16 free online resources for teaching Patterns and Change Online resources for teaching IB DP Geography A geographyalltheway.com Publication About this ebook Online resources for teaching DP Geography 16 free online resources for teaching Patterns and Change Richard Allaway et al. This ebook has been produced to support the ‘Free online resources for IB Geography’ workshop being delivered at the 2013 Geographical Association Conference. It will outline 16 free online resources that could be used to support the teaching of the core ‘Patterns and Change’ unit of the IB DP Geography course. Each resource will be introduced, hints and tips given and a starter type activity suggested to engage the students and encourage synthesis. The aim is not to produce technical support as I believe that each of the online resources are accessible. There is a great, educational benefit from ‘playing’ with such resources! Published by geographyalltheway.com Publications © 2013 - geographyalltheway.com Publications All rights reserved. Subject to statutory exception no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of geographyalltheway.com Publications Feedback and new suggestions are being collated here: padlet.com/wall/16-online-resources and will be integrated into further versions of this ebook. Contributors 2013 Geographical Association Conference Ellena Beckham, Alan Parkinson, Matt Podbury, Ewan Laurie, Peter Price, Ken, Nicki and Tom. ii Derbyshire before moving to France to be the Head of Geography at the International School of Toulouse, a post I occupied for 4 years before moving to Geneva. I am a registered Chartered Geographer (Teacher) as awarded by the Royal Geographical Society with IBG. This is a professional accreditation for Geography teachers "which recognises competence, experience and professionalism in the use of geographical knowledge or skills in and out of the classroom, and who are committed to maintaining their professional standards through ongoing continuing professional development." Richard Allaway I am a teacher of IB DP Geography and the Secondary ICT Coordinator at the International School of Geneva - Campus des Nations. I am the author of geographyalltheway.com, the continually developing online repository of my teaching resources. The site was created in February 2006 and became a commercial project in November 2010. I chose to study at Sheffield University to follow a degree course in Environmental Geoscience (BSc) and pursue my love for adventurous activities in the Peak District. The climbing went so well, I chose to stay in Sheffield and complete a Post Graduate Certificate in Education. I have been teaching for over ten years. I spent four and half years teaching Geography and undertaking various pastoral roles at New Mills School and Sixth Form Centre, When I am not teaching or working on geographyalltheway.com, I love to spend time in the mountains - skiing, trekking and climbing. I am an International Mountain Leader. The IML award covers the skills and knowledge needed for leading groups on any mountaineering activities where the techniques of alpinism are not required. I live in France, with my wife Anest and two young children, in the foothills of the Jura mountains, just outside Geneva. www.richardallaway.me iii Population change 1 Explain population trends and patterns in births (Crude Birth Rate), natural increase and mortality (Crude Death Rate, infant and child mortality rates), fertility and life expectancy in contrasting regions of the world. Analyse population pyramids. Explain population momentum and its impact on population projections. “Gapminder is a non-profit venture – a modern “museum” on the Internet – promoting sustainable global development and achievement of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals. The initial activity was to pursue the development of the Trendalyzer software. Trendalyzer sought to unveil the beauty of statistical time series by converting boring numbers into enjoyable, animated and interactive graphics. In March 2007, Google acquired Trendalyzer from the Gapminder Foundation and the team of developers who formerly worked for Gapminder joined Google in California in April 2007.” Hints and Tips Gapminder World • You can pre-produce graphs and link directly to them using the ‘Share this graph’ button. • Gapminder Desktop is a downloadable version that can be run offline (without a link to the Internet). • Gapminder World uses Flash and therefore will not work on devices that do not run Flash - such as iPads and some Android tablets. 