Description
Book SynopsisGeography as Inquiry invites teachers and learners to explore geography in exciting ways, across key concepts, connected to history and the social sciences, reestablishing its place in the social studies and history curriculum.
Trade ReviewThe methods discussed in this book are designed to engage students to examine how geography has help to shape space and time. The authors continue to turn out relative and unique inquiry based learning methods. This book is a must for anyone who is teaching the Social Studies. -- Joseph Zingone, president/chairman ATSS/UFT
Mark Newman and Jack Zevin, both historians, have devoted their distinguished careers to teacher education and curriculum development in the social studies. Committed to the inquiry method of teaching and learning, they have long advocated that geography, as "an integral part of our everyday life," serve as a core discipline in our nation's schools. This book will help teachers find effective ways to "formalize our connection to geography" by presenting a host of suggestions organized according to the five fundamental themes of geography. The additional chapters on the development of map skills and travel compared to migration are alone worth the price of admission, useful ways to start discussions about upgrading the role of geography in the social studies curriculum. -- Gerald A. Danzer, professor of History Emeritus, University of Illinois at Chicago
Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Preface Chapter One: Geography as Inquiry Chapter Two: Location, Location, Location Chapter Three: The Mystery of Place and Region Chapter Four: Movement and Change: Search (stay a while), and Settle, Move Again Chapter Five: Working and Fooling with Mother Earth Chapter Six: Picturing the World Chapter Seven:Passages, Barriers, and Boundaries Chapter Eight: The Game of Sequencia (History of the World Revisited) Bibliography: Reading recommendations for enrichment