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Rescooped by Eliana Oliveira Burian from Geography Education onto formação continuada online para professores de inglês
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NatGeo's APHG page

NatGeo's APHG page | formação continuada online para professores de inglês | Scoop.it
Resources from National Geographic Education to support teachers and learners of the Advanced Placement Human Geography course.

Via Seth Dixon
Eliana Oliveira Burian's insight:

It's Worth knowing about it!

Seth Dixon's curator insight, December 20, 2012 9:10 AM

The National Geographic Education Foundation works to assist teachers to promote the status and quality of geography education.  In keeping with that mission they have recently revamped their AP Human Geography page, dividing all their resources according to the 7 major units of the course (in the "tags" section below, I have attempted to do the same):

  1. Geography: Its Nature and Perspectives
  2. Population
  3. Cultural Patterns and Processes
  4. Political Organization of Space
  5. Agriculture and Rural Land Use
  6. Industrialization and Economic Development
  7. Cities and Urban Land Use

Tags: APHG, unit 1, unit 2, unit 3, unit 4, unit 5, unit 6, unit 7.

Steven Sutantro's curator insight, December 20, 2012 8:31 PM

Useful tools for Geography Educators

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Rescooped by Eliana Oliveira Burian from Geography Education
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Discover Ancient Rome in Google Earth

"See Rome as it looked in 320 AD and fly down to see famous buildings and monuments in 3D. Select the 'Ancient Rome 3D' layer under Gallery in Google Earth."


Via Seth Dixon
Eliana Oliveira Burian's insight:

Rome, sweet Home!

Lou Salza's curator insight, December 20, 2012 10:15 PM

Amazing opportunity  for students to "see" Anciant Rome and explore monuments as they once looked and functioned.

Nikos Tzindalis's curator insight, April 10, 9:54 AM

add your insight...

 
Reneé Windle's curator insight, May 1, 10:44 PM

This is a really interesting way to visualise what Ancient Rome looked like thousands of years ago and to learn about some of Rome's most historical landmarks in relation to the Roman Empire.