Eastern
College of Arts and
Sciences
NCSS/Social Studies
Education
XI. Matrix
Matrix Item 2.2 Disciplinary Standard: Geography
Teachers who are
licensed to teach geography at all school levels should possess the knowledge,
capabilities, and dispositions to organize and provide instruction at the
appropriate school level for the study of geography.
Indicators of
Capabilities for Teaching Geography
Teachers of geography at all school levels should provide
developmentally appropriate experiences as they guide learners in their
study. They should:
* guide learners in
the use of maps and other geographic representations, tools, and technologies
to acquire, process, and report information from a spatial perspective;
* enable learners to
use mental maps to organize information about people, places, and environments
in a spatial context;
* assist learners to
analyze the spatial information about people, places, and environments on
Earth’s surface;
* help learners to
understand the physical and human characteristics of places;
* assist learners in
developing the concept of regions as a means to interpret Earth’s complexity;
* enable learners to
understand how culture and experience influence people’s perceptions of places
and regions;
* provide learners
opportunities to understand and analyze the physical processes that shape
Earth’s surface;
* challenge learners
to consider the characteristics and spatial distribution of ecosystems on
Earth’s surface;
* guide learners in
exploring the characteristics, distribution, and migration of human populations
on Earth’s surface;
* help learners to
understand and analyze the characteristics, distribution, and complexity of
Earth’s cultural mosaics;
* have learners explore the patterns and networks of economic
interdependence on Earth’s surface;
* enable learners to
describe the processes, patterns, and functions of human settlement;
* challenge learners
to examine how the forces of cooperation and conflict among people influence
the division and control of Earth’s surface;
* help learners see
how human actions modify the physical environment;
* enable learners to
analyze how physical systems affect human systems;
* challenge learners
to examine the changes that occur in the meaning, use, distribution, and
importance of resources;
* help learners to
apply geography to interpret the past and present and to plan for the future;
* enhance learners’
abilities to ask questions and to acquire, organize, and analyze geographic
information so they can answer geographic questions as they engage in the study
of substantive geographic content.
2.2 Geography
The program prepares
Social Studies teachers who possess the knowledge, capabilities and
dispositions to organize and provide instruction at the appropriate school
level for the study of Geography.
2.2.1 Programmatic
Evidence
The Department of Geography and Geology Program Goals for the
Revised Geography Major (Secondary Teacher Certification) are as follows:
1) To provide future
teachers with an understanding of:
a) basic concepts of geography,
including the elements of maps and other forms of geo-information, and their
interpretation;
b) the location of important land
features, bodies of water, and key place locations globally, nationally, and in
the state of
c) the physical and human characteristics
of the world’s major regions, including natural resources, cultural and
historical geographic development patterns, and geo-political elements;
d) the physical and human characteristics of the major regions of
the United States and Michigan, including natural resources, cultural and
historical geographic development patterns, and geo-political elements;
e) the concept of culture and its
effects on the development and human relationship to the physical landscape;
f) major economic activities and
geographic influences on economic development;
g) population distributions, growth
and settlement patterns, and migrations of significance in the past and
present;
h) the structure, function, and
location of urban and rural settlements; and
i) ways by which people have
modified their physical environments over time and the resulting impacts.
2) To offer future teachers a balanced major overviewing the
sub-disciplines of geography and the continuing changes in geographic theory
and practice.
3) To ensure that future teachers have both a
comprehensive knowledge of geography and the sense of geographic inquiry that
enables them to put into perspective for their students world, national, and
state events and technological changes.
All Geography for Secondary Education majors are required to take
the following classes:
1. GEOG 107:
Introduction to Geography
Objectives for this class
include:
1). Students will be able to analyze the spatial information about
people, places, and environments in a spatial context;Students
will be able to describe the physical and human characteristics of places.
2). Students will be able to interpret the past, present and to
plan for the future.
3). Students will be able to ask questions and to acquire,
organize, and analyze geographic information so they can answer geographic
questions as they engage in the study of substantive geographic content.
Students will be able to describe and apply basic geographic concepts.
4). Students will be able to use
maps and other geographic representations, tools, and technologies to acquire,
process, and report information from a spatial perspective.
5). Students will be able to use Geographic Information Systems
(GIS).
6). Students will be able to describe and analyze the physical
processes that shape the earth’s surface;
i. Geologic time
ii. Movements of continents
iii. Earth materials
iv. Tectonic forces
v. Gradational/erosional processes
7). Students will be able to describe how human actions modify the
physical environment.
8). Students will be able to analyze how physical systems affect
human systems.
9). Students will be able to analyze processes that affect weather
and climate.
10). Students will be able to analyze how weather and climate
affect human systems.
11). Physical Geography - Environmental Geography.
12). Students will be able to describe the characteristics and
spatial distribution of ecosystems on the earth’s surface.
13). Students will be able to describe how human interactions
modify the environment.
14). Students will be able to
examine the changes that occur in the meaning, use, distribution, and
importance of resources.
15). Students will be able to
describe the characteristics, distribution, and migration of human population
on the earth’s surface and describe the processes, patterns, and functions of
human settlement.
16). Students will be able to describe and analyze the
characteristics, distribution, and complexity of the earth’s cultural mosaics;
17). Students will be able to describe how culture and experience
influence people’s perceptions of places and regions.
18). Students will be able to use mental maps to organize
information about people, places, and environments in a spatial context.
19). Students will be able to describe and analyze world political
systems and how forces of cooperation and
conflict among people influence political division and control.
