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Forecasting Population Size
Based on Certain Criteria
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Forecasting Population Size
Based on Certain Criteria : Age structure - classifies members of a population into groups according to age or the distribution of members of a population in age groups helps demographers make predictions
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high rates of growth = more young people
slow growth or no growth = even distribution of ages
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Population Pyramid a graph showing majority of ages of people in the population predicts if and when the population will grow 4
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Population Pyramid Age of population
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What is the overall shape of the graph?
Is there a dominant age group or groups? What proportion of the age group survives into the elderly (60+) age groups? Are the male and female sides roughly equal?
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Age-Structure Diagrams
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Activity Reading and analyzing a Population Pyramid Graph.
Textbook: Page 220 Answer the questions pertaining to this graph.
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Forecasting Population Size continued…
2. Survivorship: Percentage of newborn individuals in a population that are likely to survive to any given age Demographers note birth and then the death groups
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Types of Survivorship Curves
Varies from country to country. Developed countries have higher survival rates. Why? Types of Survivorship Curves Type I - most people live to be very old Type II - have a similar death rate at all ages Type III - many offspring die Both Type I and Type III may result in populations that remain the same size or grow slowly.
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3. Fertility Rates: -Number of babies born per year per 1000 women.
-Replacement level is the average number of children each parent must have in order to “replace” themselves. Change in population = births – deaths
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Fertility Rates
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Migration: movement of individuals from one area to another
Immigration: moving into an area Emigration: moving out of an area
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Migration between and within countries is a significant part of population change.
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Life Expectancy Average number of years a person is expected to live.
Most affected by infant mortality - death rate of children less than 1 yr. old Affected by parents’ education food fuel clean water population density disease
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Life Expectancy in USA
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The Demographic Transition
the general pattern of demographic change from high birth and death rates to low birth and death rates observed historically in more-developed countries industrial development causes economic and social progress that then affects population growth rates
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Stages of the Transition
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Stage 1 - Preindustrial high level birth rate and the death rate population size is stable
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Stage 2 - Transitional population explosion occurs death rates decline hygiene, nutrition, and education improve birth rates remain high population grows very fast
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Stage 3 - Industrial population growth slows birth rate decreases population size stabilizes but larger
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Stage 4 - Postindustrial
birth rate drops below replacement level population size decreases
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Women and Fertility Women who have fewer children are:
Those who know family planning techniques Independent Educated
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Activity Section Review questions page 231
Answer every question in a complete sentence.
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