Showing posts with label 5 Themes of Geography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 5 Themes of Geography. Show all posts

Monday, April 29, 2013

29-30 April - Draft Expectations and Apartheid

Announcements: 
1) Your draft of your Reporting for the British Empire will be due to the editor (me) during the next class. Today we will go over the requirements for that draft. The final draft of this paper will be due on the 7th (A) or 8th (B) of May. It will need to be typed and emailed or submitted electronically to me. I have reserved the 7th and 8th of May in the computer lab for this purpose.

2) Current Event maps will be due in the next class. You should have at least 8 current events!

3) On the 9th and 10th of May, we will have a test on the British Empire and all content that we have covered during this term thus far. We will review for this test before taking it.

Current Event > 

Colombia tops IDMC internally displaced people list


Draft to Editor Requirements: 

1) Headline (Title for your article) - Try to make it catchy! A headline tells what will be contained in the article, but also tries to draw the reader in.

Examples: 
Syrian PM survives car bombing

Cycling one of the world's most famous pilgrimages

Richard III's  head to go on tour

Defending Shakespeare from doubters

Earth's core far hotter than thought 

2) Illustration - Remember we are writing for The Illustrated London News, so you need to provide an illustration with your article. This can be a chart, a map (a really good way to bring one of your 5 themes of geography into the article!), or an image.

Examples: 
People

Places

Maps 


3) Newspaper style article - A newspaper article starts with a lede (or lead) paragraph, which summarizes the story and hooks the reader, but doesn't provide a ton of detail. The detail comes in the rest of the article, given in short paragraph that keep the article moving.

Example:


George Jones public funeral to be held in Nashville


The funeral of country music legend George Jones will be held at the famous Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville and is open to fans, it has been announced.
"George would have wanted his fans and friends everywhere to be able to come and pay their respects along with his family," publicist Kirt Webster said.
The ceremony will be held on Thursday, a day after a private visitation for family, friends and fellow performers.
Jones' hits included He Stopped Loving Her Today. He died on Friday aged 81. ...


4) Citations in APA style - Check your bibliography cheat sheet for this format. List these at the bottom of your article. There is no need for internal citation (a.k.a. don't list your sources in the middle of the article). Remember that Wikipedia is not an acceptable source for citation!!

Example: 

Harlow, H. F. (1983). Fundamentals for preparing psychology journal articles. Journal of Comparative and Physiological Psychology, 55, 893-896.

Other requirements:

 - One of the 5 themes of geography - You will need to tie one of the 5 themes of geography into your story about the location or region you are writing about.

- Your assigned cultural trait - Please write your assigned cultural trait at the bottom of the page. Remember that your article must be relevant to this cultural trait.

- Relevance to the British Empire - Remember that your article must be relevant to the British Empire. Try to tie the article back to this theme somehow. 

- The correct time period - Remember that we are writing about the British Empire from approximately 1700-1913. Slightly earlier than that time period is fine, but there should not be any reference to any time after 1913! 

- The correct heading on your paper!

British Expansion Map (15 minutes)

Apartheid in South Africa

Apartheid - Afrikaans for "the status of being apart"

Roots of Apartheid - Discovery of Gold (1886)

Most Africans in South Africa were independent peasant farmers. They made enough to live on doing this, but as a need for gold miners increased, the government helped the gold mine owners to force cheap black labor into the mines.

Why would they do this?
How did they do this?

Taxation of Africans - hut tax, poll tax

1910 - South Africa is united as the Union of South Africa

1913 Land Act - forced Africans to live on reserves, undermining their ability to be independent farmers and making it illegal for them to be sharecroppers (farmers living on land owned by someone else and paying for it by giving half or more of their crops to the landlord). This made it more likely that Africans would seek out work in the mines, where conditions were bad, in order to pay taxes and support their families.

By 1923 over 126,000 Africans were living in cities, which concerned white citizens. Jan Smuts (Prime Minister of South Africa at the time) supported residential segregation and passed the Native (Urban Areas) Act. This act called for the clearing of slums in the city and the relocation of native Africans to areas outside or on the edges of the cities.


"Natives - men, women and children - should only be allowed in urban areas when their presence is demanded by the wants of the white population."

 - The Stallard Commission, 1922 (investigated the presence of Africans in cities)

Influx Control - Every African allowed in the cities was required to carry a pass identifying him or her. The only people allowed to have passes were people that were employed in the cities, so people took jobs for lower wages in order to get passes into the cities. 

Pass raids - Police would conduct pass raids, during which natives would be searched for their passes and kicked out or arrested if they did not have them. This happened so often that most Africans had been arrested at some point, making the majority of the population criminals in the eyes of the government. 

What are some similarities between this situation and the situation we saw Gandhi deal with in South Africa? 

Thursday, April 25, 2013

25-26 April - Intro to South Africa and Peer Editing

Announcements:

1) Reminder: 1-2 May, I will be collecting the current event maps. You should have at least 8 current events at that time. Today's current event should be at least #7.

2) I will be grading journals toward the end of class, while you are working on peer-editing.