5 Suggested starter activity Set the class a challenge (or two) to complete within a certain timespan - or alternatively a playful homework activity to be presented next lesson. board where they think it will end up in 2013. A direct hit wins a small prize.... or a pat on the back! Challenge: Play with Gapminder World until you can produce a graph of Crude Birth Rate (y-axis) and Income per person (x-axis) - showing the trails of 5 countries of differing levels of development since 1980. Challenge: Is there a link between child mortality and the number of cellphones in a country? Produce the best graph to illustrate any possible relationship. Guess the country: Run any simulation and get students to guess the country/countries. Hide the key and students have to work out which colour corresponds to which continent. Linking with the Geography of Food and Health: Highlight a few sub-saharan African countries and start from 1980 on the default graph. This will show life expectancies dropping and then recovering as HIV/AIDS takes hold and is then gradually brought under control. Gapminder Casino: Print out some casino chips, choose an indicator and ask the students to stick their casino chips on the 6 Responses to high and low fertility 2 Explain dependency and ageing ratios. Examine the impacts of youthful and ageing populations. Evaluate examples of a pro-natalist policy and an anti-natalist policy. YouTube is a video-sharing website, created by three former PayPal employees in February 2005, on which users can upload, view and share videos. The company is based in San Bruno, California, and uses Adobe Flash Video and HTML5 technology to display a wide variety of user-generated video content, including movie clips, TV clips, and music videos, as well as amateur content such as video blogging, short original videos, and educational videos. In November 2006, YouTube was bought by Google for US$1.65 billion and now operates as a subsidiary of Google. Hints and Tips YouTube • YouTube clips can easily be embedded into websites, wikis, blog posts etc using the embed code that can be found under the ‘Share’ button. • It is possible to embed YouTube video clips easily into PowerPoint 2010 presentations: Insert > click Video and select Video from online video site option. You will need to use the ‘old’ embed code available from YouTube. • Sometimes it is necessary to be able to download a YouTube clip for future educational use! There are many online services that will do this including: KEEPVID. 8 Suggested starter activity Add your own commentary: no comment TV is a YouTube channel from euronews that has audio, but no commentary. Get the students to add their own commentary. What question could be asked to generate commentary on this video: 1 point, 3 points, 6 points: Show a clip and then discuss a 1 point question that could be asked about the content, a 3 point question and finally a 6 point question. How about a 1 point, 3 point and 6 point question from this video: Useful video clips for ‘Responses to high and low fertility’ Y OU T UBE C LIP 2.1 Antinatalist: China: Unnatural Selection Y OU T UBE C LIP 2.3 Pronatalist: Germany's children ad campaign Y OU T UBE C LIP 2.2 China's one-child policy creates massive gender imbalance Y OU T UBE C LIP 2.4 Pronatalist: Singapore unveils S$2 billion package to boost fertility rate 9 Movement responses migration 3 Discuss the causes of migrations, both forced and voluntary. Evaluate internal (national) and international migrations in terms of their geographic (socio-economic, political and environmental) impacts at their origins and destinations. peoplemov.in shows the flow of migrants as of 2010 through the use of open data. The data is presented as a ‘slopegraph’ that shows the connections between countries. The chart is split into two columns: the source countries on the left and the destination countries on the right. The thickness of the lines connecting the countries represents the amount of immigrated people. peoplemov.in is an experimental project in data visualization by Carlo Zapponi - a Data Visualization Designer at Nokia. Hints and Tips peoplemov. in • As the site uses HTML5 it works OK on the iPad (or other tablet computing devices) but seems to cut off a bit of information on the left extreme of the page. • Reload peoplemov.in to refresh the page and reset the diagram. • The ‘Top migration corridors’ list provides an interesting discussion and could be used when discussing either Lee’s Model or Ravenstein's Laws. 11 Suggested starter activity Task: Start local by clicking on your current location on both the left as a source country and on the right as a destination country. Can you explain the major flows or the lack of them? Challenge: find countries and flow that illustrate: • The majority of migrants go only a short distance. • The major causes of migration are economic. • Migrants going long distances generally go by preference to one of the great centres of commerce or industry. 