I do well in this class it will help
me for my career in the future. Another class I think I've grown in is cultural geography because I
passed this class with almost an A and this class I do not struggle a lot in. The Habit of Heart and
Mind I think I've improved most on is responsibility because I take my studies a lot more serious
now. The Habit of Heart and Mind I am using more now is to think because I think more in math. I
have gotten better at the habit of writing by writing this four hundred word blog. Math and biology
continues to be a struggle for me because I do not understand the concepts the teacher is teaching
real quick. I am most proud that I received a B in my geography final because I studied really hard
for it. If I could go back and do something differently I would give me everything to study more for
my math and biology exams because I got a really low grade on them and if I were to have studied a
lot more on them I would have passed
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Why Is Geography Important In The Crucible
Geography is a very important part of every film and book in every way. Geography is where a story
takes place and how things work out. When characters live in a specific place they will gain accents,
different forms of religion (or lack thereof), and cultural norms. The characters I have read about
and watched are all very different when it comes to these certain norms, cultures, and what occurs
during the story. Geography and setting are extremely influential in The Great Debaters, The
Crucible, and my life living in Mahwah, N.J. because each and every one is complete different with
completely separate directions and messages. In the early nineteen twenties and thirties a small
group of students applied and were accepted onto a small Texas
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Differences Of The Cosmopolitanism
Due to the wave of the World Values Surveys which was conducted in 57 countries around the
world, more than 30 percent of the 65,269 respondents, seriously, identified themselves as the
citizens of the world. So the Cosmopolitanism is an important and remarkable phenomenon (Miller,
2010). The Cosmopolitan, is the attitude to yourself as a person, a citizen of the world and this
attachment is voluntary and selective (Bayram, 2014: 2). When we talk about the cosmopolitan, it
can be imagined a cultural–social orientation that combines the two dependent dimensions to each
other. The first and most basic dimension is what it later called the cosmopolitan Idea, and refers to
specific mental state of the cosmopolitan (Hanrez, 1990). Cosmopolitan mindset can be understand
as the way of thinking about what Beck calls it the imagination of dialogue and thus includes two
aspects: on the one hand, the desire to communicate with others and the other tending to identify the
orientation and background of the person's cultural ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Cosmopolitan territorial system includes the experience and the extent of expectations namely
internal differences, despite coexistence, the same life style, contrasting certainty in the experience
of individuals and communities. It means the world that we require to understand, think about and
review its differences and in this way they identify and prove the differences between themselves
and others. Cosmopolitan outlook and theoretical sensitivity prepare a space for imagination of
dialogue in everyday practice and the related sciences (Beck, 2006: 89). As Dlanty argues, this
reflective and critical duality of Cosmopolitan is what distinguishes it from the world. Cosmopolitan
ethos emphasizes willingness to change, Self–changing and self–competition (Johnson, 2012:
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The 's Historical Atlas Of Central Asia
For millennia, civilizations on either side of the Eurasian Continent exchanged both products and
ideas through the complex networks of the Silk Route. Central Asia, given its strategic position on
this route, long served a critical role at the crossroads between East and West. However, while
cultures on both ends of the networks have by and large been extensively researched, Central Asia –
despite its centrality – is frequently ignored or marginalized; rather than claiming a separate area of
study, it oftentimes retreats to the peripheries of a larger grouping, whether the Islamic world, the
Sinosphere, or the Russian Empire. Yuri Bregel, on the other hand, proposes an alternative
perception of the region. He contends that Central Asia ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Climate is a dominant factor in the development of Central Asian civilizations. In the first map,
titled "The Principal Geographical Features and Provinces," Bregel paints the environmental
conditions of each locale with rich details (3). Deserts cast a pervasive presence in the map, limiting
both human movement and patterns of settlement. Because of Central Asia's high aridity, most
population centers lie on the banks of Amu–Darya and Sir–Darya, the main rivers in the region, as
well as their tributaries. These circumstances, together with the ubiquity of mountains in the south,
produce a series of sedentary provinces such as Ferghana and Khorezm that are relatively isolated
from one another. Furthermore, the deserts act as a natural barrier disjoining the mountain–based
farming communities from the vast steppes to their north, where a more temperate climate and flat
terrains encourage nomadic ways of life. Conflicts often arise when the two groups intersect, and the
struggle between sedentary city–states and nomadic empires comprises a key theme in the history of
Central Asia.
Nowhere is the distinction between the two categories more apparent than in the drawing of political
boundaries. Bregel explains in the preface that "various Central Asian states knew to protect their
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The 's Philosophies About The Increased Globalization Of...
1. Appiah's philosophies about the increased globalization of the world, or at least the increased
access to cultures which often did not have significant interaction, claim that it has the overall
potential to be a net positive. His theories have less to do with the actions of sovereign entity and
more to do with the behavior of individuals, but he does simultaneously critique what he believes to
be unethical cultural practices made by societies and so the actions of the leadership and cultural
paradigm of the Revolution will be what is being judged based on the framework of Appiah's
philosophy.
a. Appiah's assertions have to do with something which he deems to be other than globalization:
cosmopolitanism. For Appiah, cosmopolitanism goes beyond mere globalization–"a term that once
referred to a marketing strategy, and then came to designate a macroeconomic thesis, and now can
seem to encompass everything and nothing" (Appiah xiii)–and even multiculturalism–"another
shape shifter, which so often designates the disease which it purports to cure" (Appiah xiii)–
representing a grudging coexistence and maintained separation between different cultures. Beyond
these insufficient terms and concepts, Appiah proposes cosmopolitanism which was coined by the
"Cynics of the 4th century BC" and means "citizen of the universe" (Appiah xiv). As
cosmopolitanism is mainly an act undertaken by individuals, a cosmopolitan is someone who places
their membership to humanity over the loyalty to
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De Blij's Why Geography Matters: More Than Ever
As time passes by, with everything seeming in place, we push aside real life. Activities we like to
pretend are not occurring are put on the bottom of the list. War, deadly tsunamis, earthquakes,
terrorism, economic crisis, all real life changes which have occurred and are occurring now. People
are becoming less knowledgeable than ever when it comes to geography. "Given the accelerating
pace of change on our increasingly crowded planet, this may not be surprising– even if it is
disturbing," states Harm de Blij in his book "Why Geography Matters: More Than Ever." While De
Blij tells us how illiterate we have become to geography, he also explains to readers how American
people could benefit from the knowledge of Geography in specific situations. ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
After the late Wisconsinan Glaciation, about 1800 years ago, its shift consequently pushed moist and
moderate conditions into present day Sahara. Later environmental changes separated African and
Egyptian people. This separation meant a lack of transportation between the two, which meant no
exchanges. Isolation caused a lack of drinkable water and decreased its productivity. Not only did
Climate change impact Africa, but their people faced changes of latitude. Changes of latitude cause
lower and higher temperatures, intensifying the humidity, animal life, and agricultural life. What this
change in latitude did increase was a misfortune of threat via health wise. "The heat and humidity of
Africa's equatorial lowlands generated still another threat to African well–being: a host of diseases
ranging from malaria to bilharzia and from yellow fever to sleeping sickness." (De Blij, 298)
Environments are what aids insects to survive and transport these diseases, causing fatal death
between
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Geography : Description, Geography, And Cultural Aspects...
Geography is a science that looks into the description, distribution, and interactions of the physical,
biological, and cultural aspects of the world. We study geography because it helps us to better
understand our history as well as our current situations. It allows us to see how the world is laid out,
however, geography is not just limited to maps. There are many other purposes of geography than
just showing us where things are in the world. For example, it tells us about culture in different
regions and how people interact with their environment.
If you are studying the geography of an area, you are most likely going to find things about
human/environment interaction. Human/environment interaction is how people deal with their
surroundings. For example, if someone goes to get water from a stream or a well, they are
interacting with their environment. Human/environment interaction answers questions such as how
people use their environment, why they change it, and what happens when the environment is
changed.
Another theme of geography you may be studying is movement. Movement is how and why people
and things move. Immigrants are people who move into a new country, and emigrants are people
who are moving out of a country. An illustration of these two circumstances could be that if
someone were to move from England to the United States, they would be an immigrant to the
United States but an emigrant of England. These still are not all of the different parts to geography.
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'Popularity In The Word Vulgar'
The main points made by the article is what kind of opportunities does this contemporary cultural
phenomena shown to geographers by looking at the pop culture that is present and how technology
presented by the pop culture fit within cultural geography. As part of the first question addressed,
Kinsley takes the term "vulgar" and see how it fits into cultural geography. Recognizing that the
"implication of 'disgust' and 'distaste' in the word 'vulgar'" (Kinsley 793) are what most consider
when hearing the word, but that is not the point in case of this situation. That instead of seeing that
the word in a negative connotation, but when it comes to looking deeper into this new wave of
cultural geography, it should instead be seen as "a useful (if challenging) means" when speaking
about cultural geography especially when "popular" has started to take place within cultural
geography. Analyzing the notion of "popular" cultural geography, Kinsley talks the different
arguments that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In order to learn more or to dig deeper in specifics of any study of cultural geography, Kinsley
acknowledges on how technology, especially at the rate and the new advances that have been made,
can allow for geographers to delve into these landscapes. Now, cultural geographers are not just that,
but instead they are "'multimedia' scholars"(Kinsley 795) who have been defied with the idea of
"reading of landscapes as text with watching of, listening to, and touching forms of spatial
experience composed as, in and through image, sounds haptics" (Kinsley 795). In terms of cultural
geography and how the word popular fits into all it and the progression it making is something that
takes account based off of
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The Landscape Lewis
Peirce F. Lewis's "Axioms for Reading the Landscape" focuses on how to read and understand
landscapes through a set of rules which he calls "axioms." In the "Geographic (or Ecological)
Axiom," Lewis (1979, 24) argues that studying a landscape outside its location makes no sense in
gaining cultural insight on the landscape. Don Mitchell (2007, 43) in "New Axioms for the
Landscape," presents the idea that the shape of the land provides direction to its social life. Carrie
Breitbach's (2009) "The Geographies of a More Just Food System: Building Landscapes for Social
Reproduction" revolves around the idea of bringing justice to the food system by rectifying
landscape and social reproduction as a solution in South Dakota. Lewis's and Mitchell's ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In that regard, South Dakota's social reproduction represents the input that people put (output) into
the state's economy. South Dakota's economy relies 38 percent on the beef and cattle industry
(Breitbach 2009, 540). Before the opening of Walmart stores, South Dakota's small towns relied on
private own butcher shops and cattle farms for their livelihood and overall economy. Once Walmart
moved in, their businesses were forced to close because it became too expensive to compete.
