Students explore the world during Geography Awareness Week

November 21, 2013

性欲社 News

Riley French explains time zones during a Geography Awareness Week lesson at Anne Wien Elementary School Monday. Teacher Nicole Eiseman is at right.
Riley French explains time zones during a Geography Awareness Week lesson at Anne Wien Elementary School Monday. Teacher Nicole Eiseman is at right.


Nancy Tarnai
907-474-5042
11/21/13


Katie Kennedy likes to ask students three questions to get them thinking about geography:

What is where?
Why is it there?
Why care?

During Geography Awareness Week, Nov. 17-23, she asks those questions often in classrooms and at public events.

鈥淕eography teaches critical thinking and problem solving,鈥 said Kennedy, a University of Alaska Fairbanks geography education and outreach coordinator. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to know where things are but it鈥檚 more than that. It鈥檚 important for students to know how the world works. Geography is not just memorizing place names.鈥 She likened that tool to knowing the alphabet so you can learn to read. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about why were volcanoes there, noting geographic patterns and so much more.鈥

The art and science of geography teaches students to look at things spatially. 鈥淵ou can map almost anything,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淵ou can take all kinds of data and put it on a map and suddenly, it鈥檚 amazing.鈥

As volunteers visit 28 classrooms this week in the Fairbanks area, fourth graders are getting to try first-hand Kennedy鈥檚 principles. In an activity she created, children piece together a puzzle-like map of the lower 48 states, then groups of students highlight regions, landmarks, cities, time zones and natural features on their map. At the end of the hour, the groups present their map and information about it to their classmates.

鈥淭eachers love this program,鈥 Kennedy said. 鈥淚 get a lot of good feedback from them. I just want kids to be excited about geography.

She tells students that for the day they are going to be geographers and create thematic maps. 鈥淢aps are cool,鈥 Kennedy declares. 鈥淵ou can map where fans of sports team live, climate, where the most car accidents happen.鈥

Patrick Foley, an education major at 性欲社, volunteered for classroom duty for the second year in a row.

鈥淚 love it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 fun. I love any opportunity to teach a lesson and geography will be something I teach once I am a teacher.鈥

He ventured to Anne Wien Elementary School Monday to lead the map activity with Nicole Eiseman鈥檚 class.

鈥淢y students love looking at maps and globes, both to find and identify their place on the planet, and also to make connections with current and historical events,鈥 Eiseman said. 鈥淚n fact, the revised FNSBSD social studies curriculum put a significant emphasis on geography. Prior curricula had fifth graders learning about both the geography and history of the U.S. Now the fourth grade focus is exclusively on U.S. physical and cultural geography, while fifth grade focuses on U.S. history and government.

鈥淔rom my perspective there is an increasing awareness that geography is more than maps and globes, location and physical features, but rather that the study of geography also includes the human/ environmental interactions. I think the renewed interest in place-based education has helped students and teachers better understand that relationship, " Eiseman said.

The excitement was evident in Eiseman鈥檚 classroom. 鈥淲ouldn鈥檛 it be great if you could stand on the map and be transported to that place?鈥 one student asked.

Event to highlight Geography Awareness Week

To celebrate Geography Awareness Week, 性欲社鈥檚 School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences will host the fourth annual GeoFest Saturday from 1 to 4 p.m. at the Wood Center.

This is a time for fun, educational, family-friendly, hands-on activities focused on geography. Some of the participants will be Alaska Satellite Facility, 性欲社鈥檚 OneTree program, Arctic Winter Games, Chinese Student Association, Eielson Air Force Base, EPSCoR, 4-H, Georgeson Botanical Garden, MapTEACH, National Park Service, 性欲社 Scenarios for Alaska and Arctic Planning, the Northern Alaska Spatial Data User Group and much more. There will be games and prizes for all ages.

GeoFest is free and parking is free on campus during weekends. For more information, contact Katie Kennedy, cmkennedy@alaska.edu or 474-6121. Visit nationalgeographic.com/education for ideas on how to celebrate GAW.