12 Gender and change 4 Examine gender inequalities in culture, status, education, birth ratios, health, employment, empowerment, life expectancy, family size, migration, legal rights and land tenure. Y OU T UBE C LIP 4.1 Google Public Data Explorer The Google Public Data Explorer makes large, public-interest datasets easy to explore, visualize and communicate. All of the datasets in the Public Data Explorer are provided by thirdparty data providers, such as international organizations, national statistical offices, nongovernmental organizations, and research institutions. Hints and tips Google Public Data Explorer • You can search across all of the public datasets hosted by Data Explorer. There are two types of results: datasets and metrics. A dataset is a set of statistics bundled together into a coherent unit by a single data provider. Metrics are individual statistics, that are components of larger datasets. • Works fine on the iPad. • When looking at ‘Gender and change’ try the Gender Gap Report [dataset], Gender Inequality Index [metric] from the Human Development Report and Gender pay gap [metric] from the UN Economic Commission for Europe. 14 Suggested starter activity Challenge: Produce a combined graph that shows the overall Gender Gap report index score for all the following countries: • Australia • Brazil • China • Mozambique • United States of America • Yemen Task: Describe and explain the trends illustrated above. Challenge: Find a country that has experienced a decline in their Gender Gap Overall index. Focus countries: Using the Google Public Data, search gender and the first link is the Gender Inequality Index. Students can choose a number of their 'focus countries' and begin to compare the gender inequality of them. Good for a quick starter and prompt for discussion. 15 Measurements of regional and global disparities 5 Define indices of infant mortality, education, nutrition, income, marginalization and Human Development Index (HDI). Explain the value of the indices in measuring disparities across the globe. UNDP DIY HDI: Build Your Own Index enables you to construct your own development index. You start by selecting the dimensions you wish to include in the index. If you click on the dimension name it opens up the dimension panel, which provides a new set of options. Each dimension can consist of one or more indicators. In the expanded dimension panel, it is possible to change the importance or 'weight' of both the dimension itself and the indicators within the dimension. For more information about each indicator, click on the 'i' button which is next to the indicator name. You can also see the number of countries for which data is available for each indicator. Hints and tips UNDP DIY HDI: Build Your Own Index • This online tool is Flash based and therefore will not work on the iPad or some other tablet computing devices. • ‘Finished’ indexes can be exported as pdf files. 17 Suggested starter activity Challenge: Construct a Human Development Index that has Australia ranked number 1. Challenge: Construct a Human Development Index that has your home country ranked number 1. Challenge: Construct a Human Development Index that has no economic data included within it. 18 Origin of disparities 6 Explain disparities and inequities that occur within countries resulting from ethnicity, residence, parental education, income, employment (formal and informal) and land ownership. Lives on the Line shows two key statistics: 1. The life expectancy at birth of those living around each London Underground, London Overground and Docklands Light Railway station. 2. The rank of each London ward on the spectrum of Income Deprivation Affecting Children Index (IDACI). Life expectancy data exists for each ward in London. To transfer the ward-level values to each station, a circle with a 200m radius was first drawn around them. If this circle overlaps no other wards then that single rounded value is used for the station. If it overlaps multiple wards then an average was used. Hints and tips Lives on the Line • Works fine on the iPad. • Some other data visualization to view as part of a disparities and inequalities exercise: ‣ London Surnames ‣ Twitter Tongues - the languages of tweets in London in summer 2012 ‣ Office for National Statistics - Households in poverty estimates 20 Suggested starter activity Challenge: Find where people live the longest. Challenge: Find where people live the shortest. Challenge: Find where there is the greatest change in life expectancy in the shortest distance. Challenge: Why does crossing the Thames between Pimlico and Vauxhall sees life expectancy drop by 6 years? Linking to London 2012: As an introduction to work on the London Olympic boroughs set the following enquiry: 1. One of the key aims of London's 2012 bid was 'convergence' between East & West London, i.e. all quality of life indicators to be equalised; 