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Stillman, Peter R.; Long, Cathryn J. – Intercom, 1976
Considers some environmental changes that would occur from one person living on a virgin piece of land and calls attention to information needed by students from grades 7 through 12 to become involved in a wilderness simulation activity. Homework assignments, discussion questions, follow-up activities and folk art projects are described.…
Descriptors: Activity Units, Class Activities, Environmental Education, Folk Culture
Peer reviewedWalker, G. T. – Geographical Education, 1976
Discusses the role of geography in achieving the objectives of environmental education, including environmental awareness, concern, and commitment. Strategies are suggested for teaching about environmental limits, links, complexity, and patterns. For journal availability, see SO 505 721. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education, Environmental Education, Geographic Concepts
Peer reviewedAndrews, Alice C. – Journal of Geography, 1977
Describes uses of analogies in the college or high school geography classroom. For example, logically stated analogies of locational relationships can be used as test items or starting points for lectures. Analogous relationships between cultures can serve as subjects for research papers. (AV)
Descriptors: Cultural Interrelationships, Geographic Concepts, Geography Instruction, Higher Education
Peer reviewedHunt, Nancy P.; Allen, Elizabeth G. – Social Studies, 1988
Describes how database software was used for fifth graders' research and investigation about the 50 states. Provides suggestions for using a database in the classroom. Includes follow-up activities and lists a variety of additional topics that may be explored. (GEA)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Computer Uses in Education, Databases, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedKnight, David B. – Journal of Geography, 1987
This paper explores how the people of Owen Sound, Ontario viewed the various regions of their city. Presents maps showing perceptions of positive and negative regions. Includes examples of citizens' characterizations of these regions, showing social attitudes and values. (JDH)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Human Geography, Social Attitudes
Peer reviewedJohnston, R. J. – Journal of Geography, 1987
Describes the main findings of British urban social geographers. Concludes that though social geographers have adequately described residential areas using "objective data," they still have not conveyed much of what it is like for people to live in urban areas. Includes a 68-item bibliography. (JDH)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Human Geography, Social Attitudes
Peer reviewedDobyns, Henry F. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1984
Illustrates how the Northern Panya People were the key link in a Pacific Southwest trade route extending from the Pacific Ocean to the Colorado River, where it forked northeast--toward the Hopi Pueblos--and southeast--toward the Pima People. Conceptualizes an established network of pre-Contact trade centers in North America. (JHZ)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, American Indian History, American Indians, Ancient History
Peer reviewedEysberg, Cees D. – Journal of Geography, 1985
A distance perception survey was used to get college students enrolled in a human geography course involved and interested in the topic of perception. Students were asked to arrange 12 European capitals in sequence according to their distance from Amsterdam. Survey results are presented. (RM)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Distance, Geographic Location, Geography Instruction
Peer reviewedTroughton, Michael J. – Journal of Geography, 1985
Agricultural industrialization is the adoption by an agricultural system of an industrial mode in its orientation and operation. Similarities and distinctions between agricultural industrialization in Canada and in the United States are examined. (RM)
Descriptors: Agricultural Production, Agricultural Trends, Agriculture, Capitalism
Peer reviewedMarburg, Sandra Lin – Environmental Review, 1984
Analyzes the analogy of associating men with culture and women with nature as a model of the sexes that became dominant in the nineteenth century as part of broader theories of society in American social science, especially cultural anthropology and human geography. Suggests further studies based on female-oriented typologies. (BC)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Cultural Differences, Environmental Education, Females
Peer reviewedParson, Helen E. – Journal of Geography, 1984
To give students an understanding of how resource management techniques and society's perception of resources have changed, a project which compared a present-day classification of the agricultural land quality of McNab Township in Eastern Ontario (Canada) with nineteenth-century ideas about the land quality of the same area is described. (RM)
Descriptors: Agriculture, Geography Instruction, Higher Education, Human Geography
Peer reviewedLehr, John C. – History and Social Science Teacher, 1984
Music is a geographical and a temporal phenomenon which pervades every society. How music can be used to teach basic geographical concepts, to reflect the central themes of North American geography, and to explain the relationship between art forms and the tastes of a culture is discussed.
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Elementary Secondary Education, Geographic Concepts, Geography Instruction
Fuller, Buckminster – UCLA Educator, 1976
Buckminster Fuller looks at the world before 5,000,000 B.C., in 1900, in 1975 and in 2000 A.D. (RW)
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Global Approach, Human Dignity, Human Factors Engineering
Peer reviewedSocial Education, 1976
Presents classroom materials developed by the Population Reference Bureau for use by teachers and students in exploring population trends, urban development, immigration patterns, demographic shifts, and relationship of human beings to their environments. Included are graphs, charts, tables, and maps. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Developed Nations, Developing Nations, Human Geography, Instructional Materials
Peer reviewedSolomon, Les – Journal of Geography, 1976
This paper illustrates a method by which geography students can experience a process of inquiry and problem-solving by using data banks as a resource. Examples are given of open-ended and structured classroom utilization of a data bank for students to study the socioeconomic structure of Wichita, Kansas. (Author/AV)
Descriptors: Databases, Elementary Secondary Education, Geography Instruction, Human Geography


