Environment & Society

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Video

FEATURES & DETAILS:


Price: $19.98
  
Grades: 5 to 9
  
Runtime: 23 minutes
  
Item #: T0151
  
Availability: In Stock!
  
Format: VHS
  
Also Available In:
Digital Rights
  
Closed-Captioning: Yes


PRODUCT SUMMARY


The main interaction between environment and society is our reliance on Earth's renewable, nonrenewable and flow resources. In Environment and Society, students will explore how society uses Earth's resources to meet our most basic needs for food, water and shelter, and how those same resources influence how and where we live. Through our use and misuse of technology, students will see how we impact the world around us and conversely, how the forces of the ever-changing Earth shape our lives as well. Students also consider critical environmental issues related to our use of energy resources and learn to appreciate the interconnectedness of Earth's systems. Part of the multivolume Geography for Students Video Series. A teacher's guide is included and available online.


EDITORIAL REVIEWS


"…vocabulary terms are explained in easy-to-understand language…colorful and fast moving…includes timely references to Hurricane Katrina and global warming…will capture students’ interest and be useful in social studies and even science classes."- School Library Journal (June 2006)

"…this series addresses much of the standard curriculum in geography, and with the well-planned Teacher’s Guide that is almost a lesson plan in itself; an entire unit of study comes in one small package…Recommended." - Library Media Connection (Jan 2007)



FULL REVIEWS


School Library Journal (June 2006)

Gr 5-9-Geography, as this series explains, is much more complex than memorizing state capitals or major mountain ranges. Physical Systems, for example, introduces terms like "atmosphere," "lithosphere," and "biosphere," and shows how events like the eruption of Mt. St. Helens can affect other physical systems. Places and Regions talks about Formal, Functional, and Perceptual Regions, noting that the Jello Belt, for example, is a Formal Region, similar to the Sun Belt and Rust Belt. Throughout the series, vocabulary terms are explained in easy-to-understand language, with the exception of "ethnic enclave" which on two different programs is defined by one of the academic experts as "an affinity group with spatial representation." However, footage of a Chinatown will help the viewers understand the meaning of an ethnic enclave. By contrast, the concept of time zones across the globe is clearly explained in The World in Spatial Terms. Each title has the same format, with a male with a backpack introducing each section, while the main narration is done by a female. The footage is colorful and fast moving, and the myriad of geography experts who appear on camera keep their comments short and to the point. The series includes timely references to Hurricane Katrina and global warming. There are also surprising nuggets of information, such as an explanation of the Ring of Fire, a series of volcanic plates ringing the Pacific Ocean, which includes both New Zealand and Alaska; and the fact that the Great Plains were originally called the Great American Desert. Sometimes too much information is provided, as in the comparison of the Mercator, Robinson, and Winkel Tripel map projections. Overall, though, the series will capture students' interest and be useful in social studies and even science classes. Be aware of overlapping segments, though, especially in Geographic Perspectives. Most of the segments on that DVD are also on other titles in the series.

Copyright 2006 School Library Journal. Used with permission.

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