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Summer Assignment AP Human Geography 2017-2018 Instructor: Mrs. Charlene Brown Student Name: ____________________________ Due on Friday, August 11, 2017 As an APHG student, you are held to a higher expectation than the average student of geography. Despite the fact that you are in 9th grade, AP Human Geography is a college level course; you will be given college level work. As part of the college level curriculum and expectation, there is the opportunity to earn college credit; however, this can only be achieved if you are willing to put forth college level effort. As an introduction to this course, it is required that you complete this summer assignment in an effort to become more familiar with the areas of study that are covered. Your entire packet is due on the first day of your AP class. Resources and text will be posted on the Schoology group for this assignment. Group Code: 7P3VD-4W6H6 Part I: Geographical Regions Students need basic geographical knowledge in order to understand human geography. The map below gives students a starting point for identifying regions and their locations relative to other regions and landforms. Geospatial awareness is fundamental knowledge for students to build an understanding of cross-cultural contacts, trade routes, migrations, etc., which constitute the key concepts in the AP Human Geography course. Materials: Internet, maps provided, colored pencils Directions: Please input the following information on the map provided. AP Human Geography – World Regions, a closer look This map identifies the various sub-regions within the five major geographical regions. These regions will be used repeatedly during the AP World History course and students are expected to learn them. Label the following sub-regions on the map and color in the geographical borders. o Central Asia o East Asia o South Asia o Southeast Asia o Middle East o North Africa o West Africa o Central Africa o East Africa o Southern Africa o Sub-Saharan Africa (this will overlap) o North America o Latin America (will overlap) o Caribbean o South America o Label all the continents and major waterways (major oceans and seas). AP Human Geography World Regions A Closer Look Part II: Vocabulary Flashcard Fundamentals An important component to understanding human geography and our world is to be familiar with and be able to apply an array of vocabulary terms and concepts. This is also fundamental to doing well on the AP Exam. Materials: Standard 3x5 note cards (your choice of colors), pen, internet, online textbook (see Schoology group) Directions: You are charged with creating your own flashcards for each unit of study. You will create them on your own time and follow your own organizational style. The vocabulary words will be given at the beginning of each period. You must bring these flashcards with you to class every day. Obviously, your stack of flashcards will grow significantly as the year progresses. A binder ring or a zip-lock bag might be useful for storage. There are over 500 terms, concepts, models, and people to be defined or identified. Your first batch of vocabulary cards will cover Unit 1 concepts and items that will be revisited multiple times throughout the year. The following are the basic requirements for this assignment: 1. Must use 3x5 notecards/index cards 2. The term, concept, model, or person goes on one side with the definition, examples, and picture on the other. 3. Definitions must be in your own words! Vocabulary Terms Arithmetic Density Contagious Diffusion Distance decay Distortion Environmental Determinism Formal Region Geographic Information System Relocation Diffusion Scale Time Zones Physiological Density Stimulus Diffusion Human Geography Projection Absolute Location Functional Region Global Positioning System Expansion Diffusion Diffusion Cultural Landscape Sequent Occupance Possibilism Remote Sensing Relative Location Perceptual Region Time-space compression Hierarchical Diffusion Hearth Part III: Map Projections Map projections are attempts to portray the surface of the earth or a portion of the earth on a flat surface. Distortions always result from this process. Some projections minimize distortions in some of these properties at the expense of maximizing errors in others. Some projections are attempts to only moderately distort the following properties: 1. Distance A map is equidistant when it portrays distances from the center of the projection to any other place on the map. 2. Direction A map preserves direction when azimuths (angles from a point on a line to another point) are portrayed correctly in all directions. 3. Size or Scale Scale is the relationship between a distance portrayed on a map and the same distance on the Earth. 4. Shape or Area When a map portrays areas over the entire map so that all mapped areas have the same proportional relationship to the areas on the Earth that they represent, the map is an equal-area map. Directions: Look up information on the following map projections and place it into a chart similar to this one. Projection Name 1. Goode Homolosine Projection 2. Robinson 3. Mercator Projection 4. Miller Cylindrical 5. Mollweide 6. Sinusoidal Equal Area 7. Lambert Azimuthal Equal Area Image Uses Distortion Part IV: Power of Place Directions: Answer the following questions based on the video at the link included. You may need to write your answers on a separate sheet of paper. Please remember all answers must be in complete sentences! Video Link: https://www.learner.org/series/powerofplace/page1.html Power of Place #1- One Earth, Many Scales 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Approximately how much of the earth’s surface is covered by water? Where are most volcanoes found? Iceland is located on the boundary of what two tectonic plates? How can night satellite imagery be used to determine differences in levels of economic development? The USA consumes about how much of the world’s energy? What is happening to the Aral Sea? What is Globalization? The black smudge seen in satellite images over Siberian snow fields is caused by what? What does the Chinese- Anglo culture conflict in Vancouver involve? What are the differences between Centripetal forces and Centrifugal forces? What is the lingua franca of the global economy? (What is a lingua franca?) The resistance to globalization in Quebec is based upon what? What is the difference between Centripetal and Centrifugal forces? Part V: Types of Diffusion Cartoons Directions: Look at the chart on the next page. Follow the directions at the top of the page. Additional resources will be available to you on Schoology, including a copy of our textbook in a digital format. Part VI: Comparative World Religions This activity asks students to produce a summary of evidence concerning six of the world’s major belief systems. This project will help you develop a good study resource to review for both the semester exam and the AP exam in the spring. 1. Prepare an informational foldable, chart, or booklet for Judaism, Confucianism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Christianity and Islam. Include answers to the following questions on each information sheet. a. What is the point of origin? b. How did the religion/philosophy spread? c. Where is this tradition most influential today? d. How many followers are there worldwide? e. Is this a monotheistic or polytheistic tradition? f. Who is/are the main/major deity(ies)? g. Who founded this faith? When? h. What do the followers call their scriptures or holy book(s)? i. How is the religious leadership organized? j. What are the basic beliefs of the religion/philosophy? k. What sects of the religion/philosophy have developed over time? l. Where are the most followers at today? 2. Cultural diffusion is about encounters and interactions among people. Select two of the traditions that you have researched and examine the ways in which these religions have encountered and interacted with each other. Your essay should describe the initial encounter, the nature of the interaction and the ways in which the relationship changed over time. Present your ideas in an essay of no more than 2 pages. You may not compare Judaism to Christianity. 3. The online textbook is useful for general information, but you will need to consult additional resources. Prepare a work cited page for all resources you used. If you need help with this, please look at the writing resources in the Schoology group. Bonus: Complete part 1 for one of the following belief systems: o Taoism, Jainism, Shinto, Sikhism, Baha’i, Zoroastrianism