Clayton Farmen a small town butcher from Groton was also affected by the changes. His business
closed and the relationships he had formed with his customers ended. Breitbach writes, "For Clayton
Farmen, the restructuring that led to the decline of small butcher shops also meant the end of the
personal relationships that sustained his job and gave him the confidence that he was selling quality
food" (2009, 543). With the businesses gone and Walmart the main source of economy, the towns'
atmosphere transformed from a personal to an impersonal
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Social And Cultural Geography : Explain How People Make...
Essay Two: Social and Cultural Geography: Explain how people make and transform place.
Word count: 1363
In the following bodies, I will lay out how place is defined in a sense of how it is related to people,
state on how people make places, and propose how persons transform places. Along with these
points, I will use texts to support my given answers. Place is a word that can be used in various
ways. It could either be used as a verb or noun. For example, it can be a location such as the
Wellington Beehive or an action word that indicates the movement of an object to a certain point.
The word itself originated from its Greek root "plateia hodos" or broad way which was then
translated to the Latin word "platea" meaning open space, alternated to Old French and then to Old
English taking the form "place".
In geography, place is used to describe an environment where people are able to interact and make
sense of. Lester and his associates (2016) infer that place is used to define human interaction "with
nature and among themselves; where there are tensions and where there is peace; where people are
rich and where they are poor" (p.32). Cresswell (2008) defines place as combination of a location
and meaning. Simply put, place is a space that we give meaning to. It is an empty meaningless
physical space that one can take and mold it to their liking giving it meaning and filling it with
things that truly describes themselves. For instance, homes are places created by people to
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
How Culture Influence Geography
Geography influences culture in many ways. A civilizations geography determines what kind of
god(s) they believe in as well as influences from other cultures. These features provide a stepping
stone for cultures that are solely based on geography.
For instance in Source C the map depicts the archipelago that is Japan. This displays how Japan
relies on nature to grow crops and other substantial food choices. The map shows why the Japanese
culture wants to preserve nature. Another representation of this is shown in Source B. The Egyptians
relied solely on the Nile for water and plant growth. This is why they devoted their god's to water
and nature. This idea is solely based on the geography of Egypt.
Another reason for geography to impact culture
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Carl Sauer Research Paper
Carl Sauer was an American geographer from the United States who lived from 1889 to 1975. He
had a German heritage, being the son of two German immigrants. After attending college at
Wesleyan University, he attained his PhD at the University of Chicago. After establishing himself in
the world of geography, he became a geography professor at the University of Michigan and then
later on at the University of California, Berkeley. He had an extremely decorated career. He was
awarded the Honorary Fellowship Award in 1935 and was also awarded the Daly Medal in 1940,
both by the American Geographical Society. Unlike many geographers, Sauer focused in his studies
on rural areas and landscapes, rather than cities and urban landscapes. To go along
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Relationship Between Place And Music And The Song ' Inglan...
The objective of this paper is to examine the relationship between place and music and analyze the
song "Inglan is a Bitch" by Linton Kwesi Johnson in terms of place. "Inglan is a Bitch" exemplifies
the link between music and place through its lyrics and sound. First I am going to define cultural
geography and discuss how culture is linked to place. Then I will explain local music spaces and
why music has a strong sense of place. Next I will analyze how "Inglan is a Bitch" relates to place.
After, I will finish with an overall conclusion. I will be exploring these topics through the readings
of Knox and Marston, Connell and Gibson and finally, Watson, Holyer and Mager supplemented by
Lecture notes.
According to Knox and Marston, culture produces a shared set of meanings and practices, while
geography is the place in which groups shape those meanings and practices and "in the process form
an identity" (Knox and Marston 2016, 155). Cultural Geography focuses on the way space, place
and landscape shape culture at the same time that culture shapes space, place, and landscape" (Knox
and Marston 2016, 155). Cultural geography examines cultural traits, cultural complexes, and
cultural regions. (Rutherford 2016). It is a way to understand both landscape and human settlement
patterns (Rutherford 2016).
In the reading Sounds and Scenes, authors Connell and Gibson suggest that a local music space is a
specific place that produces a distinct sound (Connell and Gibson 2003, 90). The
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Human Geography: How Human Influence On Antarctica
What makes Antarctica unique regarding human geography, is how humans influenced the
continent. physical geography is far more significant than human appearance. Antarctica is a cold,
frozen, and mostly empty land found at the South Pole of the earth.
Antarctica is a cold, frozen, and mostly empty land found at the South Pole of the earth. Humans go
there mostly for research and occasional tourism, though it's incredibly inhospitable, especially in
the colder months. Due to the harsh environment, it remains the last true wilderness on earth and is
protected by an international agreement called the Antarctic Treaty of 1961. In this Treaty, world
leaders agreed that everywhere south of 60° south latitude would remain unclaimable by any
country. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The country has over 5,000 Russian Orthodox churches. Many are built anew or under repair on
parish and local budgets money. Russia religion varies significantly Rather it be a question of as
easy opposed to west; Catholicism and Protestantism to Eastern Order; Islam as opposed to
Christianity; many were to blame identifying cultural faults across the continent. Russia has been a
innovator for many cultural traditions and events, such as humanism which have consequently been
spread across internationally. This classical concept influenced the creation of art and literature
beyond the continent.
What makes Antarctica unique regarding human geography, is how humans influenced the
continent. physical geography is far more significant than human appearance. Antarctica is a cold,
frozen, and mostly empty land found at the South Pole of the earth.
Antarctica is a cold, frozen, and mostly empty land found at the South Pole of the earth. Humans go
there mostly for research and occasional tourism, though it's incredibly inhospitable, especially in
the colder months. Due to the harsh environment, it remains the last true wilderness on earth and is
protected by an international agreement called the Antarctic Treaty of 1961. In this Treaty, world
leaders agreed that everywhere south of 60° south latitude would remain unclaimable by any
country. The treaty says that it cannot be used in military reasons, or to dispose of radioactive waste
– only peaceful
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Impact Of Ethnocentrism On Foreign Areas And Variable...
With the globalization of economy, people from diverse social backgrounds closely congregate for
negotiation, endeavoring to build free markets which assist everyone to run business with each other
faster and easier. Except for language barriers, cultural differences could be considerable aspects to
be discussed and deliberated to facilitate cultivating friendly and sustainable relationships. However,
a prevalent phenomenon about gauging other cultures with caliber of their own inclination named
ethnocentrism may be neglected, bringing many negative influences to international collaboration.
In the real world, some cases have illuminated that ignorance of ethnocentrism could result in failure
in commerce, and sociologists initiated to pay attention to this theme. To clarify their connections
and continue the previous researches, this study investigates disparate performances of companies in
domestic and foreign areas and variable responses of economies at the same time. As for negative
consequences caused by ethnocentrism, on the one hand, it impacts overseas exploration of
corporations and causes trade conflicts. On the other hand, it leads to ineffective resource allocation
and decelerates economic development of emerging countries.
Ethnocentrism impacts overseas exploration of corporations. In the past decade, enterprises all
around the world feel increasingly unsaturated with triumphs in local districts and attempt to explore
external business. The executives of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Summary Of Harm De Blij's Why Geography Matters
Harm de Blij's book, Why Geography Matters poses a central theme, which I have heard discussed
multiple times. Blij argues that the American public is the most geographically illiterate society in
the world. Blij blames this decline with the poorly formulated curricula in the American school
systems, which ultimately originates from Washington D.C. and the people that run this country. If I
had never seen this central theme in action in a classroom I would have been dumbfounded. In one
short paragraph Blij summarized how America's illiteracy began, which this then becomes the
central theme of his book that relates to the educational field. Blij writes that professional educators
took control of the system and combined the subjects of history, ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
As every day passes China grows stronger in every aspect and eventually they will be knocking on
America's doorstep in each of those categories. Economically, China is closing rapidly, but even the
sleeping giant as Napoleon Bonaparte called it, has its limits. To be blunt, China is resource hungry
and who knows what their country will do next. With the level of nationalism that their people have,
China could go in multiple directions. For example, let us look at both China attempting to exert
control over the South China Sea and also with the Senkaku Islands. Both of these areas are
becoming more and more hostile, which ultimately could lead to deadly military engagements. With
that being said, Blij also proposes an argument that I have been pondering for a while and that is a
potential cold war between the U.S.A. and China. On the outside it seems as if there is a potential
collision course to that conclusion. However, Blij does offer an interesting solution to this possibility
and it is one that I believe should be the strongest takeaway. Blij suggests that trade, scientific,
cultural and educational links and exchanges can be the solution to this issue. After all, China is
responsible for many of the essential aspects to our life. Therefore, the least we as Americans can do
is learn the various geographical aspects that encircle
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Social And Cultural Geography Research
Choose two journal articles* and consider what these articles tell us about:
a) the socially constructed, spatially contingent and performative aspects of social identities and b)
the practice of 'doing ' social and cultural geography research.
Social and cultural geography is an area of study that has become increasingly popular within
Geography. With the expansion of multi–cultural societies and the increased diversification of
cultures in addition to cultural practice, globally research into social and cultural geographies has
boomed. These two diverse fields have risen in popularity among geographers and academics;
meaning there is a significant amount of research and academic papers on this broad area of study.
