• Title/Summary/Keyword: geography of everyday life

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Meaning and Practice of the Teaching and Learning based on Everyday Life in Geography Subject Matter (지리과 생활중심 교수-학습의 의미와 실제)

  • 장의선;김일기;이민부;박승규
    • Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
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    • v.37 no.3
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    • pp.247-261
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    • 2002
  • This study suggests that the contents and methods focusing on the leamer's geographical experience of everyday life and environments, are very effective for teaching and teaming in geography subject matter. The contents have to be selected and structurized from private geographies about their region of everyday life for teaming abstractive and scientific concepts of geography. Scientific concepts of geography, i.e. geographical concepts become 'scope'for selecting the contents and these systematic structure substitutes 'sequence'. The criteria by which selected contents of teaching and teaming based on everyday life may consist of three elements: region as leamer's place for everyday life; concrete experience of the place; and leamer's changing geographical experiences.

Reconceptualizing the Geography Subject Matter Based on the Everyday Life (일상생활에 근거한 지리교과의 재개념화)

  • 박승규;김일기
    • Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.1-14
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    • 2001
  • In geography education, the research which conceptualize the subject matter is still scare. Generally, the subject matter is used as a given or taken for granted as tested. The subject matter is not accepted as a given, but needed to construct what is founded on learner's life as a thing of most important the process of teaching and learning. Today, most critics argue that schooling seems to represent only a catalog of subjects, a structure of socially prescribed knowledge, or a complex system of meanings, which may or may not fall within his grasp. To solve this problem the meaning of terms should be separated from socially fixed conditions. Therefore, this resarch explores ways to reconceptualize the subject matter of geography based on the learner's everyday life in geography education.

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Development and Operation of Region-Focused Program by Field Survey of Physical Geography with the Case Study on Miho River Basin, Central Korea (자연지리 답사를 통한 지역화 교육 프로그램의 개발과 운영 - 미호천 유역 하천지형을 사례로 -)

  • Lee, Min-Boo;Kim, Jeong-Hyuk;Choi, Hun
    • Journal of The Geomorphological Association of Korea
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.53-67
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    • 2014
  • This study aims to develop and operate education program for the region-focused field study on the physical geography for the students to understand their community places in the geography classes of elementary and, secondary schools and college. The theme of the program is understanding the geomorphic structures and processes including river channel, wetland, levee, terrace, sand and gravel bar and alluvial island, floodplain and irrigation system in Miho river basin, Chuncheong Province of Central Korea. For the study of regional geography as their community, the field education is focused on relations of landform to everyday life, though different levels in learning achievement according to each school classes. But, the purpose of the field education is, same at all classes, for student to analyze and understand the geomorphic effects on the place of everyday life in geography education.

Geographical Implications of Fieldwork Activities of Everyday-Life Space: A Case Study on Fieldwork of Students of An Elementary Teachers College (일상 공간에 대한 답사 활동의 지리 교육적 함의: G 교육대학교 학생들의 답사 활동을 사례로)

  • Lee, Khan Yong
    • Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
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    • v.51 no.6
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    • pp.915-933
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    • 2016
  • This paper is to elucidate geographical implications of fieldwork activities of everyday-life space of students of an elementary teachers college. The students depended mainly on questionaries and interview for gathering data during fieldwork. They had difficulty in processing data to visual-spatial representation, i.e. map, tables, and diagrams. But they were favourable for appling their fieldwork experiences to teaching the elementary geography. This is viewed as an unique behavioral orientation or desirable attitudes of students of an elementary teachers college. On the basis of the self-assessment and peer-assessment of fieldwork activities, it could be ascertained that the students came to understand the geographical value and significance of fieldwork activities. The fieldwork activities made them to heighten their interest of everyday-life space, and so to internalize positive their senses of place, to enforce their identities of place. According to the results of this research, we need to develop a systemic contents for fieldwork activities in geography curriculum of elementary teachers colleges.

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Spaces of Articulated (Non-)Economic Practices and Social Reproduction: Economic Geographical Perspective to the Marketization in North Korea (절합된 (비-)경제적 관행의 공간과 사회적 재생산: 북한 시장화에 대한 경제지리학적 접근)

  • Kim, Boo-Heon;Lee, Sung-Cheol
    • Journal of the Economic Geographical Society of Korea
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    • v.22 no.4
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    • pp.381-404
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    • 2019
  • The paper aims to identify how North Korean various economic agents respond to the economic crisis in North Korea, and how these multiple practices are entangled with its spatiality by through the questionnaire survey and in-depth interview targeted at North Korean refugees. The paper argues that it needs to examine the marketization in North Korea in terms of the domesticating recently debated in economic geography. In this perspective, the marketization in North Korea could be explained not as a grand project 'out there' with hegemonic power, but as various economic agents within their space are constantly (re)constructed through everyday life practices. Economic agents' responses to economic crisis, economic rupture, and economic marginalization could be identified in terms of articulation between economic and non-economic factors. More specifically, the paper emphasizes everyday life responses are over-determined by their economic and non-economic factors and its effectiveness is differentiated by their power relations.

