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1495 Rice Street
St. Paul
MN
55117

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8th Grade Global Studies

8th Grade Global Studies Syllabus

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Phone Number:  651-293-8830

Course Description:

Students will actively engage in the work of a geographer by asking geographic questions and then acquiring, organizing, analyzing, and interpreting geographic information in order to answer geographic questions.

This course will use a regional approach to explore the 6 essential elements of Geography: Places and Regions, Physical Systems, Human Systems, Environments and Society, The Spatial World and Uses of Geography in Today’s Society. The content will incorporate a variety of scales – from local to global.  Classroom materials will include adopted instructional materials and supplementary printed and electronic resources.

Expectations for students

  • Participate in class discussions
  • Participate and contribute to group work
  • Complete homework and class assignments

Daily required materials

  • a pen or pencil (sharpened before class)
  • Social Studies materials
  • your 3 ring binder including your planner

Guiding Questions of Geography:

  • How do geographers organize information about the Earth?
  • Where are things located?
  • Why are they located there?
  • How does the environment influence human activities?
  • How do humans interact with and impact their environment?
  • What are the physical and human characteristics of places?
  • How does the movement of people affect place and culture?
  • How are places interconnected and how are those connections changing?

Standards and Benchmarks:

Essential Skills

The student will use maps, globes, geographic information systems and other sources of information to analyze the natures of places at a variety of scales

Maps and Globe

The student will use maps and globes to demonstrate specific and increasingly complex geographic knowledge

The student will make and use maps to acquire, process, and report on the spatial organization of people and places on Earth.

Physical Features and Processes

The student will identify physical characteristics of places and use this knowledge to define regions, their relationships among regions, and their patterns of change.

Interconnection

The student will give examples that demonstrate how people are connectedto each other and the environment.

The student will describe how humans influence the environment and in turn are influenced by it.

The student will demonstrate how various regional frameworks are used to analyze the variation in culture and human occupation of the Earth’s surface.

Scope and Sequence

This course will use a regional approach and study the following thematic topics within each regional unit: physical and human systems, land use and resources, population and migration, industry and economic development.

Geographic Skills

Canada and US

Latin America

Africa South of the Sahara

Southwest Asia and North Africa

East Asia and Southeast Asia

Model United Nations

South Asia and Central Asia

Australia/Oceana

Content-based Instructional Practices (Habits of Thinking)

To think like a geographer students need these habits of thinking:

  • Recognize spatial patterns.
  • Use maps and other geographical tools (globes, atlases, tables, charts, graphs, documents) to acquire, analyze, organize and report information.
  • Use mental maps to organize and analyze information about people, places, and environments.
  • Apply geography to interpret the past, the present, and plan for the future.
  • Analyze and interpret information obtained from maps, aerial photographs, satellite produced images, and geographic information systems
  • Prepare various forms of maps, graphs, diagrams, table, or charts to organize and display geographic information

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