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GEO 210: Introduction to Cultural Geography - 3 Credits
Overview

Geography at the college level moves beyond the study of state capitals or mountain ranges that you may have encountered in grade school. Then you probably learned a catalog of facts about the world, but little about how the facts fit together. Yet a description of the earth is only the beginning of the study of geography. Geographers want to know where things are and why they are there. Geographers try to understand the relationships among elements of the physical and cultural environment and how the elements vary spatially. They use certain questions, certain methods of investigating problems, and a variety of intellectual tools to explain the location of thins. The most familiar tool is the map, but today's geographers also use intricate statistical models. 

In a way, we are all geographers. From the time we could crawl, we began exploring the space around us. By the time we became adults, we had acquired a considerable amount of data about the world. Now, the discipline of geography offers you a more particular way of looking at the world. This course tries to convey the geographic viewpoint. The goal of this course is to help you discover the field of physical geography and to help you remember facts and understand concepts that can be applied to your own experience.

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Objectives
 

If you do well in this course, you will be able to:

  • Understand the concepts of cultural geography, culture area, cultural diffusion, cultural ecology, cultural integration, and cultural landscapes. 
  • Understand population patterns, distribution, migration, and the relationship between culture and population characteristics. 
  • Recognize the distribution and characteristics of agriculture and the cultural domestication of plants. 
  • Differentiate between formal and functional political culture regions. 
  • Identify regions charactirzed by major linguistic families. 
  • Identify areas characterized by major world religions. 
  • Define and identify characteristics and examples of folk culture. 
  • Understand how ethnicity can impact areas. 
  • Locate and identify areas of highly urbanized populations and sparsely urbanized populations. 
  • Differentiate among primary, secondary, and tertiary industries. 
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Materials
 

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Grading
 

Possible Assignments Include: (Subject to change each semester. The actual assignments are available in the Syllabus in the Blackboard course site on the first day of classes.)

Your course grade will be determined by the surveys, quizzes, projects, forums, and exams, according to the following points:

Assignment
Possible Points
Percentage of Grade
Introductory Survey
100
1%
Background Survey/
Project Selection
100
1%
Unit/ Chapter Quizzes
2600
26%
Discussion Forums
900
9%
Current Events
900
9%
Course Project
1400
14%
Exams (4)
4000
40%
TOTAL 10,000 100%

Grading Scale
A
9,000-10,000 points
B
8,000-8,999 points
C
7,000-7,999 points
D
6,000-6,999 points
F
Fewer than 6,000 points
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Exams
 

There are 4 exams in this course.

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ELI Policies and Procedures
 
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Beginning the Course
 

Last Updated: January 5, 2012