PBS Frontline: The Meth Epidemic

July 26th, 2009 No comments »

This program depicts the Meth Epidemic in America.  Its relevance to Geography is its demonstration of the Diffusion concept and its underlying social, political and international context.

For full video, click here.

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The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson: Mapping the London Cholera Epidemic in 1854

July 26th, 2009 No comments »

An Interview with Steven Johnson

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The Geography of the Seasons

May 26th, 2009 No comments »

This short video describes the mechanisms for the Earth’s seasons:

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Global Connections Visualized: Airline Traffic

April 26th, 2009 No comments »

Global Airline Traffic

United States Airline Traffic

25 hours of FEDEX Air Traffic

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The Diffusion of Wal-Mart and Economies of Density

February 26th, 2009 No comments »

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The Geography of US Presidential Elections

October 26th, 2008 No comments »


Stanford University

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Animaniacs: The Nations of the World

October 25th, 2008 No comments »

Nations of the World – The Animaniacs

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Residential Growth in Prince William County, VA

October 25th, 2008 No comments »

Residential Growth in Prince William County, VA


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Virginia International University Geography Students to Participate in Google’s Ten to the 100th Program

September 25th, 2008 No comments »

Paper Proposal Extension
Did anyone see the email from Professor Powell about Google’s new $10 Million Project called “The 10 to the 100 Project”? This is a program seeking ideas from people that improve the lives of as many people as possible. I am encouraging everyone to participate and can be used as your paper and presentation. Thedeadline for the Google proposal is October 20, 2008. Therefore, I am extending the deadline for the paper proposal to October 19, 2008. This will be an excellent opportunity to demonstrate your understanding of geographic inquiry while participating in a project that could have tangible benefits outside of the classroom. I will discuss further in class, but in the meantime, please review the following website:

http://www.project10tothe100.com/index.html

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My First Geography Lecture at Virginia International University

September 6th, 2008 No comments »

Today I had my first class session as adjunct professor of Geography at Virginia International University. The class is very interesting in that they are entirely international. I have a Gambian, Nigerian, 2 Brazilians, 7 Mongolians, 1 Russian, 1 Croatian, 1 German, 4 Nepalese and 1 japanese student. One thing that makes this an interesting audience is that I cannot rely on previous lectures given to a primarily American audience at Piedmont Virginia Community College.

For example, when discussing the concept of vernacular regions, I brought up “The South.” A quick definition of a vernacular region is an area people recognize as part of their cultural identity. To Americans, the South is a familiar concept, typically referring to the area of the Southeastern United States. It references the American Civil War. These students did not have a concept of the American Civil War. This is a challenge, but not an impossible one. Since I more interested in teaching the concept rather than the South, I know when the students understand the concept when they can identify vernacular regions in their own experience. For example, most students could identify with The Middle East.

When discussing Place, Location and the Geographic Grid, students enjoyed using Google Earth as a teaching tool. Their first assignment was to find the latitude and longitude of their home. This is the first in a series of assignments requiring them to provide a descriptive account of the geography of their home.

The lecture itself was titled The Tools of Geographic Inquiry and included the following concepts:

  • Place
  • Location
  • Region
  • Functional Region
  • Formal Region
  • Vernacular Region
  • Space
  • Distribution
  • Density
  • Site
  • Situation
  • cultural landscape
  • scale
  • spatial association
  • cultural ecology
  • density
  • diffusion

We also discussed Yali’s Question in Guns, Germs and Steel, relating to wealth distribution in the world post 1492, which dispels the notion that wealth belongs to the Western world because of quality of the people and replaces it with the physical geographic factors contributing to European dominance.

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