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History Lessons By Teachers

The Five Themes of Geography through Historical Maps

Created 18 March 2009 by Beaulieu Scott

Grade Level(s): upper elementary (4 - 6), middle school (7 - 9)
Historical Era(s): Beginnings to 1600, Colonial 1600 - 1750, New Nation 1750 - 1800, Expansion 1800 - 1860
Content Area(s): US History, Geography


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Plot plan of land owned by Joseph Barnard

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South Hadley

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Westfield Map

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Map of Europe 1822

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"Plan of the Town of Deerfield"

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"Map of New-England"

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Lot Survey of Deerfield

Summary and Objective

After this lesson students will understand that there are Five Themes of Geography. They will achieve this outcome by an in-depth discussion and note taking session that will introduce the Five Themes of Geography and then through close inspection of historical maps, they will experience the basic concepts of the Themes. Lastly, they will prove mastery of the subject by engaging in a hands-on performance assessment that will provide a product that will support their learning and provide proof of their mastery.

Teaching Plan

Step 1. Using the first website in the weblink section of the lesson the teacher can explain and define the 5 Themes of Geography needed for the lesson.

Step 2. When explaining the concept in the Five Themes of Geography, Location (absolute), the instructor can use the "Map of Europe 1822" and log on to Google Earth to explain the idea of longitude and latitude. The instructor will use Google Earth's grid lines portion to explain what latitude and longitude are and how they are used. It is suggested that the instructor navigate through this portion of the lesson, prior to teaching the lesson, as to become comfortable with the use of Google Earth. Secondly, to explain Location (relative) the instructor can use the "Map of New England". This map can be used for perspective and will allow students to give directions to a location. The instructor should not tell the students how to hold the map.

Step 3. To explain the Theme of Place the instructor can look at the maps of Deerfield, South Hadley, and Westfield. Students can explain how these places are different. Google Earth could also be used in this activity.

Step 4. The third Theme of Geography to discuss is Human-Environment Interaction. How have humans interacted with the environment? Use the "Lot survey map of Deerfield" and the "Plot Plan of Land Owned by Joseph Barnard" to start discussions on this topic. The town maps of South Hadley and Westfield could also be used to discuss this theme.

Step 5. The fourth Theme of Geography is Movement. This is the movement of people, goods, and ideas. In terms of goods the instructor can use the weblink to the triagular trade routes of the 18th Century. In terms of people moving from place to place the route map of Lewis and Clarke weblink can be used to show the movement of people towards people. Lastly, the concept of ideas moving can be explained through a discussion on communication changes since the 17th Century. The instructor could explain how long it has taken communications to travel from one spot to another from colonial times to present day.

Step 6. The fifth Theme is Region. This theme can be introduced and explained through the Lewis and Clarke Expedition Map Weblink. This map can explain the different areas and regions that the expedition went through and a discussion about what makes the different areas different regions, ie. mountains, plains, coastlines.

Step 7. To prove mastery of the Five Themes of Geography the teacher may use a culminating activity. An activity such as the building of an informational poster using the topics, definitions, graphics and writing. The teacher will need to write the required elements portion and rubric for this activity.

Web Site: The 5 Themes of Geography
    http://www.nationalgeographic.com/resources/ngo/education/themes.html

Web Site: Louisana Purchase Map
    http://learningtogive.org/lessons/documents/images/unit177_2.jpg

Web Site: Trade Triangle 18th Century
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/0/01/Triangle_trade_euro.png

Web Site: Rubric Builder
    http://rubistar.4teachers.org



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