INSIDE general information syllabus of modules and topics
requirements class schedule
course policies
for the following Geography 1, sections of 2S AY 20L2-20L3
with David Garcia WFR WFU layout and some photos by David Garcia.2012.
GENERAL INFORMATION course designation course title course credit
THE UP DEPARTMENT OF GEOGRAPHY
Geography 1 Places & Landscapes in a Changing World 3 units
instructor
David f onathan C. Garcia
email phone mobile consultation
davi dj onathan garcia@yahoo.com
981 8500loc.241,6 091.7 81.0 3524
by appointment in CSSP Faculty Center Room 416 during Mondays to Fridays, 1 to 4 pm
facebook group name
Geography One
Established in 1-983, the Department of Geography specializes in teaching, research, and extension activities oriented towards the propagation and application of geographic knowledge in various scales and sectors in the Philippines and abroad. Some of the
particular strengths
of the department are in mapping, field work, and fieldbased teaching. For more information, visit geog.upd.edu.ph
COURSE GOALS
LEARNING GOALS
Critically understand basic geographical concepts.
cognitive geographical ideas, methods, critiques, and applications
Understand the interconnections ofpeople, places, and landscapes in a changing world to develop critical perspectives on global, geographical issues affecting both the country and the rest
ofthe world.
psychomotor field and map skills.
Appreciate the relevance and application ofgeographic knowledge in
affective
our everydaylives.
appreciation ofpeoples, spaces, places, landscapes and uses of geography
Apply this course's primary question:
"why and how the what is where?"
MODULES AND TOPTCS MODULE I GEOGRAPHY AS A DISCIPLINE In this module, you shall be acquainted
MODULE 2 MAPS
lntroducing Geography
Maps have been the quintessential human expression of our ever expanding world. Instead of memorizing capitals and country names, we will focus on the reasons why maps have been useful both for noble and sinister ends in the following topics:
Paradigms and Histories of Geography Fields and Organizations of Geography B as ic Ge o gr aphi cal Co n cepts Research Methods in Geography
Maps Map Design Map Interpretation
with the proper fundamental concepts and skills for geographical thinking. Topics in this module are:
Critical Cartography
4
MODULE 3
MODULE
SPACES
CASES
In the course of human existence, we have made sense and use of our world through a long list of concepts:
At this stage of the semester, the students will be tasked to present case studies using the previous topics about pertinent phenomena such as those listed below.
space, place, landscape, earth, world nafu)re, culture, population, economy,
migration
territory, settlemenl land, disaster, and
modernization
more.
industrialization
'Nuffsaid.
globalization urbanization Implications about the Philippines abouth such phenomena shall likewise be sought.
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You politely answer the first question with ,"geography is the study of spaces" and slam the second with "l don't know the capital of Kazakhstan, but I know very well why that nation-state was created." Now, you're the dance floor royalty.
Trivias and capitals are for quiz bees. Heck, the real geography is why and how the what is where!
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K-t' storages of vast amounts of information.
Their power lies in their function of showing things as well as hiding things. i.....
Given such, you will be able to ctiticize and apppgciate maps frqm your lqeal bookstore, favorite TV sefies, news prograrn, aiid nor.als map, which'rvill not contain more than 3 places at any episode.
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PREVIEW: PLACE Spaces plus meaning equals places. To un-
derstand the heart ofthe geographical field of knowledge, you have to know what matters most to people about a particular location. Meanings function to enrich the experience of going to and living in places. Moreover, the same place may possess different meanings to different people; meanings contribute to human behavior.
Your task is to uncover them.
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PREVIEW: ECONOMY Economy is a geographical thing. There are "national economies", "regional economies", and "local economies." Locationbased thinking, when it comes to the economy, is essential. In the advent of globalization, where things are claimed to be equal and where transportation is hasty, we have to be careful not to build a store in the middle of a farm and wish to be anywhere in a snap.
Truth is, places are more unequal and there is a divide between a fast world and a slowworld. Conventional economic perspectives won't do to solve much of our economic woes. Hence, we have to talk about economic things that the supply-and-demand curve and other charts cannot answer.