20). Students will be able to describe world economic systems;
21). Students will be able to describe the patterns and networks
of economic interdependence on the earth’s surface and the changes that occur
in the meaning, use, distribution, and importance of resources.
22). Students will be able to describe and analyze urban
settlement patterns on the earth’s surface and the processes, patterns, and
functions of human settlement
23). Students will be able to describe and analyze the
characteristics, distribution, and complexity of the earth’s urban settlements.
24). Students will be able to apply the concept of regions as a
means to interpret the earth’s complexity.
2. GESC 108: Earth
Science, has the following common objectives:
A primary goal of the course is for students to gain an
understanding of the basic processes that operate on and within the earth and
how to use this information in day to day decisions. Sub-goals of
this primary goal include:
1). Students will be able to describe and analyze the physical
processes that shape the earth’s surface;
2). Students will be able to describe and analyze the physical
characteristics of places;
3). Students will be able to describe and analyze how physical
systems affect human systems;
4). Students will be able to describe and analyze processes that
affect weather and climate;
5). Students will be able to describe and analyze how weather and
climate affect human systems;
6). Students will be able to describe and analyze the
characteristics and spatial distribution of ecosystems on the earth’s surface;
7). Students will be able to describe and analyze how human
interactions modify the environment;
8). Students will be able to describe and analyze the changes that
occur in the meaning, use, distribution, and importance of resources.
9). A secondary goal is to develop an in depth understanding of
the method of scientific inquiry so that these bias-reducing skills can be
effectively utilized to solve a variety of daily decisions throughout the rest
of the students' lives.
3. GEOG 110: World
Regions, has the following outcomes/objectives are sought for each of the world realms specified in
the course outline below:
1). Students will be able to describe and analyze the concepts of
realms and regions as means to geographically interpret the earth's complexity.
2). Students will be able to describe and analyze how physical
systems affect human systems.
3). Students will be able to describe and analyze the spatial
information about people, places, and environments around the world.
4). Students will be able to describe and analyze the physical and
human characteristics of places.
5). Students will be able to describe and analyze how culture and
experience influence people's perceptions of places and regions.
6). Students will be able to describe and analyze the
characteristics, distribution, and complexity of global cultural mosaics.
7). Students will be able to describe and analyze patterns and
networks of economic interdependence on Earth's surface.
8). Students will be able to describe and analyze how the forces
of cooperation and conflict among people influence the division and control of
the earth's surface.
9). Students will be able to describe and analyze how geography
can be used to interpret the past and present and to plan for the future.
Regions studied include:
4. GEOG 313: Geography
of
1). Students will be able to describe how geography is at the
intersection of man, land and time (or the meeting of nature and human
prehistory/history).
2). Students will be able to describe
3). Students will be able to describe how
4). Students will be able to apply geographical tools such as
maps, county/regional population censuses and climate/hydrogeological data,
which provide methods to locating, regionalizing and comprehending spatial
patterns of Michigan's physical and human environment.
5). Students will be able to apply mapwork and data analysis that
the geographical patterns of
6). Students will be able to describe basic geographical ideas
such as "push-pull factors, cultural diffusion, sequent occupance" as
applicable to the study of
7). Students will be able to apply their knowledge to offering
their own course for the general education of students, many of which will live
in the state.
5. GEOG 320: the
Geography of the
1). Students will be able to define regions as a means to
interpret the complexity of the
2). Students will be able to describe the various regions of the
3). Students will be able to describe and analyze the physical and
human characteristics of the regions of the
4). Students will be able to describe and analyze the concept of
site and situation in relation to human settlement, especially cities with
their characteristics, distribution, and complexity.
5). Students will be able to describe and analyze the economic,
political, and social processes in relation to physiography, thereby enabling
learners to analyze how physical systems affect human systems.
6). Students will be able to describe and analyze how regions
compare and contrast with other regions, and with the
6. In HIST 481, all
students receive instruction, resources and models of geography teaching, 7-12.
2.2.2 Test Evidence
Classes taken:
The three members of the Winter 2003
student teaching cohort scored as follows in their courses:
|
Geography |
Student 1 |
Student 2 |
Student 3 |
|
GEO 235 |
A-, |
A |
A |
|
Geo 110 |
B- |
A |
A |
|
Upper level electives |
|
|
|
|
GESC 475 |
B+ |
|
|
|
GESC 227 |
C+ |
|
|
|
GEOG 107 |
B- |
C+ |
|
|
GHPR 335 |
B |
|
|
|
GEOG 361 |
A- |
A |
A |
|
GEOG 360 |
|
A |
|
|
GEOG 332 |
A |
|
A |
|
GEOG 314 |
|
|
A |
|
GEOG 320 |
A- |
B+ |
|
|
GESC 108 |
C+ |
B- |
A |
|
GESC 320 |
C |
|
|
|
GEOG 111 |
A |
|
A- |
|
GEOG 499 |
|
A |
|
|
GESC 305 |
|
C |
B+ |
|
GESC 324 |
|
B |
A- |
|
GEOG 303 |
|
|
A- |
Geography:
Of the three graduates with a major in Geography for Secondary Education
in 2002-3, one student took the Geography MTTC, and received a score of 274.
The passing score for the MTTC is 220. The pass rate for majors is therefore
100%, while the state pass rate is currently 55%.
MTTC Objectives for
each subject test are listed in the
Appendix.
2.2.3 Performance
Evidence
Geography Majors scored as follows in
|
Score |
# of Students |
|
5 |
2 |
|
4 |
1 |
|
3 |
0 |
|
2 |
0 |
|
1 |
0 |
|
NA |
0 |