The fact is since the evolution of post–structuralist ideas in the mid 20th century, in addition to
postcolonial, and feminist study around the 1990s. A shift from an emphasis on identity to difference
in geographical literature has become apparent. Geographers have since engaged more frequently
with gender, sexuality, 'race', and class differences, by investigating how they are constituted in
relation to peoples and places. This has brought about vast levels of research casing all social
identities. However for the purpose of this essay, I will be focusing on the social identities of Gender
and Race as both social and cultural attitudes in these areas have transformed immensely in the last
century. As previously mentioned there is a vast amount of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Five Themes Of Geography
Erin Paradis
Mrs. Zemetres
World Geography
Five Themes Essay
9 January 2015
Imagine that you need to tell a friend how to get from their house to the grocery store. How would
you give the directions? Would you give steps for the friend to follow? Or would you tell them that
the grocery store is next to the local convenience store? Describing a location and giving directions
area examples of using the five themes of geography in your daily life. In the same way we use the
five themes of geography throughout the day, geographers use the five themes in their researching.
Location is used by geographers to describe either the absolute or relative location of a place. The
absolute location is the location on a map latitude and longitude, or as we use it, a street address.
Finding absolute location is the starting point for geographic research. Relative locations are
described by landmarks or the distance from one place to another. Location would be used by a
geographer to express where things are.
Place is used by geographers to describe physical or human characteristics of an area. Physical
characteristics are landforms, bodies of water, vegetation, soils, and climate types. Human
characteristics of a place come from human ideas and actions. Human characteristics include ...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Studying human environmental interaction helps geographers learn how people depend, modify, and
adapt to their environments. "Geographers recognize that human beings play a very important role
in shaping and modifying the natural environment (Geo Hunter)." Some effects of humans
interacting with their environment are useful and good for the environment, but there are also some
harmful effects of human environmental interaction. Some of the things that humans to do harm
their environment consist of pollution or deforestation. People and their environments impact each
other
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cultural Geography Of Toronto Essay
Toronto is a place in cultural imagination that occupies a historical locale with its time and space of
the modern geography.
Cultural geography of place presents a novel vision of Toronto as a social and a symbolic
constitutive process of historical change, in which nature is a shaping force of our mind as people.
The present album comprises a series of paintings by Lyudmyla (Mila)
Shugurova, in which landscapes have characters, voices, stories that take the habitats into an
extraordinary voyage of time as space.
From the beginning of times, the place has been forming with three receding glacial successions and
their beautiful ornaments of rocks, limestone, and basalt. Glacial movements have left an excellent
bed with nutritious deposits and ice ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Lawrence, Kaniatarowanenneh.
Lake Ontario is well outlined by the touching presence of the last glaciation, and is indeed "a
shining water" as its name suggests in
Wyandot, the language of the Huron.
During colonialism, Toronto was formed as the boundary place with a flourishing economy and a
transitory social corridor of trade, development and settlement. Transition marks a threshold that is
constantly making the cultural topology of its diverse environments as landscapes, the social scenes
amidst the natural time of change. In this album, the cultural landscapes are voyagers themselves,
reveries for tourism as the forgotten sense for belonging and its musing longing. As the changing
space, it represents one of the best habitats for a migrating society through which people may see
better their true belonging to cosmos outside the rigid limits and borders of the political and social
fragmentation.
In the present collection, we look at Toronto as the living locale through the ethics of history that
makes our choices social in the realms of the cultural habitats. Shaping places, nature speaks to us
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Geography And The World Of Geography
Before starting this course, I had a preconceived notion that I would learn about geographical
features and memorize places all around the world. I did not expect to learn about topics such as
globalization, political geography, or industries and services. I was surprised at what all we learned
in such a short period of time. I gained a new prospective and information about the world around
me. Throughout the semester, my understanding and knowledge about geography has drastically
changed from before this course. This course has made me think about topics and things that I have
never reflected upon. I have had this standard premonition of geography as just places or maps, but
there is so much more. I enjoyed learning about the different races, history of gender equality, and
religions of the world the most. Geography has influenced my political, social, and economic views
of the world. One of the topics in this course, geographies of languages, was one that interested me
in learning more. One of the reasons that it interested me was because I am a Spanish major and I
love learning new languages and cultures of the world. Languages are one of the most complex, yet
interesting social aspects of life. Without languages, we would have no way to communicate,
therefore we would not be a social society whatsoever. There were multiple facts about the
languages of the world I did not know about. One of them were the types of languages: body
language, tactile/touch language,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Guns Germs And Steel Essay
Guns, Germs, and Steel is a well written book by James Diamond exemplifying the true meaning of
human geography. One of the essentials to fully understand geography is to know about human
geography, sometimes also known as cultural geography. Human geography or cultural geography,
is the study of why people are where they are. Human geography is also the relationship of cultures
around the world and how they relate to their origin. Throughout the book, Diamond examines the
conflict of the book: why are some societies more advanced than other societies? While Diamond
was researching bird evolution in New Guinea in the year of 1972, he met Yali, a native of the
island. Yali asked a very important question, "Why is it that you white ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The majority of Indians knew what was edible and what was not, but they did not use that to their
advantage. In one case, Highlanders, people from the highlands of New Guinea, would bring a
supply of food for their trips. But, if the trip went longer than expected, or they ate more food than
intended on one day, they would slowly suffer and eventually die because they would not eat food
they did not pack. On the other hand, Indians did have knowledge in domestication. They
domesticated small animals that "yielded food, clothing, or warmth. But none of them pulled plows
or wagons." A downside to having some of the domesticated animals was disease. Of having
domestic animals, that was the worst thing the animals did to the native people. Today, people are
immune to most of the diseases spread by animals in the centuries before us because bodies today
are different then they were a few hundred years ago. Another thing the Indians were good at was an
organized system of people. The Indians created groups of people called bands (smallest), tribes,
chiefdoms, and states (largest). Of all of those, only the two biggest, chiefdoms and states had a
monopoly. Both of those monopolies were well run. Indians were technologically behind, but they
mostly made good out of what they had. James Diamond put in lots of time and effort to complete
his book, Guns, Germs, and Steel. Diamond looked through, many books,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Ap Human Geography Research Paper
"Geography has made us neighbors. History has made us friends. Economics has made us partners,
and necessity has made us allies. Those whom God has so joined together, let no man put asunder."
~(John F. Kennedy) Geography has impacted countries and regions dissimilarly throughout the
duration of history. Geography influences the historical and social development of a country or
region. These features can either cause an area to be hindered or prosperous in its development.
Likewise, the Tigris and Euphrates rivers of Mesopotamia were essential because it provided fertile
soil for crops, trade, transport and the necessities to food sources. Also, the mountainous terrain of
Greece caused the country to have independent city– states. The mountains ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
The geography of Greece prompted the distinguishment of the independent city–states. This altered
the political development of Greece because the different states had separate forms of government.
For example, the state of Athens had a direct form of democracy as a government. Whereas, Sparta
was an isolated military state. The mountains also posed as natural barriers for these states, unlike
the mountains of Italy which were low and rugged and caused the people to unite. The mountains
also obstructed the states of Greece to be culturally diffused. Although they practiced similar
religious beliefs, Greeks were prevented from trading with each other. The mountains helped some
states as a barrier from invasions. The terrain also assisted the independent Pious to practice their
own culture. Sparta is one of these independent culture states. The state prevented trading and other
"outside" communication in order to rid of cultural diffusion. The mountains helped them to begin
their own particular society and to be unaffected by other external
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Carl Sauer 's Notion Of A Cultural Landscape And Why Is It...
Terrence McLaughlin
Landscapes, Place and People
Dr. Harriot Beazley
28 August 2015
What is Carl Sauer's notion of a cultural landscape and why is it useful for understanding the world?
Carl Sauer, one of the foremost geography scholars of the 20th century theorized that the defining
characteristics of a "cultural landscape" differed from those of his predecessors. His findings, while
contradictory to some of the most respected academics of his time, helped create an entirely new
way of thinking within the discipline (Sauer 1925). However, the influence of Sauer's work
extended well beyond the confines of any one discipline. He helped establish landscape studies in
cultural geography and strongly advocated for a "responsible stewardship of the sustaining earth."
Additionally, he supplied an esthetic rationale and a historical perspective to the environmental
movement. His theory denounced the previously supported theory of environmental determinism,
and suggested that cultural landscapes are shaped by humans, as well as many other cultural aspects.
In a more complex sense Sauer proposed that cultural landscapes are the product of the human
population, and that the actions of humans and define the environment in which we all live. In his
own words, Sauer states that "Culture is the agent, the natural area is the medium. The cultural
landscape the result."
