geographic literacy – THATCamp Columbus 2010 http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org The Humanities and Technology Camp Thu, 23 Feb 2012 16:48:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 Mapping, Social Networking and the Classroom http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/01/10/mapping-social-networking-and-the-classroom/ http://columbus2010.thatcamp.org/01/10/mapping-social-networking-and-the-classroom/#comments Mon, 11 Jan 2010 00:29:20 +0000 http://thatcamp.clevelandhistory.org/?p=449

In 2006, the National Geographic Education Foundation and Roper Public Affairs published a report on geographic literacy. This report revealed a somewhat disturbing level of geographic literacy among Americans – both children and adults – citing a dramatic lack of understanding of geography, both local and world-wide. Internationally, despite the ongoing wars in the Middle East at the time, the study found that “six in ten (63%) cannot find Iraq on a map of the Middle East.” As a Teaching Assistant as OSU, I’ve seen proof of this study first-hand. In this session, then, I’d like to start a discussion that deals with creative ways for educators to confront – and attempt to solve – this educational deficit. I’d like to look outside the traditional maps used in classrooms, and examine ways to improve geographic awareness that exist outside of the textbook or overhead projector – for this session, the focus would be on popular social networking and media sites.

The majority of the students in our classrooms cannot code, build websites, or hack a computer. For some of them, the basics of Microsoft Office seem unknowable. But many of them know Facebook, MySpace, Twitter or LiveJournal, and understand the basics of Google’s box of tricks. Students who use these social networking tools rarely relate them to their schoolwork, beyond the basics of setting up study groups or complaining about coursework. Instructors interested in drawing these students into geography can, however, use these same social networking sites – often seen as frivolous and useless in the halls of Academia – as tools for the classroom. Many of them, however, use mapping widgets, used to connect users across geographic borders, while others offer real-time map-based posting tools.

For this session, I will present some examples of how mapping is used in popular social networking tools, and would love to hear some of your ideas on the theme!

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