2. Why was this an aim? What is the problem? Tentative causes? Google Street View: Students locate the highest - lowest values and use Google Street view to visit and walk around the neighbourhood of the related stations. What are their initial impressions? Why? 21 Disparities and change 7 Identify and explain the changing patterns and trends of regional and global disparities of life expectancy, education and income. Examine the progress made in meeting the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in poverty reduction, education and health. MDG Maps is a geovisualization tool of the Millennium Development Goals developed by Joshua Masiko. It enables you to generate printable maps for the different indicators. Select an indicator and the data will be loaded and rendered. Use the slider at the bottom of the map to select data for different years. You can customize the map by selecting different color schemes and background colors. To export the map to pdf click the button at the top of the map. Hints and tips • Another pesky Flash based geovisualization tool so no good with the iPad. • Clicking on a country will zoom in to the selected country and display printable charts. • There are some gaps in the data coverage. MDG Maps 23 Suggested starter activity Challenge: For each Millennium Development Goal find a data set that has complete global coverage. Why is there ‘missing data’ from some of the sets? Task: Describe the progress made by Niger in terms of: • Employment to population ratio for males over the age of 15. • Persistence to last grade of primary education for female students. • The percentage of children aged 12-23 months immunized against measles. Game: Give students an indicator (eg % of population living in poverty - under $2 per day) and a board pen. Students follow the 'home or away' Question of Sport points scoring theme depending on how confident they are with their indicator. They must identify a top and bottom rated country correctly by placing an X on the country on the IWB (& naming it). 10 indicators tested in quick succession. Quick Quiz: Has X met this MDG? 24 Reducing disparities 8 Discuss the different ways in which disparities can be reduced with an emphasis on trade and market access, debt relief, aid and remittances. Evaluate the effectiveness of strategies designed to reduce disparities. Remittance flows is a visualization that shows the global movements of money due to remittances (money sent by migrants to their home country) developed by Roxana Torre. The values presented are only an estimation of the total amount of money being sent, as it's not possible to keep track on all money sent in informal ways. The data used comes from "Bilateral remittance estimates using migrant stocks, destination country incomes, and source country incomes" (World Bank). Click on a country to see the remittance flows. Two different views are possible: Remittances sent and received, indicating if the selected country will be the one sending or receiving. The width of the country circle arc is proportional to the amount sent or received. Hovering over the lines will show the estimated remittance value between the countries. The countries are grouped by continent and within the continent in subregions. Remittance flows Hints and tips • Even though not Flash based, this visualization doesn’t seem to work on the iPad. • Swap between ‘Remittances sent’ and ‘Remittances received’ by clicking on the words above the visualization. 26 Suggested starter activity Focus countries: It is good for students to be able to quote pieces of relevant data for a handful of countries to illustrate their understanding. Who are the largest remittance senders and receivers from your focus countries? For example: • Australia: 2063 million US$ to China, 1191 million US$ from UK. • United States of America: 22190 million US$ to Mexico, 655 million US$ from Mexico. • Brazil: 330 million US$ to Portugal, 1137 million US$ from the USA. • China: According to the visualization sent 0 US$, 12205 million US$ from the USA. • Niger: 126 million US$ to Nigeria, 14 million US$ from Côte d’Ivoire. 