Since Sauer first introduced his theory of cultural landscapes in 1925, much has changed in the way
our society thinks
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cultural Geography Course Analysis
One of the classes I think I've grown in is Cultural Geography because I am paying more attention
and I did very good on the final. Another class I think I've grown in is English because I pay more
attention and I understand the work better. The Habit of Heart and Mind I think I've improved most
on is putting more effort in my work and thinking more outside of the box. I have gotten better at
the habit of responsibility by finishing everything on time and trying my very best, effort continues
to be a struggle for me because when I don't get something I don't put much effort because I give up
easily. I am most proud that I have been trying my best because usually I just give up and try not to
accomplish what I want. If I could go back and do something differently I would stay focus since the
beginning and not slip because right now my grades are ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The most important thing I´ve learned so far is to not let your friends distract you and always try
your very best. Semester 2 I want to do very good and stay very focus because I been slipping and
not been focusing in my work lately. I want to actually try and be a good student like in the
beginning of school year, in the beginning of school year I was doing really good I was really
surprised because I had a 4.00 and that was my first time getting a high GPA cause the highest I´ve
gotten is a 3.17 and I was really happy to see that I was actually starting off good but then I slipped
and ended up with a low GPA and now I want to try my best to get it up to at least a 3.00. But one
thing I really like about myself is that no matter what I always keep trying my best because I
actually want to get somewhere in life and I don´t want to keep on slipping like I always do I just
wanna stay on track and be a good student like my dad always wanted me to be. That´s why I try my
best just for him because I wanna see him happy and I want him to be very proud of
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cultural Geography: Habit Of Heart And Mind
One of the classes I think I've grown in is Cultural Geography because I was not doing that well in
that class. My grade in that class was a F. But, at the end of the Semester I was doing better than the
beginning and I brought my grades up to a passing grade. Another class I think I've grown in is
English because in the beginning I was not passing the class but at the middle of the Semester I was
doing better. At the end of Semester I was passing the class. The Habit of Heart and Mind I think
I've improved most on is that I do my homework and studying for a test. That helps me to do better
at my test and have a good grade. The Habit of Heart and Mind I am using more now is doing my
homework every single day. I have gotten better at the habit
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Landscape Of Africville Analysis
Through exploring everyday life, geography is an essential discipline that is a central part of our
understandings of the world around us. An important part of geography deals with the relationship
between human activity and the physical aspects of where this activity takes place (Bryan, 1958). It
is important to then consider that these physical aspects can often be viewed as landscapes within
our society. The concept of landscape plays an important part within geography and this is a term
that has been associated with a way of seeing the natural world (Cosgrove, 1984). From a
geographical perspective, it is a concept embedded with visual aspects and appearance but also
composed of structure and functions. Although landscapes assist individuals ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
Examining Sherene Razack's (2002) term, "a white settler society", we are able to gain an
understanding that the province of Nova Scotia took part in being a white settler society in relation
to the Africville community. According to Razack (2002), aspects of a white settler society take
place when there is a racial hierarchy present and spaces are organized to maintain unequal social
relations. The landscape of this community was structured in this way because the community was
predominately of black individuals and therefore the inhabitants were not regarded as being an
important part of the city. This can be demonstrated through the ways in which the community of
Africville was treated by the government of Nova Scotia. For instance, during the time that
Africville was present, this community was denied of essential services in which Nelson (2000)
explains, "requests for water lines and sewerage which would bring sanitation and quality of life
closer to the standards for the rest of the city were refused. Police and fire protection and garbage
collection on par with such services received by the rest of Halifax were denied. Living conditions
were ironically described by city officials as intolerable and unsanitary" (p. 166). Thus, the
landscape of Africville was associated with being regarded as a "slum" within the society of Nova
Scotia. A slum is referred to as "filthy, foul smelling, wretched, rancorous, uncultivated and lacking
care" (Nelson, 2000, p. 168). What is important to take into consideration however, is that the
community of Africville was racialized against which resulted in the landscape being viewed as a
slum. In addition, the government not only denied the community access to basic necessities needed
in order to maintain a healthy environment, but continued to further racialize this community by
placing a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Kindergarten Geography, Developmentally Appropriate Geography

  • 1. Kindergarten Geography, Developmentally Appropriate Geography The articles Kindergarten Geography, Developmentally Appropriate Geography, and Google Earth all discussed effective ways to teach geography to students. The first highlighted more multicultural education, the second aimed at general education, and the last emphasized the use of technology. Obviously, teachers design their lesson plans and implement teaching strategies to satisfy the needs of their audience–the students. Educators need to connect the curriculum with the students' culture and family, which leads to an increase of knowledge capacity. In the first article, Carlee successively taught a group kindergarten students with an Islamic community by activating background experience with international landmarks and family cultural background. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Essay on HISTORY Name: Date: Graded Assignment Final Exam Part 2 I. Map On this world map, indicate the following features: Amazon Rainforest Panama Canal The Himalayas The Ring of Fire The Mississippi River The Gobi Desert (10 points) II. Graphic Organizer Fill in the table below about these five major world religions. Do not fill in the shaded boxes. (10 points) Religion Name at least one Holy Text How do you achieve enlightment? Describe their view about the afterlife. Hinduism Bhagvada Gata Do good deeds to get good karma until you break the samsara or cycle of reincarnation and reach enlightenment Buddhism Believe the Four Truths are true and real, follow the Eightfold Path, meditation is one of the major
  • 3. steps to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Voting patterns even seem to follow where the ice age hit worst and where it didn't but this may have nothing to do with the ice age andmerely just that the industrialized regions are interested in different aspects of what each candidate hs to offer. IV. Short Answer Consider that Earth's population is projected to rise to 10 billion by the year 2050. The current population is only around 6 billion. Most scientists predict global warming will be noticeable by the year 2050 as well. What parts of the world currently have the fastest and slowest population growth? (4 points) Fastest  Sub–Saharan Africa Slowest  Europe What regions do you think will have the highest population densities in the year 2050? Explain why. (6 points) My best guess is India will have the highest population density because they are industrializing quickly, have plenty resources and are working to get more and also they have lot of job opportunities. In other places it does seem like there will be much industrialization such as Africa which can cause the people to die out when they do nt have resources. Also the culture in India from what I have seen is that people have many children and encourage big families and take care of each other. How do you think the population increase will affect urban areas in the world? (5 points) They will continue to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. The Relationship Between Physical Geography And Human... How do physical geography and human geography overlap? NAME: Alva GRADE: 10X Maybe some people will think human geography has no relation between physical geography. But I think human geography has a great effect on physical geography, and physical geography has a great effect on human geography too. As an intellectual discipline, geography is divided into the sub–fields of physical geography and human geography, the latter concentrating upon the study of human activities, by the application of qualitative and quantitative research methods. Physical geography is that branch of natural science which deals with the study of processes and patterns in the natural environment like the atmosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, and geosphere, as opposed to the cultural or built environment, the domain ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The earthquake made the nuclear leak, and the nuclear leak not only affected the human activities, but also affected the environment as well. The nuclear radiation affects the soil and the sea around the station. Many fish died and the sea was polluted. It seems that the earthquake brought a trail of things that happen later. So we can learn for this that physical geography and human geography are connected and affects each other almost every time. And the third example is the population. If the population increase, people need more places to live. They need more soil to grow the food. This will make the soil loose and the water may flood it away. And the other activities of human will pollute the environment. However, the bad environment will affect the human activities. So, as we are human, we can do something to protect the environment. It is good to ourselves. We can do a very small thing like using less disposable goods in our daily lives. Since we cannot control the environment, we should make some safeguards before the disaster ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. The Themes Of Geography Geography is the study of the earth surface or space as the home of humankind. Geography is not simply about the study of maps and what is and where on the Earth, but also why it is there and not somewhere else, sometimes referred to as "location and space distribution". It also studies whether the cause is natural or human. There are generally two fields of Geography – first, Physical Geography which studies geography and science to explain characteristics of earth such as landforms; including mountains, rivers, glaciers, deserts, and ocean and climate that includes temperature, rainfall, snowfall, humidity, and seasons, and things like natural resources, location of countries and capitals, maps, features like latitude and longitude, and others ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They are separated into new categories according to their main focuses of extent studies about Earth, nature, or/and human. For example, within the physical geography, the study of the various forms of the Earth especially, is called "geomorphology" and the study concerned with soils is called "pedology". "Biogeography" emphasizes mainly on biology, botany, and ecology and spatial relationship between animals and plants in the natural sciences, and "climatology" is the study of the world's climates and their causes and effects in the past, present, and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. Geography And Human Geography Geography is a science that deals with the description, distribution, and interaction of the diverse physical, biological, and cultural features of the earth's surface (Websters). We study geography so that we can better understand the locations of places, people, cultures, physical features of the Earth and more around us and the world. Studying geography requires looking at all of Earth's systems. Geography is used almost everyday in our daily lives. For example, using a global positioning system to navigate to a certain location or even visualizing a map of the states to picture where a state is located in the United States of America. Geography is comprised of two branches, human geography and physical geography. Human geography is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Continue down the road for two blocks, once you have passed Second Street I live in the third house on the left." The second theme of geography is, "place." Place describes the features that makes a site unique. Every place on the Earth contains physical or cultural significances that distinguish them from other places. For example, you can tell the difference between a school and a grocery store by the objects and people that inhabit the location. A place is defined by the objects and people inside of it. The third theme of geography is, "region." Regions are defined as areas that share certain similar, physical or cultural characteristics. Physical characteristics could include climate or landforms whereas cultural characteristics could include language or religion. The fourth theme of geography is, "movement" which describes how people and religion or other things move as well as why they move. There are two words to describe someone that moves from one country to another and they are immigrant and emigrant. An immigrant is someone that moves into a certain country. On the other hand, an emigrant is someone that moves out of a particular country. The fifth and final theme of geography is, "human–environment interaction." The study of the interaction between