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Showing 1 to 15 of 52 results Save | Export
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Felicitas Kuebler; Tobias Schopper – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2023
The focus of this paper is the affective dimension of far-right discourses which we consider challenges for teaching. The rise of the far-right in many parts of the world has led to a growing body of work in the social sciences. However, as the topic has become the subject of academic scrutiny its controversial nature also demands a debate on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Course Content, Political Attitudes, Ideology
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Henderson, Deborah – Geographical Education, 2020
Three decades ago, Stephen Kemmis (1990) argued that curricula provide insights into how nations and states interpret themselves and how they want to be interpreted. He also noted that 'debates about curriculum reveal fundamental concerns, uncertainties and tensions which preoccupy nations and states as they struggle to adapt to changing…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Interdisciplinary Approach, Barriers, Geography Instruction
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Morris, Nina J.; Christie, Hazel; Barber, Jacob – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2019
There is a widespread debate in higher education about how best to support students in becoming more active and engaged learners. Geographers have occupied a central position in these debates having long been concerned with understanding and creating teaching spaces that encourage active and experiential learning. Recent pedagogical innovations…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Web Sites, Undergraduate Students, Individualized Instruction
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Ye, Chao; Wu, Jinye – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2018
This paper introduces a new teaching method, poetry, into the geography classroom, accompanied by an out-of-class discussion on a blog, and finds that its effects are rather different from those of traditional teaching methods, as it allows new perspectives on instructional content related to migrant workers' lives and identities in China. The…
Descriptors: Poetry, Teaching Methods, Migrant Workers, Self Concept
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Kress, Tricia M.; Lake, Robert – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2018
Through a co/auto/ethnographic approach informed by a theoretical bricolage of critical pedagogy, place-based education, science education, human geography, feminism, and indigenous ways of knowing, the authors demonstrate the power of place in and as pedagogy. Using rich personal narratives, they reclaim their stories as an urban island-dweller…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Critical Theory, Teaching Methods, Science Education
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Moseley, William G.; Watson, Nancy H. – Journal of Geography, 2016
''Agriculture, Food, and Rural Land Use" constitutes a major part of the AP Human Geography course outline. This article explores challenging topics to teach, emerging research trends in agricultural geography, and sample teaching approaches for concretizing abstract topics. It addresses content identified as "essential knowledge"…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Human Geography, Advanced Placement Programs, Secondary Education
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Wasserman, Pamela – Social Education, 2011
The study of world population integrates so many themes and disciplines in the social studies because it encompasses all of human history--the rise of agriculture and civilizations, scientific progress, territorial conflicts, changing gender roles and more. It is also at the heart of human geography and how people came to dominate and alter the…
Descriptors: Population Education, Human Geography, Social Studies, Population Trends
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Baerenholdt, Jorgen Ole; Gregson, Nicky; Everts, Jonathan; Granas, Brynhild; Healey, Ruth L. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2010
How can we find ways of training PhD students in academic practices, while reflexively analysing how academic practices are performed? The paper's answer to this question is based on evaluations from a British-Nordic master class. The paper discusses how master classes can be used to train the discursive skills required for academic discussion,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Graduate Students, Doctoral Programs, Academic Discourse
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Summerby-Murray, Robert – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2010
Narrative inquiry is an innovative means of encouraging students to internalize concepts, reflect on experiences or create applications for theoretical ideas. The use of first-person creative writing in a second-year cultural geography course prompted initial scepticism from students but eventually highlighted their constructivist engagement with…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Creative Writing, Human Geography, Moral Issues
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Norton, William – Journal of Geography, 1984
Interpretations of culture and land relationships are considered. A more limited definition of culture necessitates a more restricted course content for cultural geography. (RM)
Descriptors: Course Content, Culture, Definitions, Geography Instruction
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Walker, Richard – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2006
Teaching economic geography is not a matter of replicating textbook models. It requires engagement with the ever-changing global economy, which often puts the lie to existing theory. It demands that the teacher break down the economy into its major parts, in a way that students can grasp. This does not mean abandoning theory; on the contrary, it…
Descriptors: Human Geography, Geography Instruction, Course Content, Undergraduate Study
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Hohenemser, Christoph – Environment, 1973
The roots of new physics courses are considered and doubts raised about them particularly when they are addressed to problems of society. A new, career-oriented undergraduate major on technology and man is then suggested. To illustrate its content, a course on urban transportation is described in detail. (BL)
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Development, Environmental Education, Higher Education
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Powell, William E. – Journal of Geography, 1986
At many colleges and universities, an opportunity exists for geographers to offer and popularize an interesting course that includes as its central theme geographical, geological, and ecological hazards and disaster. The course is outlined and described, and instructional materials are listed. (RM)
Descriptors: Course Content, Course Descriptions, Geography Instruction, Hazardous Materials
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Hantula, James – Journal of Geography, 1975
An analogy in the form of an analogue to our culture is useful as a tool for selection of pertinent content and skills, and it is appropriate as a curriculum tool when complemented by the axioms of education. (Author/ND)
Descriptors: Course Content, Cultural Context, Curriculum Development, Educational Principles
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Golledge, Reginald G. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 1985
Discusses how analytical behavioral geography can be taught at all levels of education. Fundamental concepts and principles of behavioral geography are examined including course content, models of man, models of the environment, perception and cognition, information diffusion and adoption, space preferences, and time-path analysis. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Concept Teaching, Course Content, Elementary Secondary Education, Fundamental Concepts
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