Topic 1

Thinking Like a Geographer


Goals |
Outcomes | Notes

Goals:

  • to answer the question: What is geography?
  • to define the key component of regional geography
  • to understand why it is important to know more about the geography of Texas


By the end of this unit you should know about...

  • the two perspectives of geography
  • geography's five themes, six key concepts, six essential elements, and eighteen standards
    • for a diagram showing the relationships among these perspectives, themes, and concepts, click here
  • why geographers study regions
  • the key components of regional geography: patterns, processes, and relationships


Outline Notes

Remember: this is the barest of outlines. You need to attend class and supplement these notes in order to be successful in Geography 305. These notes are provided as a response to student requests.

What is Geography?

Two perspectives/ five themes/ five key concepts/ eighteen national standards

Why do geographers study regions?

  1. Regions serve as exemplars: a specific example to lend substance to generalizations.
  2. Regions serve as anomolies: how a part of Earth's surface differs from the norm.
  3. Regions may serve as analogs: studying one helps to understand the characteristics of other, similar regions.
  4. Regions modulate and affect other regions: in order to understand change over time.
  5. Regions serve as pieces of a jigsaw puzzle: reducing complexity.

More about regions.....boundaries are fuzzy....there are different types of regions

Key Components Of Regional Geography

Patterns: factual base, human and physical characteristics, what is where

Processes: why things are where they are, how a region functions, e.g., processes of economic development, migration, urbanization

Interrelationships: links between patterns and processes.

Understanding a region demands appreciation of all three of these components.


Geography of Texas Home Page

Copyright, 1997, Sarah W. Bednarz
Revised 12/07/03