27 Atmosphere and change 9 Describe the functioning of the atmospheric system in terms of the energy balance between solar and longwave radiation. Explain the changes in this balance due to external forcings (changes in solar radiation, changes in the albedo of the atmosphere and changes in the longwave radiation returned to space). Discuss the causes and environmental consequences of global climate change. The Guardian is a British national daily newspaper. The newspaper's online offering is the second most popular British newspaper website after the Daily Mail's Mail Online. In April 2011, MediaWeek reported that it was the fifth most popular newspaper site in the world. The Guardian and its Sunday sibling, The Observer, publish all their news online, with free access both to current news and to an archive of three million stories. A third of the site's hits are for items over a month old. The Guardian organizes their content into categories. For example in the Environment section you can view the Climate change, Carbon emissions, Energy and Travel categories amongst others. The Guardian The Climate change section is useful for reviewing contemporary material when studying the ‘Discuss the causes and environmental consequences of global climate change’ part of the IB DP syllabus. Hints and tips • Each of the categories has it’s own RSS feed so you can subscribe to the stories in a news reader such as Feedly. 29 Suggested starter activity Question: What stance does the Guardian take on Global Climate Change? What evidence do you have for your opinion. Challenge: Find two articles related to the causes of global climate change. Challenge: Find two articles related to the environmental consequences of global climate change. Rota: Have a rota of students, each student should present a 2 minute summary of a very recent article as a starter activity. One summary per lesson so a student could expect to present every couple of weeks depending on class size. Challenge: Students have to find a location that has been affected by climate change. Most interesting article wins. Possibility of varying the scales: local, national, regional and international. 30 Soil and change 10 Explain the causes of soil degradation. Discuss the environmental and socioeconomic consequences of this process, together with management strategies. WikiMindMap is a tool used to easily and efficiently browse Wikipedia content, inspired by the mindmap technique. Wiki pages in large public wikis, such as Wikipedia, have become rich and complex documents and as such, it is not always straight forward to find the information you are really looking for. This tool aims to support students to get a well structured and easily understandable overview of the topic they are looking for. All content of the mindmap is derived from the wiki which was selected from the initial drop down box. Wikipedia is frowned upon by some academic institutions. However, Wikipedia does have it uses - especially when it comes to looking at the sources of the information used to produce the wiki content. Hints and tips wikimindmap • en.wikipedia.org is Wikipedia in English. • Clicking on the + symbol expands the mind map. • Clicking on the green circular arrows symbol makes that term the centre of a mind map. • Clicking on the blue square with pointing arrow symbol takes you directly to the source of that Wikipedia content. • Wikiweb [$2.99] is an iPad app that does a similar thing in a rather slick way. 32 Suggested starter activity G ALLERY 10.1 Essay planner 15 minute challenge: Using just content linked to from Essay Title WikiMindMap find 9 facts, statistics or explanations that could be Do you understand the used to fill in the central column of the essay planner for the question and how are you going to approach it? following extended response question: Discuss the environmental Introduction and socio-economic consequences of soil degradation [15 Specific opening statement marks]. First statements in each body paragraph are descriptive. Body Paragraph #1: Idea You need three of: Facts, statistics, explanations, and/or analysis. This is NOT descriptive. 1.1 Cleverly state that you have thus, proven your point for this idea/ paragraph. How have y qu Closing statement #1 Conclusio Summariz main them directly to 1.2 1. 1.3 2. Show understanding of what the question requires Body Paragraph #2: Idea 2.1 Closing statement #2 3. 2.2 2.3 Conclude question s personal o evaluation Outline 1. Body Paragraph #3: Idea 3.1 Closing statement #3 2. 3.2 3. 3.3 Idea sourc 33 Water and change 11 Identify the ways in which water is utilized at the regional scale. Examine the environmental and human factors affecting patterns and trends in physical water scarcity and economic water scarcity. Examine the factors affecting access to safe drinking water. TED is a nonprofit devoted to ‘Ideas Worth Spreading’. It started out (in 1984) as a conference bringing together people from three worlds: Technology, Entertainment and Design. TED Talks began as a simple attempt to share what happens at TED with the world. Under the moniker "ideas worth spreading", talks were released online. They rapidly attracted a global audience in the millions. As of November 2012, TED Talks have been viewed more than one billion times. Hints and tips TED • Somebody has produced an online spreadsheet with links to all the talks, names of the talks and speakers plus a short summary. Use Ctrl+F to open a search box on the spreadsheet. • The videos of