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Science

chapter 1

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Chapter 1 Review - 75 multiple choice questions Key terms on pages 41-42 Maps Scale Projection Land Ordinance of 1785 Contemporary Tools GIS GPS Place Names Site Situation Mathematical Location Regions Cultural Landscape Types of Regions Spatial Association Integration of Culture Cultural Ecology Scale Globalization Space Connections TIPS: Read and take cornell notes for the entire chapter, divided by Key Issues, and you should be just fine.
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Partial Unit 1 Outline - APHG

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UNIT 1 - WHAT IS GEOGRAPHY I. Geography - General A. Geography - the study of Earth?s physical and human features. B. Geographers search for patterns and relationships between physical features and human activities. 1. Spacial Perspective - Defined - Viewing physical and human objects according to where they appear in space. 2. Spatial organization Defined - The arrangement of physical and human objects on Earth. C. Geography v. History 1. Geography a. Where did it happen b. Why did it happen there c. How might it change that place 2. History a. What happened b. Why did it happen c. How might it affect events in the future II. History of Geography A. Babylonians 1. 600 BCE 2. Oldest known map of the world in clay B. Greeks

Unit II: Population Study Questions

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Unit II: Population Study Questions ? Population 1. Explain the difference between arithmetic and exponential growth. 2. What have been some of the trends in population growth and distribution since the First Agricultural Revolution? 3. What impact has the Industrial Revolution had on human populations? How have populations that have had such revolutions typically responded? 4. What is the relationship between population growth and distribution to natural hazards? 5. How does ?distance decay? and ?intervening opportunity? affect migration patterns? 6. What is the relationship between improvements in global health and the appearance of age-sex pyramids over the last century

AP Human Geography - Chapter 4 Outline (Key Issues 3 and 4)

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8 Salloum 1 Key Issue 3: Why is Popular Culture Widely Distributed? Popular culture varies more in time than in place. Popular culture begins in one location, like folk culture, but diffuses rapidly across earth to locations with a variety of physical conditions. Rapid diffusion depends on a group of people having high level of economic development. Diffusion of Popular Housing, Clothing, and Food Some regional differences in food, clothing and shelter continue to persist in MDCs. Popular Housing Styles Housing built in the U.S. since the 1940s demonstrates how popular customs vary more in time than in place. Newer housing in the U.S. has been built to reflect changing fashion of houses. After WWII, most U.S. homes were built in modern style.

AP Human Geo Chapter 7 outline

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Where has the world?s population increased? Make sure you highlight natural increase, fertility & mortality in your outline.? Go into DEPTH/DETAIL for each of these & GIVE EXAMPLES! Natural Increase Rate: the percentage by which a population grows in a year. It is computed by subtracting CDR from CBR. Fertility Rate: measure of the number of births in a society. Mortality: measured by infant mortality rate and life expectancy. The world?s population growth has increased the most during the past decade in Asia, with the remaining 1/3 in divided equally among Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and The Middle East. These are the top 3 fastest growing countries: South Sudan Total fertility rate: 5.66

psyc notes chapter 2

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Psychology is empirical. Psychologists are committed to addressing questions about behavior through formal, systematic observation The scientific approach assumes that events are governed by some lawful order Psychologists and other scientists share three sets of interrelated goals: Measurement and description Understanding and prediction A hypothesis is a tentative statement about the relationship between two or more variables. Variables are any measurable conditions, events, characteristics, or behaviors that are controlled or observed in a study Application and control A theory is a system of interrelated ideas used to explain a set of observations. Allows to leap from description of behavior to understanding Must be testable Gradual construction

Andrew Jackson Summary

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APT: Andrew Jackson is often depicted as a wild man and populist opponent of aristocratic privilege. There is some truth to this, but Andrew Jackson was an aristocrat in Tennessee. Elite classes in the?frontier?were successful businessmen and?lawyers?who often were as rough around theedges?as anyone else. The only form of social hierarchy among whites was in terms of accomplishment. Andrew Jackson grew up in this milieu, quickly?moving?up the social?ladder. And while he may have felt alienated from Northeastern elites, he had his own kind of aristocratic demeanor.

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