World Geography and Cultures, Student Edition

World Geography and Cultures, Student Edition
Author: McGraw Hill
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011-01-01
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9780078799952

World Geography and Cultures delivers what teachers want: a geography program with relevance - why geography is important and how it relates to their students. This program offers consistent organization of physical geography, cultural geography, and case studies about living in the region that helps students understand the similarities and differences among regions giving them context in which to understand current world events. Includes print student edition

Glencoe World Geography

Glencoe World Geography
Author: Richard G. Boehm
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers
Total Pages: 818
Release: 1995
Genre: Geography
ISBN: 9780028229966

Cultural Geography

Cultural Geography
Author: Dennis E. Bollinger
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2021
Genre: Cultural geography
ISBN: 9781628566482

The student edition will take the students around the world, starting with physical geography, the earth’s climate, and the people of the world. The first four units progress from North and South America and then on to Europe and Russia. Unit five will cover Africa and then units six and seven will cover Asia. The book will conclude in unit eight with Oceania and Antarctica. - Publisher.

Elementary Geography

Elementary Geography
Author: Charlotte Mason
Publisher: Ravenio Books
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2016-06-01
Genre: Education
ISBN:

This little book is confined to very simple “reading lessons upon the Form and Motions of the Earth, the Points of the Compass, the Meaning of a Map: Definitions.” The shape and motions of the earth are fundamental ideas—however difficult to grasp. Geography should be learned chiefly from maps, and the child should begin the study by learning “the meaning of map,” and how to use it. These subjects are well fitted to form an attractive introduction to the study of Geography: some of them should awaken the delightful interest which attaches in a child’s mind to that which is wonderful—incomprehensible. The Map lessons should lead to mechanical efforts, equally delightful. It is only when presented to the child for the first time in the form of stale knowledge and foregone conclusions that the facts taught in these lessons appear dry and repulsive to him. An effort is made in the following pages to treat the subject with the sort of sympathetic interest and freshness which attracts children to a new study. A short summary of the chief points in each reading lesson is given in the form of questions and answers. Easy verses, illustrative of the various subjects, are introduced, in order that the children may connect pleasant poetic fancies with the phenomena upon which “Geography” so much depends. It is hoped that these reading lessons may afford intelligent teaching, even in the hands of a young teacher. The first ideas of Geography—the lessons on “Place”—which should make the child observant of local geography, of the features of his own neighbourhood, its heights and hollows and level lands, its streams and ponds—should be conveyed viva voce. At this stage, a class-book cannot take the place of an intelligent teacher. Children should go through the book twice, and should, after the second reading, be able to answer any of the questions from memory. Charlotte M. Mason