MODULES AND TOPICS: ASSIGNED READINGS PER TOPIC MODULE/TOPTC
ASSIGNED READING
Geography as a Discipline
Arild Holt-fensen, chapter
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Matthews and Herbert, chapters 1,,2,3,5 Gomez and fones III, chapter 2 Pattison, Robinson, Clifford et. al Maps
Gomez and fones III, chap 16 Crampton, chap 1, Aber et. al chaps 1, 10
Monmonier, Tlmer Space Place
Landscape
Massey, Tuan, Clifford et. al Tuan, Cresswell, Clifford et. al Kno& et. al, chap 6, Clifford, et. al Gomez and fones III, chap 14,
Wylie, Meinig Earth
Hamblin and Christiansen, chaps Gregory, chap 3, Kenton
World
Knox, chap 3, Kenton Knox, chap 4, Castree, Ginn and Demeritt, Tadaki, et. al, Smith
Nature
Culture Population Economy
Territory Settlement Land
Disaster
1,
&2
Knox, chap 5, Tadaki, et. al, Mitchell Knox, chap 3 Knox, chap 7 Knox, chap 9, Dodds, Anderson, Sempa Knox, chap 1,0,1,1,, Hubbard, Marcotullio and Boyle Serote chap 1, Tolstoy Wisner chap 3
MODULES AND TOPICS: BIBLIOGRAPHY BOOKS, CHAPTERS, JOURNALS, AND OTHER WORKS The Geography 1 class utilizes diversified sources ofknowledge to enhance the critical thinking ofthe students. Chapters and portions for serious and leisurely reading are taken from the books and sources below. Anderson. Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread ofNationalism. Ve6o. 2006. Castree, Noel. Nature. Roudedge. 2005.
Clifford, Nicholas, et. al. Key Concepts in Geography. Sage. 2008. Crampton, Jeremy. Mapping: A Critical Introduction to Cartography and GIS. Wiley-Blackwell. 2010. Cresswell, Tim. Place: Encounterign Geography as Philosophy. Geography. 2008. Dodds, Klaus. Geopolitics: A
VeryShort Introduction. Oxford. 2007.
Ginn, Franklin and David Demeritt. Nature: A Contested Concepl Sage. 2009 Gomez, Basil and John Paul Jones II. Research Methods in Geography. Wiley-Blackwell. 2010.
Hamblin, W. Kenneth and Eric Christiansen. Earth's Dynamic Systems. Prentice Hall. 2003. Holt-Jensen,
Arild. Geeography: Historyand Concepts.
Sage.
2009.
Hubbard, Phil. Ciry. Roudedge. 2006. Kenton, Edna. The Book ofEarths. 1928.
I(no!
Paul, Sallie Marston, andAlan Nash. Human Geography: Places and Regions in Global
Contexl Prentice Hall. 2004.
Lillesand, Thomas and Ralph Kiefer. Remote Sensing and Image Interpretation. John Wiley & Sons. 1987. Marcotullio, Peter and Grant Boyle. Defining an Ecosystem Approach to Urban Management and Policy Development. UNU. 2003. Massey, Doreen. For Space. Sage. 2005.
Matthews, fohn and David Herbert. Geography: AVeryShort Introduction. Oford. 2008. Mayhew, Susan. Dictionary of Geography. Oxford. 2004. Meinig, D.W. The Beholding Eye: Ten Versions ofthe Same Scene. n.d. Mitchell, Don. There's No Such Thing as Culture: Towards a Reconceptualization ofthe ldea ofCulture in Geography. 1995. Monmonier, Mark. Howto Lie with Maps. UniversityofChicago. 1991. Pattisoq William. The Four Traditions ofGeography. loumal of Geography. National Council for Geographic Education. 1964. Robinson,
J.
Iâ‚Źwis. A New Look at the Four Traditions of Geography. lournal of Geo graphy- 1972-
Sempa, Francis. Geopolitics: From the Cold Serote, Ernesto. Properry, Patrimony, and
Warto the 21st Century. Transaction. 2002.
Teritory: Foundations ofLand
Use Planning in the Philippines. SURP.2004.
Tadaki, Marc, et. al. Nature, Culture, and the Work ofPhysical Geography. Wiley. 2012. Tolstoy, Leo. How Much Land Does a Man Need. 1886. Tuan, Yi-Fu. Space and Place. The Perepective of Experience.
Unive6iry ofMinnesota. 2001.
Wisner, Ben, eL al. The Roudedge Handbook of Hazards and Disaster Risk Reduction. Roudedge. 2012. Wylie, John. Landscape. Roudedge. 2007. and a lot more!
REQUIREMENTS SUMMARY
GRADE CONVERSION
requirement count credit
points 95-100 90-94 86-89 82-85
equivalent
7A-Ar
2.00 2.25 2.50 2.75 3.00 4.00 5.00
exams
5
70o/o
plates case study
15
15o/o
T
I0
project
T
5o/o
o/o
Below is a graphical representation
70%
EXAMS
74-77 70-73 65-69 60-64 51-59 oo_so
1.00
r.25 1.50
r.75
rs% PLATE'
I
lroncAsEsruDY | ,r" r*or=., HOW IS MY FINAL GRADE CALCULATED? exams plates
case
study
project
are hard and unforgiving. Read, discuss in class, review. You should study well. are the laboratory activities ofthe class. Consistent reading, review, class participation and attendance in class will give you easier times in accom plishing the plates. Also, answering plates is a form of review for the exam. The plates are compiled in a work book is a group effort with two outputs: report and a research paper.
