TOMORROW: PRACTICE EXAM FRIDAY: MINI PRESENTATIONS START AP Human Geography Model Review.

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Presentation transcript:

TOMORROW: PRACTICE EXAM FRIDAY: MINI PRESENTATIONS START AP Human Geography Model Review

Von Thunen Explains the connection of different agricultural practices and the location of the market. Accounts for land need and transportation costs

Carl Sauer Proposed idea of cultural landscape in which human activity superimposes itself on the physical landscape. Each cultural group leaves its own unique imprints Basis for study of human geography

Brandt Line Theorized in 1980, the Brant line divides the world between the developed North and the less developed South.

Human development Index Measures life expectancy education (mean years of schooling and expected years of schooling) Gross National Income (adjusted Purchasing Power Parity

DO NOW: GET YOUR EXAM FROM YESTERDAY. LOOK THROUGH WHAT YOU GOT WRONG HW: STUDY!!!!!!!!!!! Mini presentations starting Monday! YOU NEED TO HAVE: Handout, presentation of ideas May 8, 2015 Monday May 11 Tuesday May 12 Population and Migration Culture and Language Religion and Ethnicity Political and Industrial

Practice Exam Review

Pig Production

Languages

Link is online! powerful-predictors-of-the-future-kim-preshoff powerful-predictors-of-the-future-kim-preshoff

Culture Hearths

 Distance Decay.

Forward Capitals: Symbolically relocated capital city usually because of either economic or strategic reasons. Usually used to integrate outlying parts of a country into the state Brasilia

Demographic transition

DO NOW: PRACTICE EXAM– LOOK AT THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS BASED ON WHAT WE DID IN CLASS YESTERDAY. POPULATION AND MIGRATION: # 7, 8, 11, 22, 29, 37, 50 CULTURE AND LANGUAGE: # 2, 15, 18, 28, 32, 34, 43, 47 HOMEWORK: COMPLETE THE MODELS WORKSHEET IF YOU DID NOT ALREADY DO SO! WE WILL REVIEW/ASK ANY QUESTIONS ON IT TOMORROW 3 DAYS!

World Religions

Syncretism

Religious conflicts

History of World Religions You should know:  Hearth and diffusion  Universal/ethnic  Religious conflicts  Imprint on the cultural landscape of-religion.html

Shapes of States

Heartland Theory/ Rimland Theory

Back to models! human-geography-review/

Rostow Levels of Development

Wallerstein World Systems Theory Theorizes the world as a unified economic system in which different countries have different roles and depend on one another Core Periphery Semi- periphery

Industrial Sectors Primary: Extractive of resources from the earth Secondary: factories and industry Tertiary: services Quaternary: collection, processing, manipulation of information. From mutual fund managers to tax consultants, software developers and statisticians. Personnel working in office buildings, elementary schools and university classrooms, hospitals and doctors’ offices, theatres, accounting and brokerage firms all belong to this category of service Quinary: data interpretation and the use and evaluation of new technologies; “gold collar” senior business executives, government officials, research scientists, financial and legal consultants

Weber’s Least Cost Model Explains the relationship of cost of transporting materials between bulk-gaining and bulk-reducing industries with centers of production and distance to markets

Ravensteins Laws of Migration Ravenstein's Laws of Migration: 1. Most migration is over short distances 2. Migration tends to occur in steps 3. Long range migrants usually move to urban areas 4. Each migration produces movement in the opposite direction 5. Rural dwellers are more migratory than urban dwellers. 6. Males are more migratory over long distances 7. Most migrants are adults 8. Large towns grow more by migration than by natural increase 9. Migration increases with economic development 10. Migration is mostly due to economic causes

The Exam Section I: Multiple Choice | 75 Questions | 60 Minutes | 50% of Exam Score Define, explain, and apply geographic concepts Interpret geographic data Section II: Constructed Response | 3 Questions | 75 Minutes | 50% of Exam Score Questions may require that students: Synthesize different topical areas Analyze and evaluate geographical concepts Supply appropriately selected and well-explained real-world examples to illustrate geographic concepts Interpret verbal descriptions, maps, graphs, photographs, and/or diagrams Formulate responses in narrative form