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Geography of US/Canada

Geography 320
Summer 2001

Section ID 129711

Tentative Course Schedule
Course syllabus can change over the semester. It is suggested to look at it on the web caucus periodically,
though changes will be mentioned in class.

General Class Information
Your Instructor:
Prof. Chris Mayda, Assistant Professor of Geography

Where to find her:
In person: Strong 217; by phone 734 487-7856; by email: cmayda@online.emich.edu

Office Hours: M,T, TH 12-1 or by appointment

Required Text: Regional Geography of the United States and Canada; Tom L. McKnight. Third Edition

Prerequisite: GEOG 110 or GESC 108

Web Caucus
Course Caucus page: Geog 320 Mayda Summer 01
All students must go on line to participate with Web Caucus. Those not on the web caucus with their email
address available will have their grade penalized. Lecture notes are available on web caucus but are not
intended to replace lecture attendance. You are instructed to check web caucus regularly. Assignments
announcements and any important communication will be found on web caucus. It is your responsibility
to check web caucus at least weekly, or when classes might be altered.

Instructions for getting on the Caucus begin at the school's home page:
http://www.emich.edu
From there go to "Library and Computing" if you have an email account.
If you do not have an email account get one immediately. It takes at least a day to be able to access the web
after registering for an email account.
Once at "Library and Computing" page, go to the bottom where it will say "EMU Web Caucus" click on it.
Once in Web Caucus you must register the first time. Takes a day to be accepted.
Once in the Caucus go to Geog 320, Mayda and enter into the specific class and assignments.
The syllabus will be part of the pages offered in case you should lose yours.

Course Objectives
This class is a regional treatment of the physiography and demography of North America. At the end of this
course students should be able to connect the physical and human regional systems of North America as
well as defining the various regions and their cultural realms along with their loyalties, interests and plans
for the future. This will include but not be limited to:

  • Describe how physical processes affect different regions of the US and Canada
  • Identifying the physical and human factors that constitute a region
  • Explain how changing conditions can result in a region taking on a new structure
  • Explain why regions once characterized by one set of criteria may be defined by a different set of criteria today.
  • Identify the differences among formal, functional, and perceptual regions
  • Explain how functional regions are held together
  • Identify the ways in which the concept of a region can be used to simplify the complexity of Earth's space
  • Identify human and physical changes in regions and explain the factors that contribute to those changes
  • Explain the different ways in which regional systems are structured
  • ; Interpret the connections within and among the parts of a regional system
  • Use regions to analyze geographic issues and answer geographic questions
  • Explain why places and regions are important to individual human identity and as symbols for unifying or
    fragmenting society
  • Explain how individuals view spaces and regions on the basis of their stage of life, sex, social class, ethnicity,
    values and belief systems
  • ; Analyze the ways in which people's changing views of places and regions reflect cultural change
  • Predict trends in the spatial distribution of population in response to environmental, sociocultural or economic
    conditions and changes
  • Explain economic, political and social factors contributing to human migration

    Evaluate the impact of human migration on physical and human systems

    • Analyze how cultures influence the characteristics of regions
    • Explain how cultural features often define regions

    Analyze the relationships between various settlement patterns, their associated economic activities and relative
    land values;

    Analyze the internal structure, shape and functions of cities

    • The role of technology in the capacity of the physical environment to accommodate human modification
    • Analyze the relationships between the spatial distribution of settlement and resources
    • Explain how the processes of spatial change have affected history
    • Illustrate how technology has enabled people to increase their control over nature and how that has changed
      land-use patterns

    Class Lectures
    The basis of class will be lectures and discussion with PowerPoint presentations (available on web) to provide extra
    structure but not intended to provide a "distant learning" experience (not a justification for missing class). In fact
    missing classroom time will harm ones grade in that group presentations will depend on good attendance. The web
    is an aid to augment your class lectures and organize study. You are responsible for material presented in lectures,
    readings and presentations.

    Keeping current with reading assignments will allow enlightened classroom discussions, and be the cornerstone to
    good grades. By reading at the appropriate time your comprehension will increase. First read, then listen to the lecture
    and participate in discussions, and then reread the text for the best grades. Classroom attendance also helps preparation
    for exams.

    Videos
    Movies or videos will be shown occasionally in class. You are to take notes on them for testing and quizzes. You may
    be given a sheet of questions to be answered while watching movies or videos. They maybe turned in for an extra credit grade.

    Class requirements and Grading

    Your course grade will be based on:

    • 4 exams and a final
    • each exam worth 15%
    • Final worth 20% final will cover both the last regional areas plus a cumulative section
    • 10% of grade based on two reports due during class.
    • 10% of grade based on clas project Detroit: Windsor
    • Makeup exams or missed or late assignments will only be offered if it is discussed in advance.
    • Academic dishonesty (as cheating or plagiarism) will not be tolerated and will be heavily penalized.


    Exams and final will be multiple choice, short answer and matching questions. There will be approximately 20-25
    questions per chapter. Question will be drawn largely from lectures but will also have an element from readings.
    Lecture notes will be posted on web caucus.

    Grading criteria for written papers available on web caucus

    Grades
    A 90-100
    B 80-89
    C 70-79
    D 60-69
    F less than 60

    Class Policies
    Policy regarding missed work:
    You are responsible for all material covered in class, and all announcements made in class. Absence from class
    does not relieve you of this responsibility. Please get the telephone number or email address of at least 2 other students
    so that you can call them to find out what you missed. If you miss a class, it is your responsibility to contact your
    classmates and to use the computer to get the lecture notes. The instructor does NOT give lecture notes to students
    who miss class or who are unable to keep up with the class. See web caucus for this.

