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GEOGRAPHY EDUCATION

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Americans put off having babies amid poor economy

“Births have plummeted since their 2007 peak, and the recession is a factor. There’s worry that the birthrate will be affected for years.”

The graph for this article is an incredible visual that highlights how the economic conditions of a country can impact its demographics.  Not surprisingly, Americans have less children during tough times.  Questions to ponder: would this phenomenon be expected in all parts of the world?  Why or why not?  Demographically, what will the long-term impact of the recession be?

See on Scoop.itGeography Education    See on www.usatoday.com

Why the fax thrives in Japan

See on Scoop.itCultural Geography

The Japanese are regarded as a hi-tech nation, the country that gave the world huge electronics companies. Why, then, are faxes so popular there?

 

The technology that we use is in part dependent on out cultural values. 

See on www.bbc.co.uk

Issues from Global Population Growth

“Find In-depth Review, Video And Infographic On World Population.  Learn more about population growth, factors for overpopulation, population density map and UN plan to combat world population.”

This video displays some intriguing statistics about global population growth.  Equally important the video explores some concerns that are presented with a large population.  This video can also be viewed as one long infographic.  Admittedly, this video (and most academic literature) approaches the population issue from a strong perspective which advocates for the reduction of total population; if you feel it necessary to have an ideological counterweight in the classroom, this article from the LA Times may be what you are looking for.

See on Scoop.itGeography Education  –See on www.youtube.com

Drought Worsens in Midwest

See on Scoop.itGeography Education

“The worst drought in 50 years has intensified across the US midwest, not only condemning this year’s corn crop but threatening the prospects for next year’s too, new figures showed on Thursday.”

 

The current drought in the Midwest is having a much greater impact than making residents hot and uncomfortable. Farmland prices were on the rise, and the market was acting on the assumption that of good years with bountiful harvests.  As a breadbasket, the drought in deepening fears of a global food crisis and greatly impacting food production with economic, energy (ethanol) and political ramifications.   

See on www.guardian.co.uk

Walk Appeal

See on Scoop.itGeography Education

Walk Appeal promises to be a major new tool for understanding and building walkable places, and it explains several things that were heretofore either contradictory or mysterious.

What is a reasonable distance to walk around town?  Research shows that cities with improved sidewalks, less parking lots, attractive storefronts and other amenities that encourage walking.  If  walking the urban environment is and of itself an experience worth having and makes the person feel like a flâneur, experiencing the city on a deeper level, automotive transport goes down and walking goes up.  Urban infrastructure is more important for most people than distance in deciding whether to get in the car or walk down the street (for distances under 2 miles).  Bottom line: neighborhoods that have an attractive sense of place are more walkable.

See on bettercities.net

Americans Least Green—And Feel Least Guilt, Survey Suggests

See on Scoop.itGeography Education

A new global survey suggests world’s the most wasteful countries feel the least guilty—and vice-versa.

 

Our consumption patterns, ecological footprint and lifestyle choices have a significant impact on how we feel about sustainability initiatives and human/environmental interactions.  

See on news.nationalgeographic.com

Why Should Techies Care About Education Theory?

See on Scoop.itSocial Media Classroom

“Earlier this year, I penned a post titled ‘The Audrey Test’ in which I laid out a number of topics with which I argued education technologists (particularly ed-tech entrepreneurs) needed to be familiar if I was to take them at all seriously. The response – both in the comments section and elsewhere – were fairly revealing, I thought, particularly as some folks sneered at the notion that learning theories, histories, or sciences were at all relevant to building ed-tech products, services or businesses.” 

 

See on www.hackeducation.com

NCGE Newsletter

See on Scoop.itGeography Education

See on library.constantcontact.com

Can a Communist Party Nurture a Modern Capitalist System?

See on Scoop.itGeography Education

“After growing by leaps and bounds for more than three decades, China’s economic growth has come to a halt, falling from around 12 percent in the second quarter of 2006 to 7.6 percent in the second quarter of 2012. Export-dependent manufacturing sector has been hard hit. The June HSBC Flash Purchasing Managers Index hit a seven-month low of 48.1, down from a final reading of 48.4 in May, the eighth consecutive month that the index has been below 50—the contraction threshold. Is this just a temporary pause, caused by a prolonged slow-down in the world economy or something more serious?”

See on www.forbes.com

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