Current Event > Follow up on Al-Nusra and the Syrian Government:

Syria government makes opposition jihadist claim

  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-22286125


Intro to South Africa




















Relative Location: Southern tip of the African continent
Absolute Location: 29 degrees S 24 degrees E 

Area: 1,219,090 sq km, which is just less than twice the size of Texas 

Population size: 48,601,098 (July 2013 est.), mostly urban 
compared with Texas: est. 26,059,203 (July 2012)

Physical characteristics: Large interior plateau surrounded by rugged hills and a narrow coastal plain

Region: The history of South Africa is considered to be what happened within the modern borders, but also in the entire region of countries surrounding it, in which the Boers, native Africans and British interacted.

Movement:
South Africa was first used by Europeans (the Dutch) as a stopping point on the way to India for the spice trade (late 1600s). It became settled by the Dutch and Europeans of various other ethnicities. These people became known as the Boers.

Human-Environment Interaction: An Increase in Interest

The British started to take over in the early 1800s. Diamonds were discovered in 1867, which increased interest and immigration to the area.

Some of South Africa's Natural Resources:
gold, coal, iron ore, nickel, tin, rare earth elements, uranium, gem diamonds, platinum, copper, salt, natural gas


Why were the British and other European settlers interested in controlling South Africa?


Peer Editing

Pair up with a partner and fill out the peer editing sheet by reading their article and answering the questions.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

15-16 March - Applying Themes and Traits

Announcements: Journals will be collected and an quarterly assessment will be given on 21 (A) - 22 (B) March. We will review for this exam early next week.

Current Event > 

5 Themes of Geography

1. Location  (absolute location, relative location)

2. Place  (human characteristics, physical characteristics)


3. Human-Environment Interaction  (humans modifying the environment)


4. Movement  (people, resources/objects, ideas)


5. Region  (divisions of space for better understanding)

6 Cultural Traits

1. Economic  (resources, scarcity, production, distribution, types of economy, technology, division of labor, transportation)

2. Social  (family life, customs, class, roles, education)

3. Belief  (religion, philosophy, myth, ritual)

4. Political  (citizenship, leadership, institutions)

5. Aesthetic  (art, music, dance, literature, food, fashion)

6. Communication  (language, symbols, body language)

Applying the 5 Themes and 6 Traits: 

1. Divide your paper into 12 blocks (fold vertically in thirds and horizontally in half twice). 



2. Write your name and period at the top right hand corner. Write "When the Moors Ruled in Europe at the top left hand corner.

3. List the 5 themes in the first five blocks and the 6 traits in the next six blocks (with one left over). 

4. As we watch the movie segments below, write notes that are relevant to each of the themes or traits in the appropriate box on your paper.

"When the Moors Ruled in Europe"


part 1

 part 2

 part 3


 part 4

 part 5

 part 6

 part 7


Find the playlist of all 11 parts of this documentary here.

Homework: Write a paragraph summarizing the notes you took on "When the Moors Ruled in Europe" using the 5 themes and the 6 traits. Due at the beginning of the next class!


Wednesday, March 13, 2013

13-14 March - Map Quiz and Themes

Announcements: Journals will be collected and an quarterly assessment will be given on 21 (A) - 22 (B) March. We will review for this exam early next week.

Current Event >

Map Quiz! Remember to complete both sides of the map quiz. You are allowed to use your notes.

Ways of Understanding Geography and Culture 

Fill in the charts with a description and an example as we talk about them.

5 Themes of Geography - Review

1. Location 
2. Place 
3. Human-Environment Interaction 
4. Movement 
5. Region 

6 Cultural Traits - aspects of culture to know

1. Economic
2. Social
3. Belief
4. Political
5. Aesthetic
6. Communication

Monday, March 11, 2013

11-12 March, Religion in Europe

Announcements: On Tuesday afternoon (12 March) the grading of the 5 Themes of Geography projects will begin, which means any projects turned in after Tuesday will have late penalties.

Current Event  >



Earth Sun Relations Quiz! - OPEN NOTE



Religion in Europe


Catholic Church

Monotheism
Polytheism
Emperor Constantine I (380 AD)
Eastern Orthodox
Martin Luther (1517, The Ninety-Five Theses)
Indulgences
Protestant Church


What is a protester or Protestant Religion?


Protestants broke away from which church?


Who is Martin Luther? Which religion did he found?

What are some other Protestant Religions?




What is the dominant religion in each listed country?

(label each country below on your map and write in religion for each country on your map):
  
Italy, Vatican City, Spain, Portugal, France, Poland, Republic of Ireland: Roman Catholic
Greece: Eastern OrthodoxGreek Orthodox
Russia: Eastern Orthodox, Russian Orthodox
Ukraine: Eastern Orthodox, Ukrainian Orthodox
Northern GermanyProtestantLutheran
Norway and Sweden: Protestant, Lutheran
Istanbul, Turkey: Islam
England: Protestant, Church of England/Anglican Church  




Simplified Language and Religions of Europe: T Chart





Which region in Europe is predominantly Protestant?


Which region in Europe is predominantly Roman Catholic?


Why?


What is a common religion found in the in Eastern Europe?

How does the diffusion of RELIGION relate to the diffusion of LANGUAGE in Europe? >> Acculturation



Wrap Up:


- diffusion - the spread of cultural elements from one area or group of people to others by contact

- acculturation - 1.modification by adapting to or borrowing of traits from a different culture; 2. the merging of cultures due to prolonged contact
- language family - a group of languages related by a common ancestral language (ex: Germanic, Romance, Slavic, Celtic)

Next Time: European Places Map Quiz - Bring your map to class to use during the quiz!