Chatsworth Charter High School & G+STEAM Magnet Center

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AP HUMAN GEO A Assignments

Instructor
Robert Hayes
Term
Spring 2013
Department
Social Sciences
Location
G44
Description
The major purpose of this course is to introduce students to the systematic study of patterns and processes that have shaped human understanding, use, and alteration of the Earth’s surface. Students employ spatial concepts and landscape analysis to examine human social organization and its environmental consequences. They also learn about the methods and tools geographers use in their science and practice. If a student passes the CEEB Advanced Placement Exam, this course may be accepted by colleges for course credit. Upon completion of this AP course, students will be able to: • Use and think about maps and spatial data. Geography is concerned with the ways in which patterns on Earth’s surface reflect and influence physical and human processes. As such, maps and spatial data are fundamental to the discipline, and learning to use and think about them is critical to geographical literacy. The goal is achieved when students learn to use maps and spatial data to pose and solve problems, and when they learn to think critically about what is revealed and what is hidden in different maps and spatial arrays. • Understand and interpret the implications of associations among phenomena in places.  Geography looks at the world from a spatial perspective, seeking to understand the changing spatial organization and material character of Earth’s surface. One of the critical advantages of a spatial perspective is the attention it focuses on how phenomena are related to one another in particular places. Students should thus learn not just to recognize and interpret patterns but to assess the nature and significance of the relationships among phenomena that occur in the same place, and to understand how tastes and values, political regulations, and economic constraints work together to create particular types of cultural landscapes. • Recognize and interpret at different scales the relationships among patterns and processes. Geographical analysis requires a sensitivity to scale, not just as a spatial category but as a framework for understanding how events and processes at different scales influence one another. Thus, students should understand that the phenomena they are studying at one scale (e.g., local) may well be influenced by developments at other scales (e.g., regional, national, or global). They should then look at processes operating at multiple scales when seeking explanations of geographic patterns and arrangements. • Define regions and evaluate the regionalization process. Geography is concerned not simply with describing patterns but with analyzing how they came about and what they mean. Students should see regions as objects of analysis and exploration and move beyond simply locating and describing regions to considering how and why they come into being and what they reveal about the changing character of the world in which we live. • Characterize and analyze changing interconnections among places. At the heart of a geographical perspective is a concern with the ways in which events and processes operating in one place can influence those operating at other places. Thus, students should view places and patterns not in isolation but in terms of their spatial and functional relationship with other places and patterns. Moreover, they should strive to be aware that those relationships are constantly changing, and they should understand how and why change occurs. 

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Use this link to sign up to receive your AP scores on line. The College Board will not be mailing scores home any longer. This is the only way to see your scores. The link is below. Follow the instructions on this link.

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Extra Credit. No late turn in accepted!!!

Here are the questions to answer. If you copy someone else's answers (or allow someone to copy yours, you will not receive credit.)

Robert Neuwirth: The "shadow cities" of the future
1.) By 2050, how many people will live in squatter cities?
2.) What is a wabenzi?
3.) What did the boy do at the top of the pile and why?
4.) Describe 2 different types of squatter houses within squatter cities.
5.) What types of businesses survive in squatter cities?
6.) Describe the similarity between the availability of water and electricity.
7.) According to Robert, what are 2 things that squatters need?

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Assignment

READ Chapter 13 in Rubenstein pages 437-469 .
READ Chapters 21-23 in de Blij Pages 315-363

Write and answer 5 contextual questions from the reading in the chapter.

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Assignment

Urbanization

READ Chapter 13 in Rubenstein pages 437-469 .
READ Chapters 21-23 in de Blij Pages 315-363

Complete the following Key Terms:

1. Annexation (R)
2. Census tract (R)
3. Council of government (R)
4. Density gradient (R)
5. Disamenity Sector (D)
6. Feudal City (D)
7. Filtering (R)
8. Gentrification (R)
9. Greenbelt (R)
10. Hinterland (D)
11. Manufacturing City (D)
12. Mercantile City (D)
13. Metropolitan statistical area (R)
14. Micropolitan statistical area (R)
15. Modern City (D)
16. Multiplier Effect (D)
17. Nucleation (D)
18. Preindustrial City (D)
19. Primate City (D)
20. Public housing (R)
21. Rank-size Rule (D)
22. Redlining (R)
23. Smart Growth (R)
24. Sprawl (R)
25. Squatter Settlement (R)
26. Stratified Society (D)
27. Sunbelt (D)
28. Theocratic Center (D)
29. Underclass (R)
30. Urban Renewal (R)
31. Urbanized Area (R)
32. Zoning Ordinance (R)

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Assignment

Test - Industrialization

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Assignment

Read Chapter 9 on Development in Rubenstein
Read Chapters 24, 25, 26 in De Blij

Write 5 questions from the chapter and answer them in at least 1 paragraph in length.

Each student must chose two countries (please email me your top 3 choices ASAP because no two students will do the same countries) to research a Development Profile that includes all of the following:
Population figures
Absolute Location
capital city
literacy rate
type of government
age of suffrage
GDP
unemployment rate
Primary Sector activities
Secondary Sector activities -
Tertiary Sector activities - number of airports, miles (or km) of roads and railways, telephones in use

Include at least one website reference.

