A r c h i v e d  I n f o r m a t i o n

Early Childhood: Where Learning Begins Geography--January 1999

Where Is It?

Drawing of adult and children examining globe The first theme geographers use is location. This tells us exactly where in the world something is. Just as your home has a street address, every place has a ''global address'' identified by latitude and longitude. If you know these numbers and how to use them, you can find any place in the world and give its absolute location. (For definitions, see the glossary at the end of this booklet.)

Geographers also ask why things are located in particular places. How do these places influence our lives? For example, Baltimore, Maryland, was founded at 39.3o (degrees) orth latitude and 76.6o (degrees) West longitude on an inland harbor. It is a major shipping port for the eastern seaboard with direct land routes by train and highway to cities throughout the United States. Many people who live in Baltimore are involved in waterfront activities such as shipping, loading, and fishing.

Very young children will not be able to understand concepts like latitude and longitude, or even left and right. However, young children learn body awareness--the shape of the body and how much space it takes up, where the different body parts are, how the body moves and rests, how the voice is a part of the body. This is the beginning of an understanding of location.

Young children learn that they relate to other people and physical things. To help young children learn location, make sure they know the color and style of the building in which they live, the name of their town, and their street address. Then, when you talk about other places, they have something of their own with which to compare.

Activities

Direction

Concepts of location begin early in life. By age 2, children are able to distinguish between objects that are near and can be grasped, and those that are farther away. They can notice features of their immediate surroundings, such as the bedroom or yard.

The idea of direction is a difficult concept. Children develop the concept of direction through experiences such as climbing, jumping, running, and rolling around. Children need to physically experience themselves in space. First, children need to develop body awareness; to understand where their body is in a room, including its size and level (upright, crawling or stooping, or on the floor); how the body's different parts are put together with wriggling wrists and wobbling ankles, and how to move in directions like forward, backward, or sideways. When they know how their body moves, they will have the basis for learning precise directions and locations later in life. The more opportunities children have to run and move about, the greater their ability to keep track of position and location.

Children with disabilities have a special need to experience space, direction, and location. Even when using a wheelchair, children can play simple dancing games that help them orient themselves in space. They can take field trips into the community and use maps to follow directions.

Ages 2-3

Ages 4-5

Ideas of direction develop gradually through preschoolers' experiences. Try some of the following activities to introduce terms of direction:

Maps

Maps represent the real world. Young children won't fully understand maps until they are much older. However, without a foundation from their own experiences, children will not develop into successful map readers or users when they are older. Personal experience helps children understand maps and how they use symbols, which can be introduced to children when they are quite young.

Before children can learn to use maps, they must understand that maps are tools to help us find where we are and where we are going. They need to know that maps and globes use other symbols and the concept of scale. They are pictures from a ''bird's eye view,'' and reduce the size of an actual place.

Ages 2-3

Ages 4-5


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