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Rescooped by THE OFFICIAL ANDREASCY from iGeneration - 21st Century Education (Pedagogy & Digital Innovation)
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Some Good YouTube Channels for Social Studies Teachers via educators' tech 

Some Good YouTube Channels for Social Studies Teachers via educators' tech  | Daily Magazine | Scoop.it
Free resource of educational web tools, 21st century skills, tips and tutorials on how teachers and students integrate technology into education

Via Tom D'Amico (@TDOttawa)
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Rescooped by THE OFFICIAL ANDREASCY from Into the Driver's Seat
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40 Maps That Explain The Middle East

40 Maps That Explain The Middle East | Daily Magazine | Scoop.it
These maps are crucial for understanding the region's history, its present, and some of the most important stories there today.

Via Jim Lerman
Alex Vielman's curator insight, November 23, 2015 3:17 PM

Maps like the ones posted in this article, really helps people to understand and break down deeply of understanding the entire region as a whole. Visualization is very important in geography when trying to understand the region people are talking about. this region as goes down to the Mesopotamia Era. It is important to know, how the culture was in this area to how it differentiated during the Ottoman Empire. During the first couple of maps, we can begin to see the division of the entire region. As you go on, we begin to notice the divisions between people, religion, language between states and in-states. There is so much information to know about the Middle East region and it may be even harder to understand due to the tons of changes and separations, but it is important to understand these divisions like the Sunni's and the Shi'ites in order to fully explain the development and the current situations that are occurring in this region as we speak. 

Matt Ramsdell's curator insight, December 7, 2015 5:18 PM

These 40 maps are a very interesting way of showing how people have traveled around and moved about the Earth from the time of the fertile crescent era to the people of today. It shows us the paths that people have taken to move to a new location. How they used the Meditteranean Sea to move from one side to the other. It also shows how the Tigris and Euphrates came together to form a smaller area of the Persian gulf. This led to smalled economic growth because now there is less land for imports and exports.

Kelvis Hernandez's curator insight, December 12, 2018 10:49 PM
Being able to explain any region in just 40 maps is a very bold claim. While no one would be able to do this Vox was able to make a very interesting set of historically, culturally, and politically themed visualizations of this continuously changing part of the world. Some maps show the borders of an empire past, others discuss the many ethnic groups that call the region their home, and yet another discusses the importance of oil and who has it. 
 
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Teaching across the curriculum with digital maps - Innovate My School

Teaching across the curriculum with digital maps - Innovate My School | Daily Magazine | Scoop.it
It can be good to help students get a little extra perspective. Rachel Jones teams up with Brighton assistant headteacher David Rogers to take a look at what mapping technology can offer the classroom.

Via Leona Ungerer, Stephania Savva, Ph.D
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Rescooped by THE OFFICIAL ANDREASCY from Science News
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Genes and Geography—They Go Together

Scientists can now analyze a person's genes to pinpoint what country his or her ancestors hailed from. A team of U.S. researchers recently performed a massive analysis of European genetics using high-resolution gene-screening techniques that arose from the Human Genome Project. To the researchers' surprise, they found that they could distinguish Italians from French, Danish from Norwegians, and so on—just by genes alone. The techniques will prove useful in the study of genetic diseases, ancestry tracing, and crime scene investigation.


Via Sakis Koukouvis
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