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Posts tagged ‘historical maps’

Maps = history. History = maps.

Most history teachers and historians (even though they often won’t admit it), enjoy playing the “what if” game. What would have happened if the 20th Maine had retreated at Little Round Top? What if Native Americans had been resistant to European bacteria? What if the early Chinese had sailed its fleet of ships east instead of west?

It’s this sort of speculation that has a way of engaging kids in the content. But it doesn’t have to be just questions about events. It can also be questions about stuff. Several months ago, I wrote a quick post about photos that changed the world. And recently, Adelyn Soellner sent me an article discussing maps that impacted history.

I hadn’t really thought about the impact of maps on history. I know that maps can lie, both intentionally and unintentionally. I know that maps are used in many different ways. I know that maps can be used to spread ideas. And, yes, I know that maps can be important players in the story of history.

But the article suggests that certain maps have had a dramatic influence on events – that maps can not just spread ideas but help to generate new ones.

The idea that maps can cause events rather than just reflect them is one I haven’t really wrapped my head around before. We’re not taught this as pre-service teachers and so it’s not one that we pass on to our students.

The article’s author, Peter Barber, Head of Map Collections at the British Library, lists his top ten influential maps.

Most, like the 1490 Martellus World Map and the 1782 Red Line Map of North America, I’ve heard of. But the London Underground Map and pro-Bolshevik propaganda maps were new to me. I also enjoy the inclusion of Google Maps in the list.

I like the idea suggested by Barber. I’ve always loved a good map and enjoy reading things such as The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson and How to Lie With Maps by Mark Monmonier. So now I’ve got a new, fun way to think and talk about maps with other teachers and students.

Perhaps use a influential map as the opening hook to a specific unit. Cut copies of the map into smaller piece, give each student and piece and ask them to predict what their piece might be, when it was made, who made it and how it might affect events. Have students mingle to put their pieces together and compare their predictions to reality.

Perhaps leave certain pieces missing and force kids to “fill in the blanks.” Find maps from differing perspectives, say election maps as projected by Democrats and Republicans, and ask kids to explain the differences. It’s said that history is written by the “winners” – have kids create their own maps from the perspective of the “loser.”

I’m just brainstorming out loud here but it seems that we can create a much richer learning environment when we think of maps as the makers of history rather than just a simple document.

You might be interested in the British Museum’s Mapping History site. Try the Strange Maps blog and Google Maps Mania. The Library of Congress has some great maps as does Harvard and the University of Texas. You’ll run across all sorts of maps that you can begin incorporating into your classroom.

Let me know how it works out!

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Conflict History – your one-stop shop for battle info

Conflict History is a pretty basic mashup. Nothing big really. Simply document every war and battle around the world over the last 5000 years or so.

Taking advantage of the Google Maps interface, Conflict History does a great job of showing the relationship of time and place. The site has a useful search feature as well as a slider across the bottom that allows you to browse by date.

Clicking a specific map area or on the list of battles to the left pops open a window with battle specific information. While much of the information is taken from Wikipedia articles, Conflict History does a good job of organizing the textual data.

The site seems like a handy place for you and students to track down basic battle data or for you to highlight geographic places during a guided lecture.

If nothing else, it’s a great place for history buffs to spend an hour or two!

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Historic Maps in the K-12 Classroom

If you’ve been looking for high-quality geography lesson plans that tie directly to American History, you need to head over to Maps in the K-12 Classroom: A Resource for Teaching the Geographic Dimensions of American History.

Maps in the K-12 Classroom is a project of the Newberry Library’s Hermon Dunlap Smith Center for the History of Cartography with financial support from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

I was lucky enough to run into the group at a conference several years ago and was able to snag a handful of CDs with their goodies on it. We were allowed to make copies of the CD and so have been handing them out left and right ever since. At the time, they hadn’t posted their stuff online and I never really thought to check. But it is definitely worth your time to visit.

The site has 18 maps in six major categories:

  • Exploration and Encounter
  • Migration and Settlement
  • Environmental History
  • The Historical Geography of Transportation
  • Political and Military History
  • The Geography of American Communities

Every map has four lesson plans at different grade levels for a total of 72 lessons. And while each lesson is designed for a specific grade level, they can easily be adapted to fit your needs.

Lessons are easily printed and the maps can be downloaded as PDFs. Each lesson also has links to supplementary materials and images as well as museum curator’s notes.

The site truly is a hidden treasure!

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