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Program
Overview:
North America
North America
is an ethnically diverse and rapidly changing region. Looking
at several urban examples, we will first examine how geography
can be used as a tool to analyze the relationship between urban
economic and demographic data. Later in the workshop, we will
look at suburban sprawl around Chicago and how two teachers help
their students identify implications of city growth in Philadelphia
and San Antonio.
View this video==> 
Part
1. Boston and Denver: Mapping Urban Economic Development
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Director-Nancy Caufield
Producer-Cambridge Studios, USA
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In this
program, we examine urban areas in terms of ethnic diversity
and income. We first focus on Boston and its "empowerment
zones," impoverished areas mapped by geographers as
those areas most in need of government grants for economic
re-development. Following the case study, we visit a Colorado
classroom where AP human geography students use a low-tech
version of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) to investigate
the distribution patterns of poverty in Denver.
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Explain
how maps and other graphic representations are used to understand
patterns of human activity in urban regions.
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Identify
the ways in which communities reflect the cultural background
of their inhabitants.
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Identify
how students can use geographic skills to interpret patterns
of distribution in urban regions.
Part 2. Chicago, Philadelphia, and San Antonio: U.S. City
Development

Director-Nancy Caufield
Producer-Cambridge Studios, USA |
This
workshop examines suburban sprawl and its implications.
First, we look at Chicago and the trend toward movement
away from the city and into the surrounding farmlands. Following
the case study, Philadelphia students examine that city's
growth over the past 300 years and another class in San
Antonio uses census data to investigate the future of their
city's expansion.
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Explain
the impact of transportation systems on the growth of American
urban centers.
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Identify
issues associated with resources needed by urban regions,
suburban centers, and rural farming.
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Explain
how teachers can use familiar urban landmarks to teach students
complex geographic concepts and principles.
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