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FEEDBACK Geog3600 – Geography of Utah

HW A04 – Atlas for a Utah School – Chapter 4: Topography, Landmarks, and the Geosphere – Physical Geography, Utah, and ____________ School.

 

GENERAL COMMENTS

 

Purpose of the homework assignment:

Apply concepts of geography to Utah and to Utah places.

Geography is the web of relationships among people, places, and environments.

Your atlas chapter presents information about Utah’s geosphere and how Utah’s geosphere is part of the web of relationships that defines your school / county / state geography.

Expectations:

1.      Present information

2.      Analyze information

3.      Interpret information 

 

CONCEPTS of the GEOSPHERE from lectures include:

·        TOPOGRAPHY defines the shape of the land by showing contours of equal elevation above sea level.

·        RELIEF: is the difference of elevation and defines relative steepness.

·        LANDFORMS are characteristic natural features on Earth’s surface made by natural processes working on natural materials. Virtually all landforms are the product of tectonics (that sets the stage, such as regional elevation and relief), and erosion / deposition that sculpts the scene.

·        PHYSIOGRAPHIC PROVINCES: are regions defined by their landforms.

·        LANDMARKS: are recognizable places that help orient. Landmarks can contribute to a sense of place.

 

Assessment:

Approximately:

25% on map files.

75% on cover page discussion…

(a) Observations of geographic characteristics of your area’s geosphere;

(b) Analysis and discussion of those patterns

(c) Recognition, description and discussion three possible landmarks for your school. 

 

Map files (____ of 15)  - Complete?   Tell a story. Present substantial information. Basis for your observations, analysis, interpretation. Diverse sources.    

            Troubles         Just fine          Terrific

   

 

Cover page Chapter 4: Topography, Landmarks, and the Geosphere – Physical Geography, Utah, and ____________ School.

Observation: concerning the topography of your school’s vicinity, city, and / or county.

Analysis of information and interpretation

Connection to themes of geography (location, place, interaction, migration, and regions… regions are very big deal).

Discussion of aspects of geosphere: topography, landforms, landmarks, physiographic provinces

Interpretation… webs of relationships… people, places and environments

Critical thinking: impacts and relationships of GEOSPHERE with

·        other subsystems of Earth systems (hydrosphere, atmosphere, biosphere, and anthrosphere) 

·        Social and behavioral systems (anthropology, economics, family and consumer studies, (geography), political science, psychology, and sociology.

Landmarks.

Observation, analysis, interpretation

 

ABOUT YOUR ATLAS CHAPTER -- GEOSPHERE.

 

(A few concepts… to you)

Landmarks (weight = 10) ____ of 10.

Terrific: (a) identified… physical places that stand out – and (b) have connections to populace, hopefully to the school, and (c) interpreted in the context of geography… tie to concepts of the course.

Very good: (a) identified and (b) justified as important

Just fine: identified… some discussion of why special

Not quite: not physical landmarks (could be cultural… but assignment’s theme is geosphere); not discussed

Trouble: missing; or concept of landmarks not make sense in the context your other files

 

Observations (weight = 10)  ____ of 10.

Terrific: abundant, meaningful, show and understanding of what is special or important about the topography, landscape, and landforms

Very good: important information provided. A “local” person would recognize key landscape features

Just fine: 3-8 observations… some diversity… evidence that you understand that topography and landforms help define a place

Not quite: observations aren’t quite observations (might be interpretations, or feelings); or lack of diversity (five observations of exactly the same theme); or narrow focus that doesn’t convey a sense of place; problem with scale (all local, or all state);

Trouble: concepts not understood, such as, observations are not about topography, relief, landforms, landscape, or landmarks.

 

Analysis (weight = 10) ____ of 10.

Terrific: conveys concepts of geography… physiographic province is identified and discussed; for example, how your area’s landforms and landscape are characteristic of the physiographic province or are anomalous.

Very good: concepts of geography presented; discussion of region. Word such as physiographic province and landforms appear in your write up;

Just fine: concepts are clear… geosphere, landforms, physiographic provinces.

Not quite: analysis is minimal or superficial… or your analysis does not tie to your observations or map files. Not quite clear how  your analysis defines your place, specifically its aspects of physical geography

Troubles: concepts jumbled, physiographic provinces confused; … or missing.

 

Interpretation (weight = 10)   ____ of  10.

Terrific: the web of relationships is explored; of the 17 words/phrases I am delighted to see in your discussions… a few (2 or 3)are explored with some depth or a bunch (4-8) are explored superficially. The 17 key words are:

Themes of geography: location, place, interaction (human and physical environments), migration, and regions;

Subsystems of Earth systems (physical geography): geosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere (weather and climate), biosphere, and anthrosphere

Fields of social and behavioral sciences (human geography): anthropology, economics, family/consumer studies, (geography), political science, psychology, and sociology.

Very good: geosphere discusses as part of the web of relationships, or as big part of the physical geography of a place. Themes of geography are there, and / or aspects of physical geography, and / or aspects of human geography.

Just fine: clear evidence that you’ve thought about what matters about your area’s geosphere… that the geosphere makes a difference to your place.

Not quite: connections aren’t clear, discussion is missing

Troubles: I’m concerned that the fundamental concept that every thing is related to everything is missing… that you may not see connections between characteristics of the geographer and your locale.

 

Assessment… ___________ OUT OF A TOTAL OF 55 points…