humans and the environment around them informs how people and cultures interact with their surroundings and how they differ from one another. It also includes how people use ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Kim Jong-Un: An Authoritarian Government What changes our lives? What determines what we achieve in our daily lives? Human geography changes the way we act, what we spend most of our days, and what we know, physical geography only changes what we wear and where we go. How we spend most of our days could be based off our government and the kind we have. Depending on the leader of that group or country can really adjust our schedule. Dictatorship is a type of authoritarian government, it is when one person leads a group or country. Kim Jong–Un is a dictator in North Korea, he orders his followers to specific tasks and if they do not obey or follow him they will get punished or brutally murdered. Being in a democratic government is different than a dictatorship. Democratic government let the people decide who is in charge. THis creates a good country and provides freedom and fairness for the country. You can spend your life doing anything you want since there are no death threats addressed to you. An authoritarian government is the general term of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A traditional economy is when the people provide for themselves. When the people produce their own needs they do not need to look for a job, so the people spend all their days growing their own crops. The market economy directs our lives by either making money or producing products. This economy has human's looking for jobs in order to make money to buy products or produce.Or producing in order to sell and make money that way. A command economy in order to sell and make money that way. A command economy is when people are controlled. A person in this economy will not be looking for a job, but instead just achieving their given task by their leader. This economy similar to an authoritarian government, however the person doesn't get punished they do not get paid. The economy actuates the human's lives by if they work and how they work, the biome might only change the types of jobs around that ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. Sir Richard F. Burton's Trip To Congo Geographers are known to research both the human and physical geography of foreign lands. They make connections of the information gathered between human and physical geography through their experiences. Geographers must interact with people and be aware of their own views of the world and should aspire to communicate unbiased opinions and understanding of the people's cultures. In their writing authors ability to understand and work across cultural boundaries is the framework for an individual to attain knowledge while engaging in the culture and develop cross–cultural competence. On a "Trip to Congo" Sir Richard F. Burton writes a story during his exploration to the Yellalla or Cataracts of the Congo leaving some detail insights of the customs and behavior of the African communities. He only gives his point of view from an imperialist position and sometimes denigrates and diminishes the people and their culture. Even though Burton had a translator throughout his trip the language barrier prohibits interaction with the communities and the ability to empathize with the natives. Interaction and understanding is the key to appreciate their behaviors, instead Burton ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Froude's imperialistic and ethnocentric point of view manifests the differences between the "inferior race", the blacks and the minority group, the British. His beliefs of superiority of his own culture are shadowed through a forceful and aggressive tone by using "we" to get the message of white supremacy across to the reader. His views on the superiority of the British rule despite the white majority are expressed through his despiteful tone throughout the excerpt. He describes the Greater Antilles as "weak nations" that are "subject to the rules of others who are at once powerful and just" diminishing the natives ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. Physical And Cultural Themes Of Geography Throughout The... Geography is the "mother of sciences". (Wickramaratne, 2015) Geography studies the physical and cultural characteristics of different places and how they affect one another. Geography is considered a social and physical science and is taught in classrooms throughout the United States. Geography is taught in hope that someone can "see the meaning in the arrangement of things on Earth's surface and be able to see relations between people, places, and environments, who uses geographic skills, and who applies spatial and ecological perspectives to life situations." (Heffron & Downs, 2012) When Geography is being taught it is broken down into five themes: location, place, human–earth interaction, movement, and regions. Themes A location is where ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Human–Earth interaction uses two main ideas, accessibility and connectivity. Accessibility is how easily we can reach other places, but connectivity is the way places remain connected: roads, train tracks, telephone lines. Transportation and technology has made traveling between cities easier allowing trade and movement to be possible on larger scale. Movement studies people's ability to transport goods and themselves around the earth and to what impact. Globalization is making movement more rapid. People connect and interact with each other and their environments in an instant; allowing new technologies and fashions the ability to move around the world with a push of a button. Many trends will start in one region and make their way to another allowing movement to be created. Regions are areas that have consistent characteristics by no fixed boundaries. Regions can include deserts, countries, fairs, grocery stores and all different types of areas. There are four types of regions geographers use to describe areas: administrative, formal, functional, and perceptual. Administrative regions are dictated by the rules and laws of the land. States boundaries are defined and dictated by laws and mapped showing exact ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Social And Cultural Geography : Explain How People Make... Social and Cultural Geography: Explain how people make and transform place Social and cultural geography is the study of how people affect or are affected by spatial areas. Cultural geography is the study of variations of culture and cultural norms across different regions and places (Anderson, 2015). Whereas social geography is based around the social factors within a space. Both of these factors can be directly linked to show transformation within a place. Places are made by human endeavours in order to create a social structure that allows for growth and prosperity of a community whether this be creating a rural sector that allows for increased production or a city with high population and high economic turn over. These places are also created via boundaries which cause a location to exist that includes the area. They have a locale due to the culture of a community that influences style of infrastructure and this fluctuates between places and also a sense of place which is invoked on a region by its community's culture and emotional connection to the area but is also influenced by the outside world's judgement on the place either due to past events or stereotypical views. People develop and make place through many means including culture, religion. Politics, and physical change to geography all in combination that creates a unique feel and structure of place due to the varying attribute that are included to create place. "While the word 'place' has been used as long as ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. Meaning Of Geography Vs Geography "History rhymes, but geography endures." was once stated by Andrew C. Katen. History, in fact, does not repeat itself. However, it does seem to have recurring events. With geography, on the other hand, the learning possibilities are endless. As people continually change, it causes the environment around us to change, which makes geography an ongoing happening. For example, the population is always increasing and decreasing because of the number of births and deaths. So therefore, more and more space is being taken up to provide living space for the large amount of humans on Earth. Geography deals with not only maps, compasses, and landforms, but with people of different cultures and how they interact with the space around them. Many geographers feel that geography is how people adapt their environment to fit their culture (and vice–versa), while other geographers feel as though geography is about how different factors make the earth diverse and how things are laid out based on the diversity of the earth. According to some geographers, the definition of geography is how people adapt, or change, their environment to fit their culture. In document one, it states, "...Geography emphasizes people, their ways of life, their divisions, and their endeavors to solve their problems and to adapt the regional environmental conditions to their ways and means..." This basically is saying that people change the environment around them so that it is able to go together with their goals, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. Cultural Geography Classes My classes are going well so far. I am doing well in English and Cultural Geography. I am doing well in these classes because in English I get everything done on time, like the homework and class assignments. I am also doing well because my vocab quizzes and retakes are helping my grade as well and I am starting to participate and ask more questions. I am proud of my English grade. I will continue to do well in English class by completing all of my work, participating and do my very best to keep succeeding in that class. I am also doing well in Cultural Geography. I am doing well in Cultural Geography because I am prepared for the map quizzes and am starting to participate a lot more and ask questions as well. I am also completing assignments ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Why Geography Matters More Than Ever By Harm De Blij Geography is an important factor to consider when you look at this worlds past, present, or future. So whether it be the earths physical geographic features, the geopolitics stirring up trouble across the globe, or the economics of growing or shrinking countries; geography plays a major role. In todays society, geographic knowledge is one of the most important and valuable tools to possess. Without it, we are victims of ignorance and endanger ourselves, others, and the world. This ignorance, possessed by many, is posing a great risk of self–destruction. The author of "Why Geography Matters More Than Ever", Harm de Blij, makes many strong points on this matter, but occasionally makes unsupported and unclear statements which tend to stray off topic. "Lets get right to the point. There is no such thing as "global" warming." This provocative statement presented by the author makes ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He feared the Soviet Unions "deviationism" ha tainted his Maoist communism. So he mobilized young people in china, forming the Red Guards and shutting down schools. These kids were encouraged to attack "bourgeois" and root out enemies of the system, including family members. The results of this were devastating. The economy was left struggling to survive, people and elders were mistreated for things they didn't do, and there were as many as 30 million casualties. After explaining this and how Maos death practically saved china, the author makes this statement. "On July 28, 1976, twin earthquakes struck near the city of Tangshan...the death toll...may have exceeded 700,000 people...The chairmen for life died on September 9, just six weeks after Tangshan. It probably was no coincidence." This quote suggests that a political reaction was connected to Maos death. Practically a conspiracy theory, the author never backs it up with any evidence, proof, or reason. This weakens the overall topic and distracts from his main ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. English And Cultural Geography: The Habit Of Heart And Mind Last semester, the classes I think I've grown the most in are English and cultural geography because I payed a lot more attention close to the end of the first semester. The Habits of Heart and Mind that I have improved on, or begun to use more are responsibility and think. How I have gotten better at these habits are by paying attention in class. What continues to be a struggle for me is math and biology because I do not seem to understand to topics very quickly. What I am most proud of myself for accomplishing is passing my geography exam because it's the only exam I passed for finals. Something I wish I could go back and do differently is study a lot more for my English, math and biology exams because if I would have studied more I would ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Habit of Heart and Mind I want to work to get better at next semester is confidence, effort, and apply. One of the classes I think I've grown in is English because if I do well in this class it will help me for my career in the future. Another class I think I've grown in is cultural geography because I passed this class with almost an A and this class I do not struggle a lot in. The Habit of Heart and Mind I think I've improved most on is responsibility because I take my studies a lot more serious now. The Habit of Heart and Mind I am using more now is to think because I think more in math. I have gotten better at the habit of writing by writing this four hundred word blog. Math and biology continues to be a struggle for me because I do not understand the concepts the teacher is teaching real quick. I am most proud that I received a B in my geography final because I studied really hard for it. If I could go back and do something differently I would give me everything to study more for my math and biology exams because I got a really low grade on them and if I were to have studied a lot more on them I would have passed ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Why