the talks can be viewed on the TED website but I find that viewing them on YouTube is usually better. • TED Ed is a recent TED project with a commitment to creating lessons worth sharing. They follow a watch > think > dig deeper pattern. Although there are not many videos related to the ‘Water and change’ section of the IB DP Geography syllabus, the following are worth a look: ‣ Where we get our fresh water - Christiana Z. Peppard ‣ Navigating Our Global Future - Ian Goldin ‣ Don't misrepresent Africa - Leslie Dodson 35 Suggested starter activity Questions you would like to ask: While watching the TED talk write 3 follow-on questions that you would like to ask the speaker. Y OU T UBE C LIP 11.1 Fahad Al-Attiya: A country with no water Y OU T UBE C LIP 11.3 Michael Pritchard: How to make filthy water drinkable Joined up thinking: Watch a TED talk and afterwards list as many parts of the IB DP Geography syllabus as possible that the talk links to. Y OU T UBE C LIP 11.2 Rob Harmon: How the market can keep streams flowing 36 Biodiversity and change 12 Explain the concept and importance of biodiversity in tropical rainforests. Examine the causes and consequences of reduced biodiversity in this biome. The GRID-Arendal Maps & Graphics Library is an on-going project to collect and catalogue all graphic products that have been prepared for UNEP publications and websites from the last 15 years. There are currently 2698 graphics available in the database. The mission of GRID-Arendal, which was established to support the UN in the field of environment, mainly through its Environment Programme (UNEP), is to create environmental knowledge, enabling positive change. This is achieved by organizing and transforming available environmental data into credible, science-based information products delivered through innovative communication tools. The GRID-Arendal Maps & Graphics Library provides an excellent source of ‘stimulus materials’, the kind of which might be used for the short answer questions in Paper 1 or Paper 2. GRID-Arendal Maps & Graphics Library Hints and tips • A lot of the images are organised into Collections such as the Vital Forest Graphics collection. • Most of the graphics can be downloaded as high and low quality .jpg image files or .pdf files. • Use of graphics: Using the graphics and referring to them is encouraged! Use them in presentations, web pages, newspapers, blogs and reports. For any form of publication, include the link to the graphic’s webpage and give the cartographer/designer credit. 38 Suggested starter activity When Forest Conversion is Profitable [http://www.grida.no/graphicslib/detail/when-forest-conversion-is-profitable_abf8] Question: How many US dollars can be earned per hectare in Brazil from growing Soybeans? [1 mark]. Getting into the mind of the examiner: What questions could be based on the graphic using AO1 command terms: define, describe, determine, estimate, identify, outline or state? What is Becoming of the Amazon Forest? [http://www.grida.no/graphicslib/detail/what-is-becoming-of-the-amazon-forest_777a] Question: Describe the distribution of deforested areas in the Amazon. [3 marks] Then use the student’s work to produce a ‘perfect’ answer or an examiner’s mark scheme. 39 Sustainability and the environment 13 Define the concept of environmental sustainability. Evaluate a management strategy at a local or national scale designed to achieve environmental sustainability. ElectroCity is a simulation game produced by Genesis Energy and has been online since 2007. Genesis Energy is a leading generator and retailer of energy in New Zealand. It generates electricity from a range of sources including gas, coal, wind and water. The company developed the web-based game called ElectroCity which sees players name their very own town and work towards a balance of sustainable energy, city growth and profit. Players have 150 turns to create a city, generate revenue, build power generation and manage the resulting environmental impact while keeping their citizens happy. Hints and tips ElectroCity • The ElectroCity is Flash based and therefore will not work on the iPad. • You can download the game and run it offline on a Mac or PC. • There is a lesson based upon ElectroCity, aimed at younger students, on geographyalltheway.com. 41 Suggested starter activity Flipping the lesson: Ask your students to play ElectroCity for homework and ask them to take a screenshot of their final score. The starter activity could be the students discussing their top tips for success. 