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Introduction to Geography, 8/e
Arthur Getis, San Diego State University
Judith Getis
Jerome D. Fellmann, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Introduction

Objectives:

After reading and studying this chapter you should be able to:

1.

Understand what is meant by the term "geography" and why it is important to be geographically literate.

2.

Understand how the field of geography evolved.

3.

Recognize the types of employment available to professionally trained geographers.

4.

Know the six questions that geographers ask to understand the nature of geography.

5.

Understand that size and scale can affect the interpretation of geographic phenomena.

6.

To be able to identify places in terms of their absolute and relative location.

7.

Distinguish between physical and cultural landscapes and how humans can change the attributes of a place.

8.

Know what is meant by accessibility, connectivity, and distance decay when concerned with the interaction among places.

9.

Classify regional descriptions as being either "formal" or "functional."

9.

Identify the four traditions of geography, and know each of their approaches to geographic understanding.