An Issues on the Nexus of Tourism and Everyday Life (관광과 일상의 결합에 관한 소고)

  • Oh, Jeongjoon
    • Journal of the Economic Geographical Society of Korea
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    • v.24 no.1
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    • pp.14-28
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    • 2021
  • Tourism has been considered as the opposite of everyday life. Tourism has been recognized as an extraordinary experience in an extraordinary time and space, and everyday life has been related to a non-extraordinary, that is ordinary time, space, and experience. Beyond this dichotomous thought, this paper focuses on positively combining the relation between tourism and everyday life. To this end, the paper analyzed the ordinaryness of everyday life in tourist spaces, and conversely, grasped the extraordinaryness in dairy spaces. This paper shows that routines affect tourism practice, family tourism make tourist spaces domestification through performance, and the off-the-beaten track tourism spaces for experiencing the ordinary daily life of local residents are centered around the neighborhoods of global metropolises. Based on this, it was able to overcome dualism between daily life and tourism, and to promote the nexus between two.

Developing and Applying Environmental Education Learning Modules Using Goal-Based Scenario (목표기반시나리오를 활용한 환경교육 교수·학습모듈의 개발과 적용)

  • Kim, Minsung;Yoo, Soojin
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.466-482
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    • 2016
  • The purpose of this study is to develop learning modules for environmental education using goal-based scenarios and to examine their pedagogical benefits at the elementary educational level. To enhance environmental knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behavior, this research developed learning modules relevant to three sub-dimensions of environmental education: education about environment, education in environment, and education for environment. In particular, this study provided useful educational strategies based on students' everyday lives. The developed modules consisted of three parts: 1) acquiring knowledge concerning the cause of global warming, 2) practicing and internalizing environmental knowledge in students' everyday lives, and 3) extending and disseminating environmental knowledge and awareness to other people. After applying the modules, the students acquired knowledge regarding the causes of global warming through discussions with their peers, and furthermore, exercised pro-environmental behaviors in their everyday lives. Moreover, the participants created UCC to urge other people to act for environment.

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Aspects of Development Education Described in the Geography Syllabus and Textbooks in the State of NSW, Australia (오스트레일리아 NSW 주 지리 교육과정 및 교과서의 개발교육 특징)

  • Cho, Chul-Ki
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.19 no.3
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    • pp.551-565
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    • 2013
  • This paper examines the aspects of development education in the Geography Syllabus in the State of NSW, Australia and geography textbooks developed by it. The aspects of development education in the Geography Syllabus and textbooks is as follows. Firstly, Development Education is implicitly described in terms of the difference of the quality of life and aid links in Geography (Mandatory) Stage 4 and Geography (Mandatory) Stage 5, but clearly in Geography Elective. Moreover, Development Geography is one of unit to learn deeply in case of Global Challenges in Stage 6. Secondly, in geography textbooks, development education is sequenced with learning of the quality of life in everyday life, understanding of diverse meaning of development and measure of development, and the role of individuals and organizations for reducing the global inequality. The implications of the findings is as follows. Firstly, geography curriculum needs to be consist of the difference of the quality of life in the middle school, and development geography in high school. Secondly, the major concepts of development education like development, measure of development and the aid etc. need to be described in the different views. Thirdly, development education needs learners to learn the interdependence and practice the global citizenship through learning of specific links of our country with others. Finally, geography textbooks should not describe the normative efforts for reducing global inequality, and treat individual practical cases as well as organizations like government and NGOs so that learners empathize with their value and attitude through individual practical cases.

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Circulation System of Geographical Knowledge for the Sustainable Development of Geography (지속가능한 지리학 발전을 위한 지리지식의 순환체계)

  • Moon, Nam-Cheol
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.20 no.4
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    • pp.473-483
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    • 2014
  • The geographical knowledge is composed of academic geographical knowledge, school geographical knowledge, applied geographical knowledge and popular geographical knowledge according to the diverse social need and demand. And the geographical knowledge has developed through the knowledge circulation system, which is connected to knowledge production, delivery, application and to reproduction among these knowledge fields. The discontinuity of knowledge circulation can lead to crisis of geographical whole. Therefore, for sustainable development of geography, it is necessary to firmly build a virtuous circulation system of geographical knowledge which is linked to a knowledge production and accumulation by an academic geography, knowledge delivery by a school geography, knowledge social application by an applied geography, knowledge application in everyday life by a popular geography and knowledge reproduction by an academic geography.

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Design and Application of the Teaching-Learning Model on Highschool Student's Daily Life : A Case Study of Migration and Population Change Unit in Highschool (생활중심 교수학습 모형의 설계와 적용 - '인구이동과 인구변화' 단원을 중심으로 -)

  • Ock, Han-Suk;Jang, Hyun-Suk
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.523-535
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    • 2005
  • This study is aimed at researching the applicability of teaching-learning models in highschool geography class by designing the models on the basis of geographical experience the learners go through everyday life. The procedures and results of the application of the models are as followed. First, the systematization of the teaching concepts should be preceded to internalize the learners cognitive development, that is, to systemize cognitive structure. The concrete learning points of geographical concepts from the units about Migration and Population Changes are systemized with 'migration' as a higher concept, 'moving type' as basic concept, 'moving factors' as the lower concept. Everyday geographical experiences the students can go through are surveyed. Second, as preparation for the geography class, hand-outs about family-moving history and the change of the family number were used as basic material for real class teaching activity, showing the learners' general concepts are very effective as basic units which can be easily understood and accessed to. Third, with the experimental class, the geography class should secure the flexibility on the teaching-learning process. The result of applying the newly developed teaching-learning model to actual geography classes was that experimental group had higher achievement rate than the compared group with general teaching-learning model applied to. The result of analyzing students' response of the new teaching-learning model was that the students were interested and satisfied emphatically and they showed positive response in regard to practical use of the contents. Here, it is noticeable that the new teaching-learning model causes the students to be interested. But it's also found that there's no big difference in improving the students' inquisitive mind.

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