Here is the list of countries assigned:
Brandon Navalta - Armenia
Manupriya Bhardwaj - Canada
Sidney Tran - Vietnam
Lakshmy Mehra - Afghanistan
Cindy Lu - South Korea
Sagar Chopra - India
Mir Raza - U.S.A
Marcus Solon - China
Waley Chan - Japan
Michael Miller - Italy
Tim Cho - Germany
Rose Dela Cruz - Portugal
Omaid - Brazil
Tae - Mexico
Praw Rochananak - Thailand
Hermain Mariano - Philippines
Steven Bustillos - Russia
Farrell - Australia
Ben - Mongolia
Tooba - New Zeland
Yessenia - England
Kleber - Argentiana
Syeda - Pakistan
Cristofer - Switzerland
Purabjot - Ireland
Kyle - Indonesia
Kevin - Egypt
Jasmine - Scotland
Nick - Sweden
Anam - Spain
Devin - France
George - Denmark
Holly - Cambodia
Mohammed - Iran
Dustin - Wales

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Assignment

Read Chapter 9 on Development in Rubenstein
Read Chapters 24, 25, 26 in De Blij

Write out the following Key Terms:

1. Agglomeration (D)
2. Comparative Advantage (D)
3. Core-Periphery Model (D)
4. Dependency Theory (D)
5. Developed Country (D)
6. Developing Country (D)
7. Distance Decay (D)
8. Friction of Distance (D)
9. GDP (Gross Domestic Product) (R)
10. Gender Empowerment Index (GEM) (R)
11. GNP (Gross National Product) (D)
12. Human Development Index (HDI) (R)
13. Infrastructure (D)
14. LCD (Less Developed Country) (R)
15. Least Cost Theory (D)
16. Liberal Model (D)
17. Literacy Rate (R)
18. Maquiladora (D)
19. MDC (More Developed Country) (R)
20. Modernization Model (D)
21. NAFTA (D)
22. Neo-colonialism (D)
23. Peripheral Region (D)
24. Raw Materials (D)
25. Semi-Peripheral Region (D)
26. Special Economic Zone (D)
27. Structuralist Model (D)
28. Substitution Principles (D)
29. Variable Cost (D)
30. World Systems Theory (D)

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Assignment

Agriculture Unit!!!!!!! Sow those seeds!

Read chapter 10!!!!!!! in Rubenstein
Read chapters 18, 19, 20!!!!!! in de Blij

Write 5 questions based on the reading from the chapter. Please answer the questions with at least 1 paragraph each.

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Assignment

Agriculture Unit!!!!!!! Sow those seeds!

Read chapter 10!!!!!!! in Rubenstein
Read chapters 18, 19, 20!!!!!! in de Blij

Complete the following vocab terms (write them out by hand. No typing) on note cards.

1. Animal domestication (D)
2. Cadastral system (D)
3. Chaff (R)
4. Desertification (R)
5. First Agricultural Revolution (D)
6. Green Revolution (R)
7. Horticulture (R)
8. Hull (R)
9. Long-lot survey (D)
10. Luxury crops (D)
11. Maladaptive diffusion (D)
12. Metallurgy (D)
13. Milkshed (R)
14. Nucleated settlement (D)
15. Organic agriculture (D)
16. Paddy (R)
17. Pastoral nomadism (R)
18. Pasture (R)
19. Primogeniture (D)
20. Reaper (R)
21. Rectangular land survey (D)
22. Ridge tillage (R)
23. Sawah (R)
24. Second Agricultural Revolution (D)
25. Spring wheat (R)
26. Swidden (R)
27. Third Agricultural Revolution (D)
28. Thresh (R)
29. Township-and-range system (D)
30. Wattle (D)
31. Wet rice (R)
32. Winnow (R)
33. Winter wheat (R)

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Next Test - Political Geography

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Assignment

Please read chapter 8 (pages 260-295) in Rubenstein and Chapters 14, 15, 16, 17 (pages 199-268) in de Blij

Please write 5 original questions based on the reading in the chapter and answer your own questions in at least a paragraph in length.

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Assignment

Please read chapter 8 (pages 260-295) in Rubenstein and Chapters 14, 15, 16, 17 (pages 199-268) in de Blij

Complete the following terms: (the terms with an * - Please give a country or place example for each of these - 5 total)

1. Boundary (R)
2. Centrifugal Force (D)
3. Centripetal Force (D)
4. City-state * (R)
5. Colonialism (R)
6. Colony (R)
7. Devolution (D)
8. Enclave (D)
9. Ethnonationalism (D)
10. European Union (D)
11. Exclave (D)
12. Exclusive Economic Zone (D)
13. Federal State (R)
14. Forward Capital* (D)
15. Frontier (R)
16. Geopolitic (D)
17. Gerrymandering (R)
18. Globalization (D)
19. Heartland Theory (D)
20. Imperialism (R)
21. Landlocked State * (R)
22. Law of the Sea (D)
23. Median-Line Principle (D)
24. Microstate * (R)
25. Multicore State * (D)
26. Nation (D)
27. Relict Boundary (D)
28. Rimland (D)
29. Sovereignty (R)
30. State (R)
31. Supranationalism (D)
32. Theocracy (D)
33. Unitary State (R)