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Nov 27, 2024
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GEO 226W - Geography of United States and CanadaCredits: 3 Instructional Contact Hours: 3
Examines the physical, environmental and cultural patterns, and economic development of the United States and Canada. An optional field trip may be included.
Prerequisite(s): READING LEVEL 2, WRITING LEVEL 2, and MATH LEVEL 2 Corequisite(s): None Lecture Hours: 45 Lab Hours: 0 Meets MTA Requirement: Social Science Pass/NoCredit: Yes
Outcomes and Objectives
- Utilize basic geographic concepts.
- Investigate the approaches, methods, tools, and vocabulary of regional and thematic geography.
- Apply geographic concepts of space, place, region, human-environment interaction, and scale.
- Demonstrate an understanding of how spatial variation, patterns, and distributions are represented on a map.
- Apply knowledge of landforms and human activities to distinguish landscapes from one another.
- Synthesize information from multiple sources presented in various formats to answer geographic questions.
- Use written, verbal and visual responses to address geographic problems.
- Identify regions within the United States and Canada.
- Interpret a map of North America using basic map reading skills.
- Identify regional divisions within Canada and the United States.
- Characterize variations within and between the vernacular regions of the United States and Canada.
- Describe interactions with Mexico that have impacted the United States and Canada.
- Explain the physical geography of the United States and Canada.
- Describe the geological factors that have shaped the physical geography of this region.
- Describe the climatological factors that have shaped the physical geography of this region.
- Describe the biogeographical factors that have shaped the physical geography of this region.
- Explain how characteristics of the physical landscape have shaped land use.
- Discuss how environmental perception throughout history influenced settlement and land use.
- Discuss how natural resources have influenced the economies of these regions.
- Compare the physical landscape of the US with Canada.
- Analyze the ethno-cultural geography of the United States and Canada.
- Describe the pre-contact physical and cultural landscape.
- Analyze how the culture of European colonizers shaped settlements.
- Explain major migrations.
- Summarize the factors that have influenced the movement of people.
- Discuss the concepts of cultural diversity and cultural mosaic as they apply to this region.
- Analyze patterns of religion, language, identity, folk and popular culture in these regions.
- Compare population patterns using the demographic transition model and/or human development index.
- Analyze the socio-economic geography of the United States and Canada.
- Discuss urbanization in the context of this region, including the East coast megalopolis.
- Compare urban and rural patterns of development in this region.
- Discuss industrialization in the context of this region, including the manufacturing core.
- Discuss concepts of economic sectors in the context of this region.
- Discuss transportation and mobility in the context of this region.
- Summarize patterns of consumption and consumerism in this region.
- Analyze the role of the economies United States and Canada within the global economy.
- Contrast the United States and Canada's political, social, and economic systems over time.
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