After the individual requirements are graded, the scores fin percentagesJ are entered into an electronic spreadsheet. The percentages are weighted and summarized thereafter. An example is below.
exams plates
90o/o x
70 = x 15 = case study 80%o x 10 = project9oo/oX5=4.5 looo/o
63 15 8
90.5 points On the conversion scale, 9O.5 is 7.25
IS THE FIELD TRIP
REOUIRED? The definite answer is no.
But you are highly encouraged to join. During the field trip, mapping and scoping activities shall be done individually and in groups for you to apply the concepts in the classroom. Those who will join will be given an incentive grade, on top oftheir final grade. This semester, the field trip shall be in the Ilocos Region.
is still a secret. :l
SCHEDULE NOVEMBER
FEBRUARY
9 L4 L6 2L 23 2A 30
1 World 6 Nature 8 Culture 13 Population 15 Economy 20 Territory 22 Settlement 26 Deadline for dropping 27 Land
syllabus IntroducingGeography Paradigms and Histories ofGeography Fields and Organizations of Geography Basic Geographical Concepts Research Methods in Geography No class: Bonifacio Day
WHAT DO I DO BEFORE A CLASS MEETING? The primary thing to is
read the readings.
subjects
DECEMBER
5 firstexam 7 Maps L2 Map Design L4 No class: Lantern
MARCH Parade
JANUARY 9 LL L6 18 23 25 26 30
Map Interpretation
CriticalCartography second exam Space
1 Disaster 6 Case Study 1 8 Case Study 2 L2 Deadline for filing LOA 13 Case Study 3 15 Case Study4 20 third exam 22 Last day for graduating deficiencies
27
lastdayofclass class
Place Landscape
Midsemester Earth
During class, the instructor will take less time defining and more time integrating sources from different books as well from his personal experiences.
party
APRIL
L6
Deadline for Grades
Therefore, construct your intellectual baseline by reading well before class time to give chance to everyone to critically reflect on concepts.
will spend less time memorizing and more time debating, then. We
students to clear
COURSE POLICIES ONE
stx
The instructor does not acceptlate submissions. Submissions are
It is your responsibility to make sure thatyour requirements are re-
submitted/presented
during class time on the set deadline. Ifa re-
YOU'RE SET!
ceived bythe instructor and thatyour record oflates and absences is
quirement is not submitted in class on the set deadline, the grade for
corect. It is also your responsibility to communicate with your group-
that requirement is zero. Exams are taken only at the set dates.
mates regarding your group outputs.
TWO
SEVEN
Make-up exams are given only under the following circumstances:
Do not
Always remember the contents of these handbook. Implement them and talk to your instructor often.
textthe instructor after
B
medical emergency. Please bring a note from a physician.
mightbe with his family or enjolng
b. A
family emergenry. Please bring a funeral or wedding announce-
quiries will
ment, or other piece ofdocumentation that explains the situation. c.
Conflictwith
a
universiry-sponsored event. Please ask a coach or an
be
Own this course! Know why and how the what is where!
pm and during non-class days. He
a. A
a
holiday, too. Only sensible in-
entertained. This is the format foryour text and
online messages: full name, subject, section, class schedule, statement.
Breakthis rule only in really exceptional circumstances.
adviser to write an excuse letter to explain the absence. d.
Conflictwith
a
religious observance. Please inform the instructor
well in advance. e.
An unexpected and unwanted or exceptionallyweird circumstance
(such as being involved in a road accident). Bring a copy
EIGHT
ooPs!
As much as possible, let us do our correspondences in ourYahoo and
ofthe police
Facebookgroup pages. Text a classmate first. Do not post questions on the instructor's Facebookaccountwall.
PM him instead. He's always
Provide one that is like the example below. The photograph
report.
online.
NINE
should be a recent
THREE
Mobile phones should be in silent mode. Ifyou have to receive a call or
The size of the index card should
Avoid being late foryou to avoid missing plates and group activities.
text anyone, you may do it outside the classroom.
be3x5inches.
FOUR
Enjoy the experience of taking Geog
Three lates is one absence. More than six unexcused absences means a
it shall be worthwhile.
TEN grade of5. More than six excused absences means dropping the course. No absence is a .25 upward step for your final grade.
FIVE Plagiarism is zero. Cheating is five.
Mt
won't be fun all the time but
W
1,
x
1,
picture.