Geography 120
Final Project
Description: Students will be placed into a random group
of three peers. The group will select a
world region of interest to them. The
region which they select should be one identified as an individual chapter in
the course textbook. Students will then
read the chapter, taking note of the various sub-regions within their region of
choice. Through discussion, the group
will then narrow their focus to a specific sub-region with a consistent set of
environmental characteristics. Once this
specific area of focus has been determined, the group will begin intensive
research on the physical environment. At
the conclusion of this period of research, students should begin a second phase
of intensive research on the social characteristics of the people that live
there. Particular emphasis should be
placed on the behaviors and practices of the people that have been developed as
a result of the physical environment that surrounds them. At the conclusion of the research, the group
will plan and design a presentation which will be used to educate their
peers. The project should be centered on
a tri-fold display board, but may also include handouts, manipulatives, music,
food, etc. The display is due on the
assigned day (as indicated on the syllabus), at which time all members will
move about the room learning from each other’s work.
Assessment: Assessment will be multi-faceted. On the day that all projects are presented, a
designated group of peers will use a specific, outcomes based rubric to
evaluate each project. The scores from
all peer evaluations will be averaged and factored into the project grade. In addition, group members will evaluate each
other’s performance in the group, also using a specific rubric. These will also be averaged and factored into
the project grade. The instructor
evaluation portion will be a subjective assessment of the functioning of the
group, the quality of the research, and the presentation. Finally, each individual will be required to
write specific responses to a limited number of peer projects. These four measures will all be included in
the grade for the project. Breakdown is
as follows:
1.
Average of peer evaluations on your project………………....40%
2.
Average of group member evaluation of your
participation…. 30%
3.
Instructor assessment………………………………………..10%
4.
Responses to peer projects…………………………………..20%
TOTAL…………………………………………………….100%
Go to Peer
Evaluation Rubric.
Go to Group Member
Evaluation Rubric.
Go to Project Response
Worksheet.
Project
Guidelines:
The following is a series of
suggested steps for completing this project.
- Once your group members have been identified, sit
together and introduce each other.
Exchange phone numbers and email addresses. Take a few minutes to share any
particular interests or experiences which may be relevant to the project.
- Review the textbook table of contents and further identify
regions of interest. You may wish
to further examine individual chapters to gain insight. Once you have narrowed your interests to
a few regions, study maps of those regions in your atlas. Visually identify landforms and water
bodies.
- Conduct further conversation on your findings. Narrow your decision to a single region
(which should correspond to a chapter in the text.)
- Each chapter begins with sections on landforms,
climate, and environmental history.
Each member of the group should be assigned one of those sections
to read and provide information on to the whole group.
- Once the above reading is complete, share aspects of
each section with the whole group.
The group should then identify sub-regions which have relatively uniform
physical aspects. Remembering that
the focus of the project is to establish links between the natural
environment and the way people live, choose three possible sub-regions
that are likely to have strong such connections. Rank those topics in order of
interest. Although you will begin
with your first choice, the other two remain alternatives if information
on the first topic proves scarce.
- At this point, all groups should have a primary
topic. The next step is for each
member to choose certain aspects of the physical environment of that
region to become experts on. Such
aspects include:
- Landforms & geology
- Climate
- Water resources (surface water and groundwater)
- Ecosystems (i.e. vegetation, animal life &
interrelationships)
- Soils
Each member should
then do the following: 1) conduct
additional research on the aspects of the physical environment for which they
will be experts, and 2) read the remaining portions of the chapter on their
region, which deals with the social aspects of the people that live there.
- Bring the results of your additional research to the
group and share it. Be certain to
divide the workload equally, and to provide the work expected in a timely
manner. Remember that your
participation within the group is specifically evaluated by your group
members.
- Once all research has been shared, the group should
then brainstorm, suggesting relationships between the environment and the
people. At first, you may reference
the textbook, recalling the reading from the latter portion of the chapter. Once initial relationships have been
identified, some additional research may be necessary for a complete
understanding. Social aspects of
the people may include:
- History
- Politics
- Agriculture
- Religion
- Language
- Culture
- Economics
- Social and family structure
You need not
include all of the above aspects in your project, and others may arise. The strength and significance of
relationships will vary among regions.
- Once you have outlined all your research and
identified all the relationships, you must plan the presentation. As indicated previously, the
presentation will be centered on one or more tri-fold display board(s),
but should include other items.
Approach the presentation with this frame of mind: your job is to educate your peers. They must understand the details of the
physical environments as well as how they connect to the people. You are the teachers. The presentation does not stand alone;
you may issue hand-outs and you must interact with those that visit. Include the following considerations
when planning:
- How much explanatory text will you have and who
will write it?
- Will all text be on the board or will you have
hand-outs?
- What types of images will you use? Photographs and maps are mandatory, but
will you also include graphs or other diagrams?
- What will the flow of the presentation be
like? What is the best order for
introducing information?
- Will you have additional items to create a true
“sense” of the region, such as food, artwork, music, etc?
- Use the rubrics linked above to guide you in your
progress.
Presentation
Day: On presentation day,
the groups will be divided in half. For
half the period, half the groups will present as the others rotate and
learn. Then roles will be switched. Every individual that visits a project will
be learning from it, completing a response, and evaluating it. Groups will rotate in a timed, orderly
fashion. At the end, group members will
privately evaluate each other’s group performance.