Education through Maps The Challenges of Knowing and Understanding the World
Pontus Hennerdals studie visar att vi har svårt att uppfatta hur kanterna av en världskarta hänger samman. Men genom att vi upptäckt detta kan vi skapa engagemang för bättre förståelse för genom exempelvis undervisning, säger han.
Författare
Pontus Hennerdal
Handledare
Fil. Dr. Ulf Jansson, Stockholms universitet, Professor Bo Malmberg, Stockholms universitet.
Opponent
Docent Ann Grubbström, Uppsala universitet
Disputerat vid
Stockholms universitet
Disputationsdag
2015-10-23
Titel (eng)
Education through Maps The Challenges of Knowing and Understanding the World
Institution
Kulturgeografiska institutionen
Education through Maps The Challenges of Knowing and Understanding the World
The overall purpose of this thesis is to study, in relation to geography education and with a historical perspective, the challenges of knowing and understanding the world. The cases are all from Sweden. In the first paper, educational ideas in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries are studied, and the results indicate that some of the previously criticised educational ideas that were perceived as resulting from the ideas of nineteenth century regional geography in fact can be observed in earlier centuries and were criticised during the nineteenth century. In the second paper, schoolchildren‟s ability to locate geographical names on outline maps is compared with children‟s ability to complete the same task 45 years earlier. A total of 1,124 students were included in the latter study, and the results were
compared with those from a study of 1,200 students from the same town conducted in 1968. The results raise questions regarding the picture of the continuous decline in children‟s school results and show, for example, that
children today are better at locating continents on a world map. The final paper identifies a new aspect of mapreading difficulties. These difficulties in map reading are increasingly important in our global society, i.e., how the edges of the world map cohere. The paper shows that many map readers, children and adults, respond according to the idea of linear peripheral continuity, which indicates that the proposed continuation is along the straight line that continues tangentially to the original route when it crosses the edge. In general, this understanding leads to incorrect interpretations of the continuation of world maps
.
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