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![]() Integrating Geography – Geography is Everywhere! by Cindy Wiggers Geography is a subject that is easy to teach and fun to study. All you need is a good atlas, some simple outline maps, and whatever curriculum you are already using for history and science. Science? If you’re thinking there may be an error here, let me set you straight – yes, science! You see, geography is much more than simply knowing WHERE a place is located on a map or memorizing states and capitals. Let’s take a look at the definition as stated by the National Geographic Society: Geography: A knowledge of place names, location of cultural and physical features, distribution and patterns of languages, religions and physical phenomena, such as tectonic activity, land form, climate, bodies of water, soils and flora and fauna. The changes in places and areas through time, including how people have modified the environment. Cartographers’ tools, such as maps, instruments, graphs and statistics, are also a part of geography. Since the study of geography has so many facets you can easily integrate it into your current curriculum. When studying plate tectonics, erosion, volcanoes or weather in science, pull out an outline map and let your student depict the details of what you are learning on it. Weather maps are interesting project to develop and so are see-through layered maps, made with clear plastic overhead projector sheets. Layer each sheet on top of the next exposing a different theme. It’s great fun to make a salt dough map of the area you are studying in history. Outline maps provide practical hands-on learning experiences for your students. Here are just few of many ideas to get you started:
Here are some important helpful hints to make adding a mapping assignment to your school day beneficial.
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