42 Patterns of resource consumption 14 Evaluate the ecological footprint as a measure of the relationship between population size and resource consumption. Identify international variations in its size. Discuss the two opposing views (neoMalthusian and anti-Malthusian) of the relationship between population size and resource consumption. Worldmapper is a collection of world maps, using equal area cartograms where territories are re-sized according to a particular variable. The maps are best understood as pie charts where the segment of the pie is reshaped to look like a country. Then the area of that country is adjusted according to the proportion of the world total of a variable that is found there. Just as a pie chart would. A consistent colour scheme is used throughout all the maps. The folks at Worldmapper divided the world into 12 separate regions. The regions were chosen to be geographically contiguous groups of territories which divided the world into roughly symmetrically balanced population groups, with no region containing fewer than one hundred million people. Hints and tips Worldmapper • The Worldmapper website includes nearly 700 maps - lots of which could be linked to the IB DP Geography syllabus content - have a good look round. • The data behind each map can be downloaded, as can PDF poster versions and high resolution images. 44 Suggested starter activity Describe training: Send one student out of the room. Choose a Worldmapper map and project it on the board. Students in the classroom have 4 minutes to write a description of the patterns shown. Project four Worldmapper maps on the board, including the one for which the descriptions have been written. Invite the student back into the room and choose another student to read their description. If the student who has been out of the room can correctly identify the map being described then huge applause! Send another student out and repeat for the four Worldmapper maps. 45 Changing patterns of energy consumption 15 Examine the global patterns and trends in the production and consumption of oil. Examine the geopolitical and environmental impacts of these changes in patterns and trends. Examine the changing importance of other energy sources. ChartsBin is a web-based data visualization tool that will allow everyone to quickly and easily create rich interactive visualizations with their own data. ChartsBin is useful as a free resource as it hosts many different maps that can be useful for teaching IB DP Geography including ones relevant to ‘Changing patterns of energy consumption’. The ‘Featured’ and ‘Latest updates’ sections are created and maintained by the ChartsBin statistics collector team. Hints and tips ChartsBin • You can change the map projection used by clicking on the list of possible projects below the map. • A key is available by clicking on the button below the map. • Useful maps: • Current Worldwide Oil Production • Current Worldwide Reserves-to-production ratio of Oil • Current Worldwide Oil Consumption • Ecological Footprint of Consumption Compared to Biocapacity 47 Suggested starter activity Y OU T UBE C LIP 15.1 How to Create an Interactive Thematic Map in ChartsBin.com? 15 minute challenge: Using the video on the right and a ChartsBin account (all you need is a working email address) create a visualization of total electricity production from hydro. 48 Conservation strategies 16 Discuss the reduction of resource consumption by conservation, waste reduction, recycling and substitution. Evaluate a strategy at a local or national scale aimed at reducing the consumption of one resource. Compflight is an image search engine tailored to efficiently locate images. It searches the image hosting site Flickr. In August 2011 Flickr reported that it was hosting more than 6 billion images! Compfight Entering a search term returns a page of thumbnail images. The left hand column includes various settings: • Tags only / All text: Difference between searching just an image’s tags (keywords) or all the text associated with an image. • Any license / Creative commons / Commercial: The license the images have. • Show originals / Hide originals / Only originals: Blue bars indicate Flickr is holding an original. Linger your cursor over the image to display dimensions. ‘Hide originals’ will hide the blue bars associated with original images. ‘Only originals’ will locate only images that have originals. • Safe / Unsafe: ‘Safe search’ will hide 99% of inappropriate content. Hints and tips • Clicking on an image will show a popup that will show a larger version of the image, the image’s license agreement and choice of sizes to download. Clicking on the large image will take you to it’s Flickr page. 50 Suggested starter activity Photo editor task: Imagine you are the photo/image editor for a new Geography textbook. Find 6 images to present to the editorin-chief for the section on ‘the reduction of resource consumption by conservation, waste reduction, recycling and substitution’. This can lead to a class discussion on the best image(s). 51
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