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GEOGRAPHY EDUCATION

Supporting geography educators everywhere with current digital resources.

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11 Guerrilla Street Art Greats

When guerrilla-geographer Daniel Raven-Ellison travels, he always keep his eyes peeled for unexpected works of art that creatively subvert culture, rules, and politics and force us to see…

Not all cultural landscapes are officially sanctioned by city planners or government officials.  These landscapes of resistance are often poignant critiques on society and represent the mulitplicity of voices within places.  There isn’t one “Geography” with a capital G of a given place, but many geographies.  Many people and demographic groups interact and use the same place in distinct ways and the meaning of that place is socially mediated within the cultural landscape.   

Tags: art, landscape, culture, place, unit 3 culture.

See on intelligenttravel.nationalgeographic.com

The League of Dangerous Mapmakers

TS: The creation of a new congressional district, or the loss of an old one, affects every district around it, necessitating new maps. Even states not adding or losing congressional representatives need new district maps that reflect the population shifts within their borders, so that residents are equally repre­sented no matter where they live. This ritual carving and paring of the United States into 435 sovereign units, known as redistricting, was intended by the Framers solely to keep democracy’s electoral scales balanced. Instead, redistricting today has become the most insidious practice in American politics—a way, as the opportunistic machinations following the 2010 census make evident, for our elected leaders to entrench themselves in 435 impregnable garrisons from which they can maintain political power while avoiding demographic realities.

Tags: political, gerrymandering, mapping, unit 4 political.

See on www.theatlantic.com

“Million” Cities

From TD-architects Theo Deutinger Rotterdam.

 

Rome was the first city with one million residents, with that occuring in 5 BC.  Over a thousand years later, London and Beijing joined that group as industrialization became the impetus for wide-scale urbanization.  Today we are seeing an explosion of “million cities” throughout the world. 


Tags: urban, megacities, unit 7 cities.



See on td-architects.eu

5 Ideas That Are Changing the World: The Case For Optimism

From technology to equality, five ways the world is getting better all the time…

This article by former President of the United States, Bill Clinton, outlines numerous ways that globalization can improve world, especially in developing regions.  He uses examples from around the world and includes numerous geographic themes.

  1. Technology-Phones mean freedom
  2. Health-Healthy communities prosper
  3. Economy-Green energy equals good business
  4. Equality-Women rule
  5. Justice-The fight for the future is now

Tags: technology, medical, economic, gender, class, globalization, development, worldwide.

See on www.time.com

How future urban sprawl maps out

Projections of urban growth indicate areas where biodiversity is at high risk.

The AAG Smart Brief is a fantastic source of geographic news.  This is what they said about this article:  “Areas such as tropical Africa and eastern China are expected to be hot spots of urbanization during the next several years, according to researchers, who used satellite imagery and other data to project future urban expansion through 2030. ‘We’re not forecasting population, we’re forecasting the expansion of urban space,’ said Yale University geographer Karen Seto. Their efforts could be used to assist conservation initiatives, Seto noted.”

Tags: AAG, urban, sprawl, land use, urban ecology, biogeography, unit 7 cities, environment.

See on www.nature.com

The True Size Of Africa

This is another old classic image that I might have shared earlier but it merits repeating. As Salvatore Natoli (a leader in geography education) once said, “In our society we unconsciously equate size with importance and even power.” This is one reason why many people have underestimated the true size of Africa relative to places that they view as more important or more powerful.

 

Tags: mapping, Africa, perspective, images.

See on www.informationisbeautiful.net

The Real World at Night

Earlier I have posted the classic image of “Earth Lights at Night,” and discussed the classroom uses of the image.  This cartogram helps take that analysis one step further.  This cartogram helps students to visualize the magnitude of population (with the cartogram adjusting area for population) and then to see the patterns of energy use, global consumption and urbanization with in a new light. 

Tags: remote sensing, worldwide, consumption, poverty, population, spatial, political, regions.

See on www.viewsoftheworld.net

Tiny Capital


Created by Eirik Evjen.  The production of this video was made out of 76 940 single photos.

“Norway has recently reached 5 million inhabitants and the capital is growing rapidly. The city scene in Oslo is steadily thickening with taller buildings, more people and the never-ending construction sites. Being by far the most populated city in Norway with 613 000 inhabitants, most Norwegians look to Oslo as a major capital. However, if one compares Oslo to other international capitals, Oslo only ranks as the 112th largest. Oslo is indeed a major capital, just a small one…”

Tags: art, urban, Europe, landscape, unit 7 cities.

See on vimeo.com

Live Flight Tracker

Flightradar24 is the best live flight tracker that shows air traffic in real time. Best coverage and cool features!

Ever wanted to find out where that plane overhead came from?  Where is it going?  Here it is.  The flight that was over Rhode Island 5 minutes ago that left the JFK airport?  It’s officially on it way to Geneva Switerland and now over the Atlantic.

Tags: mapping, worldwide, geospatial, transportation.

See on www.flightradar24.com

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