Oh, the Places We’ll Go

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My Wonderful World is delighted to be joined today by
Jan Harp Domene, President of coalition partner the National Parent Teacher Association (PTA). Jan identifies the current election season as an opportunity to make the case for expanding geographic education offerings nationwide, and highlights the PTA’s efforts to get students involved in learning about civics and geopolitical issues.

In light of last Friday’s presidential debate on foreign
policy and the impending global economic crisis, I can’t think of a better time
to be talking about the world and the role we play in it. And by “we,” I mean everybody—not just the people
who want to be President next January. I
tell the young parents who join PTA that they are the future leaders of our
organization, but it’s also true that kids are the future leaders of our
country. They might grow up to be the President,
or they might be the head of their own company, or they might be a leader in
their own community. Whatever path they
take, kids today will almost certainly be more connected to the world outside
our borders than the generation that preceded them.

So how are we preparing our kids for this world that seems
to be getting smaller and smaller? In
addition to the basics like math, science, and reading, are we also teaching
them about civics and art and geography and language? Understanding other cultures, and even our
own evolving America,
is going to be increasingly important as time goes on. Consider this: there are already more than twice
as many people
in the world primarily speaking Mandarin as there are
primarily speaking English—with that gap likely to get bigger in the coming
decades. And what does it mean that in
2050 there will be more school-age Hispanic
children
than school-age non-Hispanic
white children in the United States? Regardless of where we live, the odds are increasing that we’re going to
be talking to people from all over the map. If we’re going to understand one another, a good place to start is knowing
where exactly on that map we’re all from. That’s why we’re so proud to be a
part of the My
Wonderful World coalition
along with
National Geographic and other leading organizations. Working together, we’ve
created an action
kit
to help parents become advocates on behalf of geographic
education.

Continue reading “Oh, the Places We’ll Go”

Tell Us: What’s your take on the foreign policy debate?

Tell Us:
Did you get a chance to watch the first Presidential debate
on foreign policy Friday night? If you didn’t, get up to speed with these
recommended resources:

  1. Quotes on key foreign policy issues, including Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Russia/Georgia, and energy independence (BBC News)
  2. Watch the debate in full (BBC News)
  3. Written transcript of the debate (LA Times Blog)

What did you think of the focus on foreign policy relative
to other issues, like domestic economic policy (Of course, as new developments
in the European and Asian stock markets following last week’s bailout of
leading U.S. financial and insurance institutions reveal, U.S. economic
dynamics have great influence on the global economy and can hardly be
approached from a purely “domestic” perspective.)? Is there any specific topic
or world region you wished the candidates had addressed that they did not?

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Continue reading “Tell Us: What’s your take on the foreign policy debate?”

Five for Friday 9.26.08

New Election Map.
Gear up for the Vice-Presidential debate tonight by checking
out the latest iteration of the red-blue state election map. I like this one
from “Real Clear Politics,” which crunches state numbers by averaging results
from several national polls.

 “Improving
Iowa Schools:
Provide Help in Teaching about Global Understanding.”

In this opinion-editorial piece that
appeared in the Des Moines Register on
Monday, retired educator and school principal Joe Millard makes the case for geography,
urging state officials to increase global education offerings.


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Project Urban Earth Aims
to “Reclaim the Streets.”

Geography teacher Daniel
Raven-Ellison of Thatcham, England,
traveled to Mumbai, Mexico City, and London
to look at urban
development trends–from street level, through photography. His methodology:
Walk across the entire city. Snap a picture every eight steps. Combine images
into a stop-motion film photo montage. His goal: Show cities objectively, as
they really are. “I wanted to show the changing face of the city from ground
level. Urban Earth is about challenging the way we see the world. We see most
of our urban environments through the screen of the car door. This aims to show
what the cities are really like and reclaim the streets.” It’s an important
task in this, the first year in human history when more than 50% of people live
in cities. Check out Daniel’s
blog
for more on the project.

Continue reading “Five for Friday 9.26.08”

“Telephono:” The Game of Telephone Goes Global

Some people argue that great art is inspired by
simplicity. Did you know that Beethoven’s Fifth
Symphony
might have been inspired by three notes of a local bird’s song?
Well, David Matysiak is following suit by taking the kid’s game of telephone
and creating a series of musical anthologies in his Telephono project.

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Telephono is a fun, collaborative, creative mash-up concept:
Matysiak writes an initial piece of music and sends it to a fellow musician,
who then has the freedom to change “anything or everything” about the original
version. The second musician sends it to
a third, and the chain continues. At
each stage, artists send their product back to Matysiak.

Because the process is archived at each step, a listener of
the entire process can hear the specific changes that each musician makes. What’s especially awesome about this project
is that it travels across state lines, country borders and international
oceans, showing that place can contribute to the artistic process.

Place is literally infused in some pieces of Telephono. For example, Italian musician Enrico Molteni
took a pop song sent to him from Chicago musician, Mike Kinsella, and added sounds of an Italian beach to the track. (Check out
each step of this process! From Matysiak’s first repetitive guitar riff called
“There Was No Expiration Date on the Carton of Milk That Wore My Thinning Face”
to Molteni’s re-titled pop-version “Ain’t We Superhuman”).

Continue reading ““Telephono:” The Game of Telephone Goes Global”

MWW Has a New Friend: GeoCarta Blog

We’ve just added a new blog to our ‘roll: GeoCarta. GeoCarta features articles relating to topics of surveying, mapping (cartography), navigation, and geotechnologies. Examples of recent post titles include: “Mapping Minefields in Angola ,” “Self-Driving Auto Navigates Streets of San Francisco ” “GPS System Vulnerable to Fake Signals “and “Welsh Hikers Make Mountain out of Hill .” One of the stories I found most interesting, … Continue reading MWW Has a New Friend: GeoCarta Blog