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Dorschner, Donald L.; Marten, Robert O. – Journal of Geography, 1990
Analyzes the establishment, expansion, and contraction of geography departments at the college and university level beginning in the late 1800s and concluding with the present decade. Reports that in the 1980s the total number of geography departments in the United States decreased for the first time. (DB)
Descriptors: Colleges, Departments, Educational History, Educational Research
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Gibson-Graham, J. K. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 1999
Argues that much teaching and research in economic geography affirms, or fails to question, the existence of a global, national, or local capitalist economy. Uses queer theory to open a space of difference, and suggests ways of introducing students to a differentiated economic landscape, offering possibilities beyond the capitalist norm. (DSK)
Descriptors: Capitalism, Economic Factors, Geography Instruction, Higher Education
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Elder, Glen S. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 1999
Drawing on contributions of queer theory, rethinks positionality, social identity, and real and imagined boundaries. Summarizes recent debates in queer theory about the permeability of borders, and reveals how these ideas can inform geographical imagination. Concludes that debates about borders in queer theory can inform both geographical…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Geographic Concepts, Geography Instruction, Human Geography
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Del Casino Jr, Vincent – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2004
Authors of world regional geography textbooks have recently become more interested in the broader theoretical changes that have emerged in human geography. Relying on feminist and other critical perspectives, concepts such as space, place and scale are being re-imagined in this 'new world regional geography'. This paper intervenes on behalf of a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Textbooks, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Human Geography
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Mains, Susan P. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2004
Undergraduate geography courses provide a significant entry way into representing and challenging dominant images of places and identities. Teaching geography in the Caribbean raises significant issues in terms of providing materials that explore representations of places and topics that are grounded in the region, while also moving beyond…
Descriptors: Human Geography, Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Geography Instruction
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Fahrer, Chuck; Harris, Dan – Journal of Geography, 2004
This article introduces the word "LAMPPOST" as a mnemonic device to aid in the instruction of climate variables. It provides instructors with a framework for discussing climate patterns that is based on eight variables: latitude, altitude, maritime influence and continentality, pressure systems, prevailing winds, ocean currents, storms, and…
Descriptors: Physical Geography, Mnemonics, Human Geography, Climate
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Reed, Philip A.; Ritz, John – Technology Teacher, 2004
Geospatial technology refers to a system that is used to acquire, store, analyze, and output data in two or three dimensions. This data is referenced to the earth by some type of coordinate system, such as a map projection. Geospatial systems include thematic mapping, the Global Positioning System (GPS), remote sensing (RS), telemetry, and…
Descriptors: Geography, Information Technology, Cartography, Information Systems
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Spencer, Christopher – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2005
This is part of a campaign to encourage educational researchers, geographers in particular, to spread their literature searches beyond their immediate subject area. The question of place attachment and identity is reviewed through the psychologistal literature. The hypothesis is offered and supported, that place, in a geographical sense is also…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Psychologists, Geography, Educational Researchers
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Dowler, Lorraine – Journal of Geography, 2002
This paper examines how to incorporate a feminist pedagogy into teaching World Regional Geography in order to empower students to seek social change. This paper also addresses the fragile relationships that develop in the feminist classroom, such as challenging students' inherent prejudices in a safe and comfortable setting.
Descriptors: Feminism, Geography, Social Change, Teaching Methods
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Cooper, Catherine W. – Journal of Geography, 2002
This map contest is an exercise in geographic education for fourth grade students. It is sponsored by a grassroots, nonprofit environmental organization to raise the awareness and appreciation of students to the special features of their home region. The maps illustrate some aspect of the living resources or history of the region. As a case study…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Publicity, Geography, Map Skills
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Kimerling, A. Jon – Journal of Geography, 2002
Islam is an important topic in human and regional geography instruction, and major textbooks include maps showing Islam's core and rapid expansion diffusion, along with the number of pilgrims to Mecca from different countries. Determining the qibla, the sacred direction for daily prayer, and the distance to Mecca are additional topics that link…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Textbooks, Human Geography, Islam
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Murphy, James T. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2006
This essay examines how undergraduate economic geography courses in Anglo-American institutions traditionally frame economic activities in developing regions and asserts that mainstream approaches have devalued the complexity and diversity of economic geographies in the Global South. Focusing on developmentalism as a commonly used heuristic frame,…
Descriptors: Human Geography, Developing Nations, Geography Instruction, Undergraduate Study
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Silvern, Steven E. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
In this article the author provides a case study of how differing geographical imaginations are at the center of state-tribal relations in the United States. Specifically, he focuses on the political conflict between the state of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin Ojibwe over the continuing existence and exercise of Ojibwe off-reservation hunting,…
Descriptors: Treaties, American Indians, Conflict, Court Litigation
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Sonmez, Abdulkerim – Rural Sociology, 2008
This paper addresses two interrelated issues that have assumed major political significance in the handling of the Kurdish question in Turkey. The first is the impact of violence and resulting internal displacement in Eastern and Southeastern Turkey on rural-agrarian change. The second concerns the implications of the structural change and social…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Change, Human Geography, Population Trends
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Porter, Jess – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2008
This article will demonstrate an approach for discovering and assessing local landscape change through the use of remotely sensed images. A brief introduction to remotely sensed imagery is followed by a discussion of relevant ways to introduce this technology into the college science classroom. The Map Detective activity demonstrates the…
Descriptors: College Science, Science Instruction, Historic Sites, Geography
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