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AP HG Chapter 3 Migration MC Test Review

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Chapter 3 Migration MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) The ability to move from one location to another is A) migration. B) mobility. C) net migration. D) voluntary migration. Answer: B Diff: 1 2) A permanent move to a new location is A) migration. B) mobility. C) net migration. D) voluntary migration. Answer: A Diff: 1 3) A country has net immigration if emigration ________ immigration. A) equals B) exceeds C) is closer to net migration than D) is less than Answer: D Diff: 1 4) Refugees migrate primarily because of which type of push factor? A) economic B) environmental C) political D) all of the above Answer: C Diff: 2

Ch. 3 PPT

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? 20## Pearson Education, Inc. Key Issues Where are migrants distributed? Where do people migrate within a country? Why do people migrate? Why do migrants face obstacles? ? 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. ? 20## Pearson Education, Inc. Learning Outcomes 3.1.1: Describe the difference between international and internal migration. 3.1.2: Identify the principal sources of immigrants during the three main eras of U.S. migration. 3.2.1: Describe the history of interregional migration in the United States. 3.2.2: Describe interregional migration in Russia and Canada. 3.2.3: Describe interregional migration in Canada, China, and Brazil. ? 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. ? 20## Pearson Education, Inc. Learning Outcomes

Rubenstien Ch 3 Reading Guide

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Migration: Key Issue 1 Why Do People Migrate? Rubenstein, pp. 78-85 On page 78, list the three things geographers study regarding migration. - - - On page 79, most people migrate for three objectives, list them: - - - CASE STUDY on page 80. Identify Five key points of the case study. ? REASONS FOR MIGRATING 1. What are push factors and pull factors? 2. Complete the table below with specific examples of push and pull factors. PUSH FACTORS PULL FACTORS ECONOMIC CULTURAL ENVIRONMENTAL 3. Define: intervening obstacle 4. Briefly describe role of each of the following in examining intervening obstacles and migration: a) physical geography b) transportation c) political concerns/laws

ap human geography webquest

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APHG Immigration to America webquest Learning questions: Who came to America? Why did they come? When did they come? For the people of the United States, Ellis Island is frequently an experience commonly shared by our ancestors. In the period when the world?s immigrants poured into our country searching for a better life, this entry center processed and either admitted or rejected hundreds of thousands of men, women and children. Today, we are going to explore what Ellis Island was and what it meant to the people who came through the Great Hall. ? 1) Ellis Island and Waves of Immigration Go to http://www.libertyellisfoundation.org/

Chapter 3 Exam

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MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) The ability to move from one location to another is 1) _________ A) mobility. B) voluntary migration. C) variable migration. D) net migration. E) migration. 2) Several million Irish migrated in the 1840s primarily because 2) _________ A) disastrous economic conditions pushed them out of the country. B) poor environmental conditions induced them to migrate. C) they were attracted to the United States. D) Spanish invasion threatened their homes. E) the English forced them to become refugees. 3) Wilbur Zelinsky's model of migration predicted 3) _________ A) migrants move most frequently for economic reasons. B) women are more likely to migrate than men.

Unit 1 Test Study Guide

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Cultural Geography ? Geog 2001 Study Guide Fall Semester Test One: Chapters 1-4 J. Naumann 1) How does Environment Determinism explain the relationship between the environment (physical conditions of nature) and culture? 2) How does Possibilism explain the relationship between the environment (physical conditions of nature) and culture? 3) What were the adverse environmental impacts of rechannelling the Kissimmee River in Florida ? 4) What are characteristics of meridians in the Earth's Coordinate System? 5) What are characteristics of parallels in the Earth's Coordinate System? 6) What is map scale? 7) What are the characteristics of a small scale map? A large scale map?

Chapter 2 Study Guide

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AP Human Geography ? Mr. Cox Name_____________________________________________ Unit Three: Migration 1. Explain the difference between immigration and emigration:________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ 2. Compare circulation and migration:_____________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ 2. Explain how migration affects globalization:______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________ 3. List E. G. Ravenstein?s three main elements of migration: 3.a.__________________________________________________________________________________

Chapter 3: Migration Vocabulary

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Remittances Money migrants send back, money migrant send back to family and friends in their home countries, often in cash, forming an important part of the economy in many poorer countries. Cyclic Movements Movement that has a closed route and is repeated annually or seasonally. Activity Spaces The space within which daily activity occurs. Nomadism Movement among a definite set of places. Periodic Movements Movement that involves temporary, recurrent relocation Migrant Labor A common type of periodic movement involving millions of worker in the US and tens of millions of workers worldwide who cross international borders in search of employment and become immigrants, in many instances. Transhumance

Ch 4 Migration

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Question Answer Movement that involves a short period away from home. cyclic movement Movement that involves longer periods away from home. periodic movement Movement that may never include a return home. migration A system of pastoral farming where ranchers move livestock according to the seasonal availability of pastures. transhumance Regular movement among a set number of places, with no permanent home. nomadism migration from country to country international migration migration from one part of a country to another region within the same country internal migration a person who leaves his/her country for another country emigrant a person who moves into a country from another country immigrant

AP Human Geography - Chapter 3 Outline

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CHAPTER 3 MIGRATION Introduction Geographers document from where people migrate and to where they migrate. They also study reasons why people migrate. In the United states, the average family moves once every six years. Most people migrate in search of economic opportunity, cultural freedom, and environmental comfort. The difference between the number of immigrants and the member of emigrants is the net migration. Local diversity is the migration of people of similar cultural values. Migration is a form of relocation diffusion, but reasons for migrating can be gained from expansion diffusion. Case Study: Migration from Ukraine to Italy Legal and illegal immigrants have been pouring into Western Europe by the millions. Most of them come from Africa, Asia, and Eastern Europe.

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