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Berger, Michael L. – Journal of Geography, 1976
For teaching about urban geography, it is suggested that students first examine self-contained buildings and treat them as miniature cities, then advance to more traditional concerns of the discipline. (Author/ND)
Descriptors: Buildings, Elementary Secondary Education, Geographic Location, Human Geography
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Berger, Michael L. – Social Studies, 1974
The implications of a vertical city, of which the John Hancock Center in Chicago is a prototype, should be considered by teachers of urban studies. Questions clustering around nine discussion areas indicate the kinds of expanded, critical, and interdisciplinary thinking that planning and teaching for the future require. (JH)
Descriptors: Architecture, Building Design, Community Planning, Futures (of Society)
Berger, Michael L. – 1973
The field of urban geography has as its prime foci the study and teaching of the spatial relationships that exist among the various structures, areas, and inhabitants within cities. The idea of a single-structure city, a building where people can live, work, and be entertained with a climatically-controlled environment is no longer a utopian…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Geographic Concepts, Geography, Geography Instruction
Berger, Michael L. – 1976
Inquiry techniques are described in which students investigate geographic phenomena in microcosm. The objective of this strategy is to enable students to examine geographic concepts and generalizations on a level which they can easily understand. Specifically, strategies for investigating and analyzing self-contained buildings and planned…
Descriptors: Community Characteristics, Community Study, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching