Five themes of geography

Location
Place
Human-Environment Interaction
Movement
Region

Five Themes of Geography is an educational tool for teaching geography. Adopted in 1984 by the Association of American Geographers, those five themes were published in the NCGE/AAG publication Guidelines for Geographic Education, Elementary, and Secondary Schools. Most American geography and social studies classrooms have adopted the five themes in teaching practices.[1]

Themes

The five-theme organizational approach was superseded by the Geography for Life standards published by the National Geographic Society (USA), a set of eighteen standards promulgated in 1994. However, the five themes continue to be used as an educational approach in many educational outlets.[1]

Five Themes:[2]

Location

Every point on Earth has a location. Location can be described in two different ways:

Place

The theme of place includes physical and human characteristics of a place.

Human-environment interaction

Further information: human-environment interaction

This theme describes how people interact with the environment, and how the environment responds, with three key concepts:[3]

Movement

Movement is the travel of people, goods, and ideas from one location to another, or political events. Examples of movement include the United States' westward expansion, the Information Revolution, and immigration. New devices such as the airplane and the Internet allow physical and ideological goods to be transferred long distances in short time intervals. A person's travel from place to place, and the actions they perform there, are also considered movement.

Region

Regions are areas with distinctive characteristics: human characteristics, such as demographics or politics, and physical characteristics, such as climate and vegetation. The United States is a political region because it shares one governmental system.

References

  1. 1 2 Ganzel, Karen. "Geography Lesson Plans Using Google Earth". Lesson Planet. Retrieved April 29, 2010.
  2. Rosenberg, Matt. "The Five Themes of Geography". About.com. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  3. "The Five Themes of Geography" (PDF). Retrieved 2 June 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.