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Do Now: Reading Day. Get seated – fill in the front seats first !!! Take out your Human Geo. notebook and open to your Human Geo. tab in your binder. On a new sheet of paper in your notebook, write today’s date and Human Geo. Reading Day on the top. Reading Day Review .
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Do Now: Reading Day • Get seated – fill in the front seats first!!! • Take out your Human Geo. notebook and open to your Human Geo. tab in your binder. • On a new sheet of paper in your notebook, write today’s date and Human Geo. Reading Day on the top.
Reading Day Review • Content Quiz Questions • DBQ’s Lighting Round • Student Q&A
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • What is geography?
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • The study of the earth, specifically the spatial organization of the earth’s surface
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • Which of the 5 themes of geo. is most central to geo.?
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • LOCATION!
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • Site identifies a place by its _________________
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • Unique physical characteristics
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • Situation identifies a place by ________________
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • Location relative to other subjects, especially human characteristics
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • How would you write the scale of a map if one inch of road on the map represents 1,000 inches on the road?
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • 1:1,000 Or 1 in. = 1,000 in.
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • What is map distortion and what causes it?
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • When the shape of land masses becomes distorted (or changed) due to projection • Tip: see how big Antarctica looks?
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • What is mathematical location?
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • The mathematical concept of location is the exact latitude and longitude
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • What does the theory of environmental determinism say?
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • That a society’s environment determines its success or failure • Tip: Our buddy Jared Diamond over there is NOT an environmental determinist!
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • What does arithmetic density (population density) tell us?
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • Density tells us how closely people live to each other. Arithmetic density measures how many people per area of land.
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • What is the difference between physiological and agricultural density?
Unit 1: Thinking Geographically • Physiological density: Persons per area of arable land • Agricultural density: Farmers per area of arable land
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Which areas of the world are growing most rapidly?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Developing countries • Tip: This is very important/concerning because these countries already lack food, energy, resources, etc.
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Which region of the U.S. is most densely populated? • Northeast • Southeast • Southwest • West
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Northeast
Unit 2: Population and Migration • What is the Natural Increase Rate?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Birth rate – Death rate(the rate in which the population increases)
Unit 2: Population and Migration • What is are the main negative effects of overpopulation?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • What is the relationship between the education of women and birth rates?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • As women have more access to education, birth rates drop
Unit 2: Population and Migration • What are the characteristics of Stage 1 of the DTM?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Stage 1: • Most basic, hunter gatherer societies, fluctuating birth and death rates, very little education, traditional gender roles
Unit 2: Population and Migration • What are the characteristics of stage 2 of the DTM?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Population explosion (high birth and death), death rate begins to drop due to health care and sanitation, very little contraception
Unit 2: Population and Migration • What are the characteristics of stage 3 of the DTM?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Birth rate and death rates dropping and getting much lower, pop. is stabilizing, education and health care much more available, contraception available
Unit 2: Population and Migration • What are the characteristics of stage 4 of the DTM?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Pop. pyramid is contracting, having less children, elderly people are supported by fewer young people, advanced society
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Open Response Challenge: • Choose one stage in the DTM and list: • One positive impact of the country’s population structure on economic development • One negative impact of the country’s population structure on economic development
Unit 2: Population and Migration • How can a country reduce its birth rate most effectively?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Distribute contraception • Educate women
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Where do people generally avoid? (hint: the four too’s)
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Too wet, too cold, too dry, too high (mountainous)
Unit 2: Population and Migration • These two countries make up 1/3 of the world’s population…
Unit 2: Population and Migration • India and China
Unit 2: Population and Migration • What are the three reasons people move?
Unit 2: Population and Migration • Economic factors • Environmental comfort • Cultural freedom (Tip: most people move for the first reason)
Unit 2: Population and Migration Name one push factor for a Dinka in Sudan.
Unit 2: Population and Migration Fear of ethnic violence; lack of resources (poverty); poor education