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Avinoam Meir – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2025
Separation between human, physical, and GIS geographies is risky to geography's disciplinary survival. How can they be bridged through teaching in higher education? I dwell first upon the separation as rooted in the emergence of modern science and geography, the culture-nature binary, Kant's classification of knowledge, and positivistic science.…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Undergraduate Students, Foreign Countries, Ethnic Groups
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Sharp, Emma L.; Fagan, Joseph; Kah, Melanie; McEntee, Marie; Salmond, Jennifer – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2021
"Wicked problems" are complex to understand and challenging to teach. Our experience of teaching about environmental concerns in Aotearoa New Zealand suggests how these concepts are taught is more important for student learning than the nature of wicked problems themselves. By offering opportunities for students to co-develop their own…
Descriptors: World Problems, Concept Teaching, Environmental Education, Geography Instruction
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Duhn, Iris – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2012
Working with an understanding of assemblage as the ad hoc groupings of vibrant materials and elements, this article argues that conceptualizing place as an assemblage opens possibilities for bridging the gap between subjects and objects that continue to structure pedagogy. Considering "place" as an assemblage of humans and their multiple…
Descriptors: Place Based Education, Global Approach, Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education
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Hope, Max – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2009
Human geography fieldwork is important. Research has shown that when students "see it for themselves" their enjoyment and understanding is enhanced. In addition it helps develop subject-specific and transferable skills, promotes 'active learning' and links theory to "real world" examples in a "spiral of learning".…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Human Geography, Field Experience Programs, Field Instruction
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Nairn, Karen – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2005
Many fieldtrips are designed so that students might have direct experience of "the landscape" and/or "the people". But as Scott (1992) warns, experience of "the real world" is never transparent and unmediated. It is with this central idea in mind that the author (re)examines the epistemology of two human geography…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Epistemology, Geography Instruction, Human Geography
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Sterland, Sam; Bellamy, John; Escott, Phillip; Castle, Keith – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2006
This article highlights the importance of considering the flow of newcomers into church life and the inadequacy of relying solely upon changes in numbers of attenders in assessing the effectiveness of churches. Drawing upon data collected in four countries, Australia, England, New Zealand and the United States of America, this article looks at the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Churches, Recruitment, Socialization
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Holloway, Sarah L.; Valentine, Gill – Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research, 2000
Explores the ways British and New Zealand children imagined each other's environments and cultures. Illustrates the sources and importance of stereotypical understandings of landscape, people, and patterns of daily life in other nations, and the ways these may be contested through Internet contact. (JPB)
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Computer Mediated Communication, Computers, Cultural Differences
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Lang, Anna J. – Journal of Geography, 1979
Discusses systematics, ecology, and distribution of New Zealand's moas (flightless birds). Presents two theories of extinction: environmental catastrophe and human impact. Concludes that some moa species survived the Pleistocene epoch and primitive man completed the extinction process. (CK)
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Anthropology, Archaeology, Area Studies
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Bedford, Richard – New Zealand Journal of Geography, 1996
Provides an overview of recent New Zealand immigration policy including information suitable for inclusion in lesson plans and units of study. Discusses accessing and using population, migration, and immigration data and addresses possible problems and deficiencies. Includes statistical and graphic analysis of data. (MJP)
Descriptors: Area Studies, Content Analysis, Foreign Countries, Geographic Distribution
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Conradson, Vicki – New Zealand Journal of Geography, 1996
Presents the results of an undergraduate research project using geographic concepts and terminology to document the public perception of crime in a small New Zealand town. Original data were culled from a questionnaire which addressed such issues as direct victimization, fear of crime, and behavior restrictions and adaptation. (MJP)
Descriptors: Crime, Fear, Foreign Countries, Geography
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Murray, Ian – New Zealand Journal of Geography, 1996
Suggests some approaches to meeting the requirements for study of "cultural process" in geography in New Zealand. Provides some guidelines for defining a cultural process and discusses possible teaching units. Outlines a conceptual and pedagogical map to follow in developing these units using transportation development as an example.…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Cultural Education, Cultural Interrelationships, Cultural Pluralism
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McCulloch, Gary – Australian Journal of Education, 1992
Discussion of the relationship between the character of the community and secondary schools in developing urban and suburban neighborhoods of Auckland (New Zealand) looks at such factors as location, transportation, and social/ethnic geography. Focus is on the political nature of school construction and recent evolution of national public policy…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Ethnic Groups, Foreign Countries, Geographic Location
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Gale, Lucy – New Zealand Journal of Geography, 1996
Investigates the concepts that could be used to develop geography lessons based on the ideology of indigenous people. Uses the Maori of New Zealand as an example and discusses how such concepts as "Maori Mind,""Maori Land,""Founding Ideologies," and "Cultural Artifacts" could be incorporated into an…
Descriptors: Cultural Background, Cultural Context, Cultural Influences, Cultural Traits
Mason, Paul, Ed. – 1994
Each of the 6 separate books in this series for juveniles introduces students to an ancient culture still in existence today. The illustrated guides examine the challenges facing each cultural group from contemporary social, political, and technological influences. The books in the series include: (1) Kurds (John King); (2) Native Americans (James…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Maintenance, Culture Conflict
Brown, Jordan; Grippo, Lois – 1995
This curriculum guide was developed for use with public television's Nature series. The materials in the guide are designed to help students actively participate in the study and experience of nature. Students are encouraged to view the programs as naturalists would, observing animals in their environment, noting their behavior, examining the…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Earth Science, Elementary Secondary Education, Environmental Education