See on Scoop.it – Social Media Classroom
92 years ago today, women gained the right to vote in the United States. Here is a link to the documents that made this happen .
See on www.archives.gov
See on Scoop.it – Social Media Classroom
92 years ago today, women gained the right to vote in the United States. Here is a link to the documents that made this happen .
See on www.archives.gov
See on Scoop.it – Social Media Classroom
This Public Service Announcement (PSA) was produced in 1995 by the 5th grade students at Ray Bjork school in Helena Montana. The production equipment was mad…
This video pretty accurately describes how we use the internet today, even down to the obsession with cat-related content.
See on www.youtube.com
While touring Kevin Babola’s art studio yesterday, I found this thought-provoking piece entitled ‘Political Landscapes.’ I greatly enjoyed my conversation with the artist about the political, economic and urban visions that went into this painting. The conceptual idea behind this painting started when the artist was exploring the neighborhoods of New Bedford, MA and noticed how a sense of place can change very quickly. I dare say most cities have areas similar to the one portrayed here where the socioeconomic character changes very abruptly. While physically it might be very easy to cross from the side of the street with tenements to the neighborhood with single family homes, making that transition permanent is incredibly difficult.
Questions to ponder: what leads to cities having abrupt changes in the urban fabric? What might this chasm represent to people on either side of the divide? How does this impact the neighborhood institutions (schools, local government, etc.)? Please visit the artist’s webpage.
See on Scoop.it – Geography Education See on www.kbolaillustration.com
USGS Earthquake Hazards Program, responsible for monitoring, reporting, and researching earthquakes and earthquake hazards…
This map represents the 1079 earthquakes with magnitudes higher than 2.5 that have occured in the last 30 days. You can customize the map to display different data at any scale. There is detailed information about each earthquake in this great dataset.
See on Scoop.it – Geography Education See on earthquake.usgs.gov
This site “Map of Strange” is dedicated to showing strange things that can be seen in Google Maps. Displayed here is a beach that I loved to go to growing up in San Diego. Coronado is written in large stones on this part of the beach right next to the red roof of the famous Hotel Del Corondo.
See on Scoop.it – Geography Education See on www.mapofstrange.com
See on Scoop.it – Geography Education
“With the help of satellite images fifth and sixth grade students at Mr. Tim Blum’s geography class at the University of Wyoming Lab School got a birds-eye view of how humans have impacted or modified their environments. Images acquired by satellites decades apart showed cleared forests, irrigated crop fields in the middle of the deserts, altered landscapes (new roads and water bodies), and urban growth.”
SD: Geospatial technologies can sound daunting for teachers that don’t feel that they are specialists. Yet there are simple ways to make sophisticated technologies very relevant to just about any grade level as this article demonstrates.
See on blog.americaview.org
See on www.youtube.com See on Scoop.it – Geography Education
The 1980 Mount St. Helens eruption was one of the most significant natural disasters in the U.S. in the past half-century. Landsat captured the extent of, and recovery from, the destruction.
The accompanying satellite images (also compiled in a video to show the temporal changes) demonstrate one way that remote sensing images can help us better understand the spatial patterns in the biosphere.
See on Scoop.it – Geography Education See on www.nasa.gov
See on Scoop.it – Geography Education
There are plenty of regional biases about other places. This map was generated by Google autocomplete. If you Google, “Why is Rhode Island so….” if will automatically suggest some responses. This was done for all the states and these autoresponses are quite revealing (and often humorous).
See on blog.noupsi.de