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Published byMelanie Ryan Modified over 9 years ago
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Topic 2: Why Physical Geography for Teachers?
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Reason 1: Physical geography sets the stage for human activities on Earth Lake effect snows
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Thick Fog in West London
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Nile River flooding in August of 2001 at Khartoum, Sudan
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Delaware water gap: its role in Indigenous peoples, French & Indian War, railroads, and now outdoor recreation.
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Conditions allowing Arizona’s Growth
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Giant drainage basin of the Salt River Project
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Reason 2: There is value in understanding nature for its own sake.
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Your doodler could be the next Frank Lloyd Wright, integrating nature, art and architecture.
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Your daydreamer could come up with a new solution to the global ozone layer crisis.
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Education about the natural world enriches the lives of your students and helps them succeed.
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Reason 3: Physical processes impact our daily lives and create natural hazards
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Just consider Arizona Heat.. The first 100 degree day at Sky Harbor Airport …
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1938 + Today
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Salt River Flood in 1993
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Reason 4: Physical geography is a core player in solving environmental problems
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Analyzing Effects of Fire From Geography Ph.D. student Jinsoo Park, University of ARizona
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GIS & GISCorps
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Talbot Brooks & Hurricane Katrina
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Talbot Brooks: Example of analyzing the Storm Surge of Hurricane Katrina, using landforms, knowledge of climatology, and human occupation to help identify hotspot problems
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Reason 5: Physical geography links 2 major parts of our K-12 curriculum: social studies (human geography) and science (physical geography) helping kids and us all to understand that the “subjects” we teach do not exist in isolation
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Physical Geography is a core Part of K- 12 Geography Promotions in the USA and UK (see these in the Classroom Resources Folder)
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Identified Problem Secondary schools are deeply entrenched in an academic orientation that is perpetuated by a large number of beliefs and traditions that make this academic orientation among the most powerful of the ‘sacred’ norms of secondary schooling. This pervasive academic orientation creates a curriculum that is unbalanced, is content-driven, has limited relevance for many students, and results in fragmentation of student experience and balkanization of secondary schools and their departments. Hargreaves&Earl (1990) Rights of passage: Review of selected research about schooling in the transition years.
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Suggested Solution A pragmatic approach to curriculum integration embraces the established disciplines and does not attempt to ignore them… [but] attempts to meet the needs of pupils, the school and the local community... [by] reshaping and re- establishing subjects, rather than eroding them away altogether…shaping of the subject in ways that make it more relevant, more interesting and, dare we suggest, more integrated with the ways in which pupils structure their knowledge. Grady J. Venville, John Wallace, Léonie J. Rennie & John A. Malone Curriculum Integration (2001)
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Reason 6: Physical geography helps you answer all those questions…
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How did the Grand Canyon form?
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Reason 7: Physical geography is a core part of the discipline of geography
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Imagery seen in this presentation is courtesy of Ron Dorn and other ASU colleagues, students and colleagues in other geography departments, individual illustrations in scholarly journals such as Science and Nature, scholarly societies such as the Association of American Geographers, city, state governments, other countries government websites and U.S. government agencies such as NASA, USGS, NRCS, Library of Congress, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service USAID and NOAA.
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