Is Geography Important In The Crucible Geography is a very important part of every film and book in every way. Geography is where a story takes place and how things work out. When characters live in a specific place they will gain accents, different forms of religion (or lack thereof), and cultural norms. The characters I have read about and watched are all very different when it comes to these certain norms, cultures, and what occurs during the story. Geography and setting are extremely influential in The Great Debaters, The Crucible, and my life living in Mahwah, N.J. because each and every one is complete different with completely separate directions and messages. In the early nineteen twenties and thirties a small group of students applied and were accepted onto a small Texas ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Differences Of The Cosmopolitanism Due to the wave of the World Values Surveys which was conducted in 57 countries around the world, more than 30 percent of the 65,269 respondents, seriously, identified themselves as the citizens of the world. So the Cosmopolitanism is an important and remarkable phenomenon (Miller, 2010). The Cosmopolitan, is the attitude to yourself as a person, a citizen of the world and this attachment is voluntary and selective (Bayram, 2014: 2). When we talk about the cosmopolitan, it can be imagined a cultural–social orientation that combines the two dependent dimensions to each other. The first and most basic dimension is what it later called the cosmopolitan Idea, and refers to specific mental state of the cosmopolitan (Hanrez, 1990). Cosmopolitan mindset can be understand as the way of thinking about what Beck calls it the imagination of dialogue and thus includes two aspects: on the one hand, the desire to communicate with others and the other tending to identify the orientation and background of the person's cultural ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Cosmopolitan territorial system includes the experience and the extent of expectations namely internal differences, despite coexistence, the same life style, contrasting certainty in the experience of individuals and communities. It means the world that we require to understand, think about and review its differences and in this way they identify and prove the differences between themselves and others. Cosmopolitan outlook and theoretical sensitivity prepare a space for imagination of dialogue in everyday practice and the related sciences (Beck, 2006: 89). As Dlanty argues, this reflective and critical duality of Cosmopolitan is what distinguishes it from the world. Cosmopolitan ethos emphasizes willingness to change, Self–changing and self–competition (Johnson, 2012: ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. The 's Historical Atlas Of Central Asia For millennia, civilizations on either side of the Eurasian Continent exchanged both products and ideas through the complex networks of the Silk Route. Central Asia, given its strategic position on this route, long served a critical role at the crossroads between East and West. However, while cultures on both ends of the networks have by and large been extensively researched, Central Asia – despite its centrality – is frequently ignored or marginalized; rather than claiming a separate area of study, it oftentimes retreats to the peripheries of a larger grouping, whether the Islamic world, the Sinosphere, or the Russian Empire. Yuri Bregel, on the other hand, proposes an alternative perception of the region. He contends that Central Asia ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Climate is a dominant factor in the development of Central Asian civilizations. In the first map, titled "The Principal Geographical Features and Provinces," Bregel paints the environmental conditions of each locale with rich details (3). Deserts cast a pervasive presence in the map, limiting both human movement and patterns of settlement. Because of Central Asia's high aridity, most population centers lie on the banks of Amu–Darya and Sir–Darya, the main rivers in the region, as well as their tributaries. These circumstances, together with the ubiquity of mountains in the south, produce a series of sedentary provinces such as Ferghana and Khorezm that are relatively isolated from one another. Furthermore, the deserts act as a natural barrier disjoining the mountain–based farming communities from the vast steppes to their north, where a more temperate climate and flat terrains encourage nomadic ways of life. Conflicts often arise when the two groups intersect, and the struggle between sedentary city–states and nomadic empires comprises a key theme in the history of Central Asia. Nowhere is the distinction between the two categories more apparent than in the drawing of political boundaries. Bregel explains in the preface that "various Central Asian states knew to protect their ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. The 's Philosophies About The Increased Globalization Of... 1. Appiah's philosophies about the increased globalization of the world, or at least the increased access to cultures which often did not have significant interaction, claim that it has the overall potential to be a net positive. His theories have less to do with the actions of sovereign entity and more to do with the behavior of individuals, but he does simultaneously critique what he believes to be unethical cultural practices made by societies and so the actions of the leadership and cultural paradigm of the Revolution will be what is being judged based on the framework of Appiah's philosophy. a. Appiah's assertions have to do with something which he deems to be other than globalization: cosmopolitanism. For Appiah, cosmopolitanism goes beyond mere globalization–"a term that once referred to a marketing strategy, and then came to designate a macroeconomic thesis, and now can seem to encompass everything and nothing" (Appiah xiii)–and even multiculturalism–"another shape shifter, which so often designates the disease which it purports to cure" (Appiah xiii)– representing a grudging coexistence and maintained separation between different cultures. Beyond these insufficient terms and concepts, Appiah proposes cosmopolitanism which was coined by the "Cynics of the 4th century BC" and means "citizen of the universe" (Appiah xiv). As cosmopolitanism is mainly an act undertaken by individuals, a cosmopolitan is someone who places their membership to humanity over the loyalty to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. De Blij's Why Geography Matters: More Than Ever As time passes by, with everything seeming in place, we push aside real life. Activities we like to pretend are not occurring are put on the bottom of the list. War, deadly tsunamis, earthquakes, terrorism, economic crisis, all real life changes which have occurred and are occurring now. People are becoming less knowledgeable than ever when it comes to geography. "Given the accelerating pace of change on our increasingly crowded planet, this may not be surprising– even if it is disturbing," states Harm de Blij in his book "Why Geography Matters: More Than Ever." While De Blij tells us how illiterate we have become to geography, he also explains to readers how American people could benefit from the knowledge of Geography in specific situations. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... After the late Wisconsinan Glaciation, about 1800 years ago, its shift consequently pushed moist and moderate conditions into present day Sahara. Later environmental changes separated African and Egyptian people. This separation meant a lack of transportation between the two, which meant no exchanges. Isolation caused a lack of drinkable water and decreased its productivity. Not only did Climate change impact Africa, but their people faced changes of latitude. Changes of latitude cause lower and higher temperatures, intensifying the humidity, animal life, and agricultural life. What this change in latitude did increase was a misfortune of threat via health wise. "The heat and humidity of Africa's equatorial lowlands generated still another threat to African well–being: a host of diseases ranging from malaria to bilharzia and from yellow fever to sleeping sickness." (De Blij, 298) Environments are what aids insects to survive and transport these diseases, causing fatal death between ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Geography : Description, Geography, And Cultural Aspects... Geography is a science that looks into the description, distribution, and interactions of the physical, biological, and cultural aspects of the world. We study geography because it helps us to better understand our history as well as our current situations. It allows us to see how the world is laid out, however, geography is not just limited to maps. There are many other purposes of geography than just showing us where things are in the world. For example, it tells us about culture in different regions and how people interact with their environment. If you are studying the geography of an area, you are most likely going to find things about human/environment interaction. Human/environment interaction is how people deal with their surroundings. For example, if someone goes to get water from a stream or a well, they are interacting with their environment. Human/environment interaction answers questions such as how people use their environment, why they change it, and what happens when the environment is changed. Another theme of geography you may be studying is movement. Movement is how and why people and things move. Immigrants are people who move into a new country, and emigrants are people who are moving out of a country. An illustration of these two circumstances could be that if someone were to move from England to the United States, they would be an immigrant to the United States but an emigrant of England. These still are not all of the different parts to geography. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. 'Popularity In The Word Vulgar' The main points made by the article is what kind of opportunities does this contemporary cultural phenomena shown to geographers by looking at the pop culture that is present and how technology presented by the pop culture fit within cultural geography. As part of the first question addressed, Kinsley takes the term "vulgar" and see how it fits into cultural geography. Recognizing that the "implication of 'disgust' and 'distaste' in the word 'vulgar'" (Kinsley 793) are what most consider when hearing the word, but that is not the point in case of this situation. That instead of seeing that the word in a negative connotation, but when it comes to looking deeper into this new wave of cultural geography, it should instead be seen as "a useful (if challenging) means" when speaking about cultural geography especially when "popular" has started to take place within cultural geography. Analyzing the notion of "popular" cultural geography, Kinsley talks the different arguments that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In order to learn more or to dig deeper in specifics of any study of cultural geography, Kinsley acknowledges on how technology, especially at the rate and the new advances that have been made, can allow for geographers to delve into these landscapes. Now, cultural geographers are not just that, but instead they are "'multimedia' scholars"(Kinsley 795) who have been defied with the idea of "reading of landscapes as text with watching of, listening to, and touching forms of spatial experience composed as, in and through image, sounds haptics" (Kinsley 795). In terms of cultural geography and how the word popular fits into all it and the progression it making is something that takes account based off of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. The Landscape Lewis Peirce F. Lewis's "Axioms for Reading the Landscape" focuses on how to read and understand landscapes through a set of rules which he calls "axioms." In the "Geographic (or Ecological) Axiom," Lewis (1979, 24) argues that studying a landscape outside its location makes no sense in gaining cultural insight on the landscape. Don Mitchell (2007, 43) in "New Axioms for the Landscape," presents the idea that the shape of the land provides direction to its social life. Carrie Breitbach's (2009) "The Geographies of a More Just Food System: Building Landscapes for Social Reproduction" revolves around the idea of bringing justice to the food system by rectifying landscape and social reproduction as a solution in South Dakota. Lewis's and Mitchell's ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In that regard, South Dakota's social reproduction represents the input that people put (output) into the state's economy. South Dakota's economy relies 38 percent on the beef and cattle industry (Breitbach 2009, 540). Before the opening of Walmart stores, South Dakota's small towns relied on private own butcher shops and cattle farms for their livelihood and overall economy. Once Walmart moved in, their businesses were forced to close because it became too expensive to compete. Clayton Farmen a small town butcher from Groton was also affected by the changes. His business closed and the relationships he had formed with his customers ended. Breitbach writes, "For Clayton Farmen, the restructuring that led to the decline of small butcher shops also meant the end of the personal relationships that sustained his job and gave him the confidence that he was selling quality food" (2009, 543). With the businesses gone and Walmart the main source of economy, the towns' atmosphere transformed from a personal to an impersonal ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. Social And Cultural Geography : Explain How People Make... Essay Two: Social and Cultural Geography: Explain how people make and transform place. Word count: 1363 In the following bodies, I will lay out how place is defined in a sense of how it is related to people, state on how people make places, and propose how persons transform places. Along with these points, I will use texts to support my given answers. Place is a word that can be used in various ways. It could either be used as a verb or noun. For example, it can be a location such as the Wellington Beehive or an action word that indicates the movement of an object to a certain point. The word itself originated from its Greek root "plateia hodos" or broad way which was then translated to the Latin word "platea" meaning open space, alternated to Old French and then to Old English taking the form "place". In geography, place is used to describe an environment where people are able to interact and make sense of. Lester and his associates (2016) infer that place is used to define human interaction "with nature and among themselves; where there are tensions and where there is peace; where people are rich and where they are poor" (p.32). Cresswell (2008) defines place as combination of a location and meaning. Simply put, place is a space that we give meaning to. It is an empty meaningless physical space that one can take and mold it to their liking giving it meaning and filling it with things that truly describes themselves. For instance, homes are places created by people to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. How Culture Influence Geography Geography influences culture in many ways. A civilizations geography determines what kind of god(s) they believe in as well as influences from other cultures. These features provide a stepping stone for cultures that are solely based on geography. For instance in Source C the map depicts the archipelago that is Japan. This displays how Japan relies on nature to grow crops and other substantial food choices. The map shows why the Japanese culture wants to preserve nature. Another representation of this is shown in Source B. The Egyptians relied solely on the Nile for water and plant growth. This is why they devoted their god's to water and nature. This idea is solely based on the geography of Egypt. Another reason for geography to impact culture ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Carl Sauer Research Paper Carl Sauer was an American geographer from the United States who lived from 1889 to 1975. He had a German heritage, being the son of two German immigrants. After attending college at Wesleyan University, he attained his PhD at the University of Chicago. After establishing himself in the world of geography, he became a geography professor at the University of Michigan and then later on at the University of California, Berkeley. He had an extremely decorated career. He was awarded the Honorary Fellowship Award in 1935 and was also awarded the Daly Medal in 1940, both by the American Geographical Society. Unlike many geographers, Sauer focused in his studies on rural areas and landscapes, rather than cities and urban landscapes. To go along ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Relationship Between Place And Music And The Song ' Inglan... The objective of this paper is to examine the relationship between place and music and analyze the song "Inglan is a Bitch" by Linton Kwesi Johnson in terms of place. "Inglan is a Bitch" exemplifies the link between music and place through its lyrics and sound. First I am going to define cultural geography and discuss how culture is linked to place. Then I will explain local music spaces and why music has a strong sense of place. Next I will analyze how "Inglan is a Bitch" relates to place. After, I will finish with an overall conclusion. I will be exploring these topics through the readings of Knox and Marston, Connell and Gibson and finally, Watson, Holyer and Mager supplemented by Lecture notes. According to Knox and Marston, culture produces a shared set of meanings and practices, while geography is the place in which groups shape those meanings and practices and "in the process form an identity" (Knox and Marston 2016, 155). Cultural Geography focuses on the way space, place and landscape shape culture at the same time that culture shapes space, place, and landscape" (Knox and Marston 2016, 155). Cultural geography examines cultural traits, cultural complexes, and cultural regions. (Rutherford 2016). It is a way to understand both landscape and human settlement patterns (Rutherford 2016). In the reading Sounds and Scenes, authors Connell and Gibson suggest that a local music space is a specific place that produces a distinct sound (Connell and Gibson 2003, 90). The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Human Geography: How Human Influence On Antarctica What makes Antarctica unique regarding human geography, is how humans influenced the continent. physical geography is far more significant than human appearance. Antarctica is a cold, frozen, and mostly empty land found at the South Pole of the earth. Antarctica is a cold, frozen, and mostly empty land found at the South Pole of the earth. Humans go there mostly for research and occasional tourism, though it's incredibly inhospitable, especially in the colder months. Due to the harsh environment, it remains the last true wilderness on earth and is protected by an international agreement called the Antarctic Treaty of 1961. In this Treaty, world leaders agreed that everywhere south of 60° south latitude would remain unclaimable by any country. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The country has over 5,000 Russian Orthodox churches. Many are built anew or under repair on parish and local budgets money. Russia religion varies significantly Rather it be a question of as easy opposed to west; Catholicism and Protestantism to Eastern Order; Islam as opposed to Christianity; many were to blame identifying cultural faults across the continent. Russia has been a innovator for many cultural traditions and events, such as humanism which have consequently been spread across internationally. This classical concept influenced the creation of art and literature beyond the continent. What makes Antarctica unique regarding human geography, is how humans influenced the continent. physical geography is far more significant than human appearance. Antarctica is a cold, frozen, and mostly empty land found at the South Pole of the earth. Antarctica is a cold, frozen, and mostly empty land found at the South Pole of the earth. Humans go there mostly for research and occasional tourism, though it's incredibly inhospitable, especially in the colder months. Due to the harsh environment, it remains the last true wilderness on earth and is protected by an international agreement called the Antarctic Treaty of 1961. In this Treaty, world leaders agreed that everywhere south of 60° south latitude would remain unclaimable by any country. The treaty says that it cannot be used in military reasons, or to dispose of radioactive waste – only peaceful ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Impact Of Ethnocentrism On Foreign Areas And Variable... With the globalization of economy, people from diverse social backgrounds closely congregate for negotiation, endeavoring to build free markets which assist everyone to run business with each other faster and easier. Except for language barriers, cultural differences could be considerable aspects to be discussed and deliberated to facilitate cultivating friendly and sustainable relationships. However, a prevalent phenomenon about gauging other cultures with caliber of their own inclination named ethnocentrism may be neglected, bringing many negative influences to international collaboration. In the real world, some cases have illuminated that ignorance of ethnocentrism could result in failure in commerce, and sociologists initiated to pay attention to this theme. To clarify their connections and continue the previous researches, this study investigates disparate performances of companies in domestic and foreign areas and variable responses of economies at the same time. As for negative consequences caused by ethnocentrism, on the one hand, it impacts overseas exploration of corporations and causes trade conflicts. On the other hand, it leads to ineffective resource allocation and decelerates economic development of emerging countries. Ethnocentrism impacts overseas exploration of corporations. In the past decade, enterprises all around the world feel increasingly unsaturated with triumphs in local districts and attempt to explore external business. The executives of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Summary Of Harm De Blij's Why Geography Matters Harm de Blij's book, Why Geography Matters poses a central theme, which I have heard discussed multiple times. Blij argues that the American public is the most geographically illiterate society in the world. Blij blames this decline with the poorly formulated curricula in the American school systems, which ultimately originates from Washington D.C. and the people that run this country. If I had never seen this central theme in action in a classroom I would have been dumbfounded. In one short paragraph Blij summarized how America's illiteracy began, which this then becomes the central theme of his book that relates to the educational field. Blij writes that professional educators took control of the system and combined the subjects of history, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... As every day passes China grows stronger in every aspect and eventually they will be knocking on America's doorstep in each of those categories. Economically, China is closing rapidly, but even the sleeping giant as Napoleon Bonaparte called it, has its limits. To be blunt, China is resource hungry and who knows what their country will do next. With the level of nationalism that their people have, China could go in multiple directions. For example, let us look at both China attempting to exert control over the South China Sea and also with the Senkaku Islands. Both of these areas are becoming more and more hostile, which ultimately could lead to deadly military engagements. With that being said, Blij also proposes an argument that I have been pondering for a while and that is a potential cold war between the U.S.A. and China. On the outside it seems as if there is a potential collision course to that conclusion. However, Blij does offer an interesting solution to this possibility and it is one that I believe should be the strongest takeaway. Blij suggests that trade, scientific, cultural and educational links and exchanges can be the solution to this issue. After all, China is responsible for many of the essential aspects to our life. Therefore, the least we as Americans can do is learn the various geographical aspects that encircle ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. Social And Cultural Geography Research Choose two journal articles* and consider what these articles tell us about: a) the socially constructed, spatially contingent and performative aspects of social identities and b) the practice of 'doing ' social and cultural geography research. Social and cultural geography is an area of study that has become increasingly popular within Geography. With the expansion of multi–cultural societies and the increased diversification of cultures in addition to cultural practice, globally research into social and cultural geographies has boomed. These two diverse fields have risen in popularity among geographers and academics; meaning there is a significant amount of research and academic papers on this broad area of study. The fact is since the evolution of post–structuralist ideas in the mid 20th century, in addition to postcolonial, and feminist study around the 1990s. A shift from an emphasis on identity to difference in geographical literature has become apparent. Geographers have since engaged more frequently with gender, sexuality, 'race', and class differences, by investigating how they are constituted in relation to peoples and places. This has brought about vast levels of research casing all social identities. However for the purpose of this essay, I will be focusing on the social identities of Gender and Race as both social and cultural attitudes in these areas have transformed immensely in the last century. As previously mentioned there is a vast amount of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Five Themes Of Geography Erin Paradis Mrs. Zemetres World Geography Five Themes Essay 9 January 2015 Imagine that you need to tell a friend how to get from their house to the grocery store. How would you give the directions? Would you give steps for the friend to follow? Or would you tell them that the grocery store is next to the local convenience store? Describing a location and giving directions area examples of using the five themes of geography in your daily life. In the same way we use the five themes of geography throughout the day, geographers use the five themes in their researching. Location is used by geographers to describe either the absolute or relative location of a place. The absolute location is the location on a map latitude and longitude, or as we use it, a street address. Finding absolute location is the starting point for geographic research. Relative locations are described by landmarks or the distance from one place to another. Location would be used by a geographer to express where things are. Place is used by geographers to describe physical or human characteristics of an area. Physical characteristics are landforms, bodies of water, vegetation, soils, and climate types. Human characteristics of a place come from human ideas and actions. Human characteristics include ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Studying human environmental interaction helps geographers learn how people depend, modify, and adapt to their environments. "Geographers recognize that human beings play a very important role in shaping and modifying the natural environment (Geo Hunter)." Some effects of humans interacting with their environment are useful and good for the environment, but there are also some harmful effects of human environmental interaction. Some of the things that humans to do harm their environment consist of pollution or deforestation. People and their environments impact each other ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32. Cultural Geography Of Toronto Essay Toronto is a place in cultural imagination that occupies a historical locale with its time and space of the modern geography. Cultural geography of place presents a novel vision of Toronto as a social and a symbolic constitutive process of historical change, in which nature is a shaping force of our mind as people. The present album comprises a series of paintings by Lyudmyla (Mila) Shugurova, in which landscapes have characters, voices, stories that take the habitats into an extraordinary voyage of time as