984 resultados para GEOGRAPHY - HISTORY
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 8)
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Preface dated 1875.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"List of works, exclusive of the classics ... which have been consulted ...": p. [1]-7.
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"Lists of works, exclusive of the classics ... which have been consulted for the ... present edition": p. [ix]-xv.
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"List of publications consulted and quoted from": p. 150.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Geographic Information System (GIS) is a technology that deals with location to support better representations and decision making. It has a long tradition in several planning areas, such as urbanism, environment, riskiness, transportation, archeology or tourism. In academics context higher education has followed that evolution. Despite of their potentialities in education, GIS technologies at the elementary and secondary have been underused. Empowering graduates to learn with GIS and to manipulate spatial data can effectively facilitate the teaching of critical thinking. Likewise it has been recognized that GIS tools can be incorporated as an interdisciplinary pedagogical tool. Nevertheless more practical examples on how GIS tools can enhance teaching and learning process, namely to promote interdisciplinary approaches. The proposed paper presents some results obtained from the project “Each thing in its place: the science in time and space”. This project results from the effort of three professors of Geography, History and Natural Sciences in the context of Didactics of World Knowledge curricular unit to enhance interdisciplinarity through Geographic Information Technologies (GIT). Implemented during the last three years this action-research project developed the research practice using GIS to create an interdisciplinary attitude in the future primary education teachers. More than teaching GIS the authors were focused on teaching with GIS to create an integrated vision where spatial data representation linked the space, the time and natural sciences. Accumulated experience reveals that those technologies can motivate students to learn and facilitating teacher’s interdisciplinary work.
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In this article, Brian Hudson relates how he came to write the paper published in the journal Antipode, for which he gained recognition as a radical geographer in the late 1970's. It is a tale of a journey in which the loves of his life, geography, history, travel and his wife of over 40 years, came together through living in a number of different places: the United Kingdom, Ghana, Hong Kong, and Jamaica. After leaving UWI, Brian and his family settled in Brisbane, Australia where he taught at Queensland University of Technology until his retirement.
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The American Geographical Society (AGS) serves as a case study for considering the nature of “gendered geography” in the nineteenth-century United States. This article links the ideals and programmatic interests of the society—which were fundamentally commercial in nature—with the personal subjectivity of its chief protagonist, Charles P. Daly, AGS president from 1864 until his death in 1899. Daly is presented as an “armchair explorer” who shifted the focus of the society away from statistical representations of the world toward the action packed narrative descriptions of the world supplied by embodied explorers in the field. The gender dynamics associated with the center versus the field provide a useful way to contrast both sides of Daly’s persona—as a scholar performing detached, careful study yet someone who also derived a great deal of personal authority by staging popular and dramatic spectacles in New York City, speechifying and presenting himself on stage at geographical society meetings with returning heroic explorers. Daly not only served as New York’ smost influential access point to the Arctic at the time, he also served as an important node in the reproduction of masculine culture in promotion of a particularly masculinist commercial geography. Key Words: American Geographical Society, Charles Patrick Daly, gender and geography, history of geography, masculinity.
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In Australia, for more than two decades, a ‘social science’ integrated framework was the favoured approach for delivering subjects such as history and geography. However, such interdisciplinary approaches have continued to attract criticism from various parts of the academic and public spheres and since 2009, a return to teaching the disciplines has been heralded as the ‘new’ way forward. Using discourse analysis techniques associated with Foucauldian archaeology, the purpose of this paper is to examine the Australian Curriculum: Geography document to ascertain the discourses necessary for pre-service teachers to enact effective teaching of geography in a primary setting. Then, based on pre-service teachers’ online survey responses, the paper investigates if such future teachers have the knowledge and skills to interpret, deliver and enact the new geography curriculum in primary classrooms. Finally, as teacher educators, our interest lies in preparing pre-service teachers effectively for the classroom so the findings are used to inform the content of a teacher education course for pre-service primary teachers.
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O presente relatório descreve a Prática de Ensino Supervisionada (PES) inserida no Mestrado em Ensino de História e de Geografia no 3.º ciclo do Ensino Básico e no Ensino Secundário. Esta prática desenvolveu-se em três turmas do 3.º ciclo do Ensino Básico da Escola Secundária Seomara da Costa Primo no ano letivo de 2013-2014. A Educação para a Cidadania é uma preocupação intrínseca ao sistema educativo no sentido de preparar os alunos para uma intervenção cívica ativa. No âmbito da PES, pretendeu-se que os alunos, nas aulas de História e de Geografia, adquirissem não só conhecimentos científicos mas também competências e atitudes que lhes permitam assumir o seu lugar enquanto cidadãos, com um papel crítico e interveniente na sociedade. Neste relatório faz-se uma breve contextualização do tema central desta prática: a cidadania; apresentam-se algumas das experiências de ensino-aprendizagem desenvolvidas com os alunos, e, por último, são enunciados os resultados de um pequeno estudo sobre as opiniões dos alunos acerca da importância da cidadania no ensino da História e no ensino da Geografia.