    Attendance policy:
    Students are expected to attend all scheduled classes and are responsible for all work missed when absent. Failure to
    attend class could have a detrimental result on the student's grade. Should a student wish to withdraw from the course,
    it is his or her responsibility to initiate the request.

    Policy regarding late assignments
    Each assignment has a specific due date. You will be told this date when the assignment is given. The assignment will
    be due on thedate specified. Late assignments will lose points (10% off for each day late). NO ASSIGNMENTS
    WILL BE ACCEPTED AFTER THEY ARE TWO WEEKS LATE.

    Questions in class
    Please feel free to ask questions of the instructor at any time, either in class, during office hours, or by email.
    Prolonged questions should be asked during the hour before class (office hour) and not immediately before class.
    As you review your notes from each class, make a list of any questions you have on material presented or in the
    textbook. At the beginning of each class you will have an opportunity to ask questions. If questions become excessive
    during a lecture, such that we are unable to stay on schedule, I may have to ask that you hold them until outside of class.

    Behavior Expectations

    • Students are expected to maintain adult behavior at all times. Be punctual. I expect you to be prepared for class,
      attend class regularly,arrive on time and stay for the entire class. I will do the same. If you must leave early, it is
      courteous to inform the instructor in advance.
    • Talking or any other behavior that disrupts the lecture, or disturbs other students, or distracts the instructor
      (talking, whispering, note passing….) may result in your being asked to stop the distracting behavior, to change
      your seat or to leave the room. Continued disruption will not be tolerated and you may be asked to leave the class.
    • It is expected that the class will read the basic subject material before classroom meetings, so in class discussions
      can be facilitated. This requires a commitment and a degree of personal motivation by the students to engage on
      the course material throughout thesemester. The key words, concepts and outline provided on the net will help
      with your reading preparation for class meetings.


    Policy on Academic Dishonesty
    Academic dishonesty (cheating or plagiarism) will not be tolerated.
    Cheating includes, among other things, use of unauthorized paper during a test (no matter the content), copying from
    another student's paper during a test, allowing another student to copy from your paper during a test, copying another's
    homework, paying someone to write a paper or do an assignment for you, buying or downloading a term paper, or leaving
    the room during a test without permission.

    Plagiarism includes copying anything verbatim form the reference without using quotation or referring to the source. It
    also includes turning in another's work as your own (as off the World Wide Web).

    Students are responsible for doing their own work, even if they "work together". If tow papers are turned in that show
    great similarity such that the instructor interprets it as evidence of cheating or plagiarism, both will be penalized.

    First offenses will receive a zero for that exercise. The second offense will result in failing the course.

    Tentative class schedule

    Dates Lecture & Reading Assignments
    July 2 Intro
    North American continent
    Download USA and Canada maps from Caucus page (See web caucus for details of assignment)

    Due: July 5

    July 3 North American continent
    Chapter 1

    Physical Environment
    Chapter 2

    July 5 Population
    Chapter 3
    map assignment due
    July 9 The North American City/ Regions of the US/Canada

    Chapters 4, 5

    Go to http://www.census.gov/
    or to your hometown's (or if none use Ypsilanti) webpage. Using the information found write one page on your hometown. Is it in a metropolitan area? Also comment on the type of information and the image it portrays of that town. Is it an accurate portrayal of the essence of your town? Due July 12
    July 10 The Atlantic Northeast
    Chapter 6
    EXAM 1 (Chapter 1-5) Exam is first hour of class. Class will meet for lecture second hour.
    July 12 French Canada

    Chapter 7
    Hometown paper due
    July 16 Ontario
    Reading reserve
    July 17 Megalopolis
    Chapter 8
    July 19 EXAM 2 (Chapters 6-8 plus Ontario reading) No class after exam
    July 23 Appalachians & Ozarks
    Chapter 9
    July 24 South (piedmont)
    Chapter 10
    July 26 Southeastern coast
    Chapter 11
    July 30 Heartland
    Chapter 12
    July 31 Prairie Canada
    Reading reserve
    EXAM 3 (Chapters 9-12) Class will meet for lecture after exam.
    August 2 Great Plains
    Chapter 13
    August 6 Rocky Mountains
    Chapter 14
    August 7 Southwest/Intermontane
    Chapter 15
    August 9 no class: do class project It does not have to be on this day, but I give you this day to find yourself in our border city. Detroit and winsor are two very different cities though located across the river from one another.

    During the semester find the time to visit each of these two cities and to make notes as to what you see in each. Compare these two cities next to each other but in two different countries. Are they the same or different? You might want to catch part of the celebration of Detroit's tricentennial. Info about the happenings at:

    http://www.detroit300.org/indexj.htm#Festival

    Write a three page report based on the information you find about the two cities. The report should include facts about each city, but also include personal observations.

    Due: August 16

    August 13 California
    Chapter 16
    August 14 Hawaii
    Chapter 17
    EXAM 4 (Prairie reading, Chapters 13-16) Class wil meet for lecture after exam
    August 16 Pacific Northwest
    Chapter 18BC/ Alaska/Boreal forest
    Chapter 19,20
    Detroit paper due
    August 20 Review
    August 21 Final Final (Chapters 19, 20 plus comprehensive)

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