Search

GEOGRAPHY EDUCATION

Supporting geography educators everywhere with current digital resources.

Category

Uncategorized

Poverty (1964): Cincinnati Slums

TELEVISION DOCUMENTARY: Examines the slum areas of Cincinnati, Ohio, and provides extensive views of substandard housing in various parts of the city. Describes the problems of the uneducated and unemployed who cannot escape from poverty, but finds a “ray of hope” in a young school child. Offers no solution for eliminating urban poverty, but states that everyone “must try.”

Source: www.youtube.com

While some of the technological presentation and the intellectual framework are certainly outdated, it is a glimpse into how America thought about poverty during the LBJ administration and the famous “War on Poverty.”

Tagsurban, economic, Cincinnati, historical, poverty, socioeconomic.

Why 12-Foot Traffic Lanes Are Disastrous for Safety and Must Be Replaced Now

Let’s make “10 not 12!” a new mantra for saving our cities and towns.

[12 foot lanes] are wrong because of a fundamental error that underlies the practice of traffic engineering—and many other disciplines—an outright refusal to acknowledge that human behavior is impacted by its environment.

Tags: transportation, planningspatial, scale.

Source: www.citylab.com

2015 APHG Reading Newsletters

Banner

Greetings from Cincinnati, OH, home of the 2015 AP Human Geography reading.  Over 600 professionals are here to score over 160,000 exams.  I’ve been delighted to share here the Professional Development activities in past years (2012: Roger Downs on Geographic Expertise; 2014: James Johnson on Disruptive Demographics).  This year, we will have two professional development nights.  The first one featured Dr. Barry Brunt and was titled,The European Union: Demographics and Geographics (Powerpoint slides and PDF here).  The second was with Dr. Sarah Bednarz, President-Elect of the AAG; she discussed Best Practices in Geographic Education (Powerpoint slides and PDF file here).  Below you can find the digital copies of the daily newsletters for this event will be archived.

Why China’s ethnic minorities are being left out of the economic boom

Facing ethnic discrimination, China’s Uighurs and Tibetans have fallen behind as the rest of the country surges ahead

Source: www.youtube.com

This video from the Economist touches on many of the same cultural/political issues as I did in my recent article for the National Geographic Education Blog (except, obviously, this video provides a greater economic emphasis).  Ethnic tensions are always simmering tensions in the China’s westernmost province and Tibet remains culturally resistant to the program set forth by the People’s Republic of China.  


TagsCentral Asia, culture, economic, China, East Asia.

‘Love locks’ to be removed from Paris bridge

“The city of Paris will start removing padlocks from the Pont des Arts on Monday, effectively ending the tourist tradition of attaching ‘love locks’ to the bridge. For years, visitors have been attaching locks with sentimental messages to the bridge in symbolic acts of affection. Some further seal the deal by throwing keys into the Seine River below.  It was considered charming at first, but the thrill wore off as sections of fencing on the Pont des Arts crumbled under the locks’ weight. The bridge carries more than 700,000 locks with an estimated combined weight roughly the same as 20 elephants.”

Source: www.cnn.com

Graffiti, tombstones, love locks, monuments…each of these are manifestations of people’s desire to have some tangible impact on the landscape.  Something that manifests a connection to place in a profoundly personal way. 

Questions to Ponder: Why do people want leave a mark on places that are meaningful to them?  When do you think that they that these markers are appropriate or inappropriate?  Do we have more of a ‘right’ to mark some places than others? Why do many oppose these personal marks on the landscape? 

Tags: placeculture, landscape, Paris, tourism.

Prayer in Various Global Faiths

Source: www.washingtonpost.com

See how people around the world pray…video examples of prayer and the cultural/spiritual significance are shown highlighting Buddhists, Mormons, and Sikhs.  Place is very important component to prayer for many and the 4th example shows how some use a labyrinth as a tool to commune with the divine.

 

Tags: religion, culture, Christianity, Buddhism.

22+ International Borders Around The World

History (and sometimes, unfortunately, current events) shows us just how easily national borders can change, but we still like to think that they are permanent fixtures. These photos of different national borders around the world show you how both friendly and hostile nations like to fence off their turf.

Source: www.boredpanda.com

Borders can make for some striking manifestations of power on the landscape.  On the other hand as seen in this picture of Slovakia, Austria and Hungary, friendship and cooperation can also be inscribed into the landscape.  There are some great teaching images in this gallery. 



Tags: border, political, territoriality, sovereignty,  images, land use, landscape.

This grand OTR experiment is about all of us

“Nowhere else in Cincinnati is contrast more evident than this one block of Republic Street. Rich and poor. Black and white. Dark past and vibrant future.” 

Source: www.cincinnati.com

The Over-The-Rhine neighborhood is very close to the APHG reading site, and the urban renewal here is quite controversial.  Many point to the economic positives and infusion of investments, while other see social displacement of the poor

 

Tags: neighborhoodlandscape, gentrificationurban, place, culture, economicAPHG, Cincinnati

High Def Earth

NASA Commentator Dan Huot talks with David Hornyak, the project manager of the High Definition Earth Viewing experiment, about the first year of the project’s operation and screens some of its memorable scenes. From a perch on the nadir side of the International Space Station’s Columbus module, HDEV’s four high definition off-the-shelf video cameras have been transmitting clear, sharp views of Earth from an altitude of 250 miles, providing impressive views while testing how the hardware holds up in the harsh environment of Earth orbit.

Source: www.youtube.com

If you are impatient, the ‘highlight reel’ of this high definition video begins at 3:50 in this clip (but understanding the ‘behind-the-scenes’ context helps to understand how we get these videos of our planet). 

Tags: mapping, perspective, images, remote sensing, geospatial, unit 1 Geoprinciples.

Blog at WordPress.com.

Up ↑