space. From the beginning of times, the place has been forming with three receding glacial successions and their beautiful ornaments of rocks, limestone, and basalt. Glacial movements have left an excellent bed with nutritious deposits and ice ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Lawrence, Kaniatarowanenneh. Lake Ontario is well outlined by the touching presence of the last glaciation, and is indeed "a shining water" as its name suggests in Wyandot, the language of the Huron. During colonialism, Toronto was formed as the boundary place with a flourishing economy and a transitory social corridor of trade, development and settlement. Transition marks a threshold that is constantly making the cultural topology of its diverse environments as landscapes, the social scenes amidst the natural time of change. In this album, the cultural landscapes are voyagers themselves, reveries for tourism as the forgotten sense for belonging and its musing longing. As the changing space, it represents one of the best habitats for a migrating society through which people may see better their true belonging to cosmos outside the rigid limits and borders of the political and social fragmentation. In the present collection, we look at Toronto as the living locale through the ethics of history that makes our choices social in the realms of the cultural habitats. Shaping places, nature speaks to us ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Geography And The World Of Geography Before starting this course, I had a preconceived notion that I would learn about geographical features and memorize places all around the world. I did not expect to learn about topics such as globalization, political geography, or industries and services. I was surprised at what all we learned in such a short period of time. I gained a new prospective and information about the world around me. Throughout the semester, my understanding and knowledge about geography has drastically changed from before this course. This course has made me think about topics and things that I have never reflected upon. I have had this standard premonition of geography as just places or maps, but there is so much more. I enjoyed learning about the different races, history of gender equality, and religions of the world the most. Geography has influenced my political, social, and economic views of the world. One of the topics in this course, geographies of languages, was one that interested me in learning more. One of the reasons that it interested me was because I am a Spanish major and I love learning new languages and cultures of the world. Languages are one of the most complex, yet interesting social aspects of life. Without languages, we would have no way to communicate, therefore we would not be a social society whatsoever. There were multiple facts about the languages of the world I did not know about. One of them were the types of languages: body language, tactile/touch language, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. Guns Germs And Steel Essay Guns, Germs, and Steel is a well written book by James Diamond exemplifying the true meaning of human geography. One of the essentials to fully understand geography is to know about human geography, sometimes also known as cultural geography. Human geography or cultural geography, is the study of why people are where they are. Human geography is also the relationship of cultures around the world and how they relate to their origin. Throughout the book, Diamond examines the conflict of the book: why are some societies more advanced than other societies? While Diamond was researching bird evolution in New Guinea in the year of 1972, he met Yali, a native of the island. Yali asked a very important question, "Why is it that you white ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The majority of Indians knew what was edible and what was not, but they did not use that to their advantage. In one case, Highlanders, people from the highlands of New Guinea, would bring a supply of food for their trips. But, if the trip went longer than expected, or they ate more food than intended on one day, they would slowly suffer and eventually die because they would not eat food they did not pack. On the other hand, Indians did have knowledge in domestication. They domesticated small animals that "yielded food, clothing, or warmth. But none of them pulled plows or wagons." A downside to having some of the domesticated animals was disease. Of having domestic animals, that was the worst thing the animals did to the native people. Today, people are immune to most of the diseases spread by animals in the centuries before us because bodies today are different then they were a few hundred years ago. Another thing the Indians were good at was an organized system of people. The Indians created groups of people called bands (smallest), tribes, chiefdoms, and states (largest). Of all of those, only the two biggest, chiefdoms and states had a monopoly. Both of those monopolies were well run. Indians were technologically behind, but they mostly made good out of what they had. James Diamond put in lots of time and effort to complete his book, Guns, Germs, and Steel. Diamond looked through, many books, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Ap Human Geography Research Paper "Geography has made us neighbors. History has made us friends. Economics has made us partners, and necessity has made us allies. Those whom God has so joined together, let no man put asunder." ~(John F. Kennedy) Geography has impacted countries and regions dissimilarly throughout the duration of history. Geography influences the historical and social development of a country or region. These features can either cause an area to be hindered or prosperous in its development. Likewise, the Tigris and Euphrates rivers of Mesopotamia were essential because it provided fertile soil for crops, trade, transport and the necessities to food sources. Also, the mountainous terrain of Greece caused the country to have independent city– states. The mountains ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The geography of Greece prompted the distinguishment of the independent city–states. This altered the political development of Greece because the different states had separate forms of government. For example, the state of Athens had a direct form of democracy as a government. Whereas, Sparta was an isolated military state. The mountains also posed as natural barriers for these states, unlike the mountains of Italy which were low and rugged and caused the people to unite. The mountains also obstructed the states of Greece to be culturally diffused. Although they practiced similar religious beliefs, Greeks were prevented from trading with each other. The mountains helped some states as a barrier from invasions. The terrain also assisted the independent Pious to practice their own culture. Sparta is one of these independent culture states. The state prevented trading and other "outside" communication in order to rid of cultural diffusion. The mountains helped them to begin their own particular society and to be unaffected by other external ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Carl Sauer 's Notion Of A Cultural Landscape And Why Is It... Terrence McLaughlin Landscapes, Place and People Dr. Harriot Beazley 28 August 2015 What is Carl Sauer's notion of a cultural landscape and why is it useful for understanding the world? Carl Sauer, one of the foremost geography scholars of the 20th century theorized that the defining characteristics of a "cultural landscape" differed from those of his predecessors. His findings, while contradictory to some of the most respected academics of his time, helped create an entirely new way of thinking within the discipline (Sauer 1925). However, the influence of Sauer's work extended well beyond the confines of any one discipline. He helped establish landscape studies in cultural geography and strongly advocated for a "responsible stewardship of the sustaining earth." Additionally, he supplied an esthetic rationale and a historical perspective to the environmental movement. His theory denounced the previously supported theory of environmental determinism, and suggested that cultural landscapes are shaped by humans, as well as many other cultural aspects. In a more complex sense Sauer proposed that cultural landscapes are the product of the human population, and that the actions of humans and define the environment in which we all live. In his own words, Sauer states that "Culture is the agent, the natural area is the medium. The cultural landscape the result." Since Sauer first introduced his theory of cultural landscapes in 1925, much has changed in the way our society thinks ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Cultural Geography Course Analysis One of the classes I think I've grown in is Cultural Geography because I am paying more attention and I did very good on the final. Another class I think I've grown in is English because I pay more attention and I understand the work better. The Habit of Heart and Mind I think I've improved most on is putting more effort in my work and thinking more outside of the box. I have gotten better at the habit of responsibility by finishing everything on time and trying my very best, effort continues to be a struggle for me because when I don't get something I don't put much effort because I give up easily. I am most proud that I have been trying my best because usually I just give up and try not to accomplish what I want. If I could go back and do something differently I would stay focus since the beginning and not slip because right now my grades are ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The most important thing I´ve learned so far is to not let your friends distract you and always try your very best. Semester 2 I want to do very good and stay very focus because I been slipping and not been focusing in my work lately. I want to actually try and be a good student like in the beginning of school year, in the beginning of school year I was doing really good I was really surprised because I had a 4.00 and that was my first time getting a high GPA cause the highest I´ve gotten is a 3.17 and I was really happy to see that I was actually starting off good but then I slipped and ended up with a low GPA and now I want to try my best to get it up to at least a 3.00. But one thing I really like about myself is that no matter what I always keep trying my best because I actually want to get somewhere in life and I don´t want to keep on slipping like I always do I just wanna stay on track and be a good student like my dad always wanted me to be. That´s why I try my best just for him because I wanna see him happy and I want him to be very proud of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Cultural Geography: Habit Of Heart And Mind One of the classes I think I've grown in is Cultural Geography because I was not doing that well in that class. My grade in that class was a F. But, at the end of the Semester I was doing better than the beginning and I brought my grades up to a passing grade. Another class I think I've grown in is English because in the beginning I was not passing the class but at the middle of the Semester I was doing better. At the end of Semester I was passing the class. The Habit of Heart and Mind I think I've improved most on is that I do my homework and studying for a test. That helps me to do better at my test and have a good grade. The Habit of Heart and Mind I am using more now is doing my homework every single day. I have gotten better at the habit ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. Landscape Of Africville Analysis Through exploring everyday life, geography is an essential discipline that is a central part of our understandings of the world around us. An important part of geography deals with the relationship between human activity and the physical aspects of where this activity takes place (Bryan, 1958). It is important to then consider that these physical aspects can often be viewed as landscapes within our society. The concept of landscape plays an important part within geography and this is a term that has been associated with a way of seeing the natural world (Cosgrove, 1984). From a geographical perspective, it is a concept embedded with visual aspects and appearance but also composed of structure and functions. Although landscapes assist individuals ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Examining Sherene Razack's (2002) term, "a white settler society", we are able to gain an understanding that the province of Nova Scotia took part in being a white settler society in relation to the Africville community. According to Razack (2002), aspects of a white settler society take place when there is a racial hierarchy present and spaces are organized to maintain unequal social relations. The landscape of this community was structured in this way because the community was predominately of black individuals and therefore the inhabitants were not regarded as being an important part of the city. This can be demonstrated through the ways in which the community of Africville was treated by the government of Nova Scotia. For instance, during the time that Africville was present, this community was denied of essential services in which Nelson (2000) explains, "requests for water lines and sewerage which would bring sanitation and quality of life closer to the standards for the rest of the city were refused. Police and fire protection and garbage collection on par with such services received by the rest of Halifax were denied. Living conditions were ironically described by city officials as intolerable and unsanitary" (p. 166). Thus, the landscape of Africville was associated with being regarded as a "slum" within the society of Nova Scotia. A slum is referred to as "filthy, foul smelling, wretched, rancorous, uncultivated and lacking care" (Nelson, 2000, p. 168). What is important to take into consideration however, is that the community of Africville was racialized against which resulted in the landscape being viewed as a slum. In addition, the government not only denied the community access to basic necessities needed in order to maintain a healthy environment, but continued to further racialize this community by placing a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...