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GEOGRAPHY EDUCATION

Supporting geography educators everywhere with current digital resources.

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Hiroshima after the Atomic Bomb

Via Scoop.itGeography Education

360° panoramic photography by Harbert F. Austin Jr.. Visit us to see more amazing panoramas from Japan and thousands of other places in the world.

 

The interactive panorama is eerily compelling…this is a haunting image. 

Via www.360cities.net

TeachSpatial: Resources for Spatial Teaching and Learning

Via Scoop.itGeography Education

This resource is a comprehensive approach to teaching spatial thinking skills. Terms with spatial reference (i.e.-place, diffusion, migration, situation, scale, region, centrality, proximity, etc.) are defined within their spatial context and related to their multiple curricular connections such as Life Science, Physical Science, Earth Science and (of course) Geography. These terms and concepts then link you to teaching resources, online modules, lesson plans and classroom activities. While useful for all units, this is especially useful for the beginning of a course to teach the importance of spatial thinking skills to then have them permeate the rest of the year. 

Via teachspatial.org

Manufactured Landscapes

Via Scoop.itGeography Education

This 90 minute documentary is an often painful look and the landscapes of manufacturing and the geography of resource extraction.  This video is VERY slow, so I don’t recommend showing the whole video in class, but certain this video would be a good inclusion in a lesson (e.g.-Three Gorges Dam, e-waste or factory work).  This Zeitgeist Film by Jennifr Baichwal focuses primarily on Chinese manufacturing landscapes and the environmental impacts that technology produces that we would collectively like to pretend we can wish them away. 

Via www.youtube.com

Texas Storm Was Over Eight Miles High

Via Scoop.itGeography Education

The astonishing power of Mother Nature….

 

3D NASA images show the magnitude of last week’s storm in Texas was immense, vertically towering 8 miles above the Texas landscape.  The storm “spawning 14 tornadoes and golf ball sized hail was immense…[NASA’s] Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite watched the storm develop and measured its cloud height at above eight miles high.” 

Via www.businessinsider.com

Where America Needs Doctors

Via Scoop.itGeography Education

What is the geography of medical practicioners?  Why are doctors concentrated more in certain parts of the country?  “If anything, this map illustrates how much where you live matters for how much health care you have access to. The 17,000 residents of Clark County, Miss. do not have a single primary care doctor in the area. Up in Manhattan there is one doctor for every 500 people.”  Click on the link for an interactive ESRI-produced StoryMap.

Via storymaps.esri.com

Mega-Farms to Hit City Rooftops

Via Scoop.itGeography Education

Plans for a rooftop farm are the largest in the world.

 

Brooklyn Grange Farm is Expanding to a 45K Square Foot Rooftop in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. This is a stunning example of urban agriculture designed to produce local food, even with limited spatial resources.  There is also a 3.5 minute video clip attached to the article. 

Via abcnews.go.com

Global Healthcare patterns

Via Scoop.itGeography Education

The Guardian’s health editor introduces our health factfile – and the full dataset behind it…

 

Discussion questions: What regional patterns are there in the per capita healthcare spending?  What connection would you expect between per capita health care spending and the quantity of doctors?  What areas spend the least on healthcare?  How come? 

Via www.guardian.co.uk

Nesting Cans Activity

Via Scoop.itGeography Education

This blog post outlines an excellent craft activity designed for K-6 students to teach the concept of scale. 

Via firstgradetothecore.blogspot.fr

Happy Easter

Via Scoop.itGeography Education

by The East India Company with Sam Joyce Conduit Street, Mayfair…

 

This London Egg is fantastic.  Happy Easter. 

Via www.flickr.com

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