STATIC AND DYNAMIC MAPS, DEVELOPED FROM AN ANALYTICAL OR SYNTHESIS REASONING, IN SC HOOL GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS: THE METHODOLOGICAL FEASIBILITY

On the teaching and learning of Geography, at least in Europe, School Geographic Atlases have earned credit among the didactic materials since the early nineteenth century. The fi rst school atlas of the european continent was the germanic «Kleiner Atlas Scholasticus», concluded in 1710. Other sim...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Marcello Martinelli, Elizabeth de Souza Machado-Hess
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal de Uberlândia 2015-06-01
Series:Revista Brasileira de Cartografia
Online Access:http://www.seer.ufu.br/index.php/revistabrasileiracartografia/article/view/44746
id doaj-05be7c899327402eb5bf344366da8875
record_format Article
spelling doaj-05be7c899327402eb5bf344366da88752020-11-25T00:02:54ZengUniversidade Federal de UberlândiaRevista Brasileira de Cartografia0560-46131808-09362015-06-0166STATIC AND DYNAMIC MAPS, DEVELOPED FROM AN ANALYTICAL OR SYNTHESIS REASONING, IN SC HOOL GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS: THE METHODOLOGICAL FEASIBILITYMarcello Martinelli0Elizabeth de Souza Machado-Hess1Universidade de São Paulo Universidade de São Paulo On the teaching and learning of Geography, at least in Europe, School Geographic Atlases have earned credit among the didactic materials since the early nineteenth century. The fi rst school atlas of the european continent was the germanic «Kleiner Atlas Scholasticus», concluded in 1710. Other similar atlases appeared, conceived as simplifi cations of the great General Reference Atlases. The «Atlas Général Vidal-Lablache: histoire et géographie» (1894) was a classic that inspired other derivations. The fi rst Brazilian School Atlas was the Atlas of the Empire of Brazil, by Cândido Mendes de Almeida, published in 1868. As a result of the evolution of cartography, a wide range of School atlases, not only global but also national, regional, state, provincial and even local atlases, are currently available in print, digital and electronic media. In order to develop a School Geographic Atlas, the initial step is the interlace of two basic guidelines in which space and time are present: fi rst, the teaching the map, considering the theoretical and methodological bases about the construction and representation of space in the child. This representation process in the child starts with its own spatial reality and later, it continues with the reality of other people; second, the teaching with the map, practiced in Geography to achieve the knowledge of the world, from the close and known experience (the place) to the distant unknown (the world space), not linearly, but going back and forth through the various levels of approach. Thus, there will be the understanding how the local reality has a strong relationship with the rest of the world. The student will be able to think on a particular context without having experienced it before. The next step deals with the defi nition of the Atlas contents and the delimitation of the spatial area, taking into account the methodological basis of the Geography. In addition, the Thematic Cartography can be considered as a monosemic language. As a consequence, the thematic maps can be constructed by applying various methods, with their own level of adequacy to represent the selected theme, in a static or dynamic appreciation. Moreover, the reality can be glimpsed inside an analytical or synthesis reasoning. Within the previous outlook, this speculation will give emphasis to the participation of maps, as the integral elements of school geographic atlas, constructed in accordance with a static or dynamic appreciation, developed following two distinct levels of reasoning, either analytical or even synthesis.http://www.seer.ufu.br/index.php/revistabrasileiracartografia/article/view/44746
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marcello Martinelli
Elizabeth de Souza Machado-Hess
spellingShingle Marcello Martinelli
Elizabeth de Souza Machado-Hess
STATIC AND DYNAMIC MAPS, DEVELOPED FROM AN ANALYTICAL OR SYNTHESIS REASONING, IN SC HOOL GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS: THE METHODOLOGICAL FEASIBILITY
Revista Brasileira de Cartografia
author_facet Marcello Martinelli
Elizabeth de Souza Machado-Hess
author_sort Marcello Martinelli
title STATIC AND DYNAMIC MAPS, DEVELOPED FROM AN ANALYTICAL OR SYNTHESIS REASONING, IN SC HOOL GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS: THE METHODOLOGICAL FEASIBILITY
title_short STATIC AND DYNAMIC MAPS, DEVELOPED FROM AN ANALYTICAL OR SYNTHESIS REASONING, IN SC HOOL GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS: THE METHODOLOGICAL FEASIBILITY
title_full STATIC AND DYNAMIC MAPS, DEVELOPED FROM AN ANALYTICAL OR SYNTHESIS REASONING, IN SC HOOL GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS: THE METHODOLOGICAL FEASIBILITY
title_fullStr STATIC AND DYNAMIC MAPS, DEVELOPED FROM AN ANALYTICAL OR SYNTHESIS REASONING, IN SC HOOL GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS: THE METHODOLOGICAL FEASIBILITY
title_full_unstemmed STATIC AND DYNAMIC MAPS, DEVELOPED FROM AN ANALYTICAL OR SYNTHESIS REASONING, IN SC HOOL GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS: THE METHODOLOGICAL FEASIBILITY
title_sort static and dynamic maps, developed from an analytical or synthesis reasoning, in sc hool geographic atlas: the methodological feasibility
publisher Universidade Federal de Uberlândia
series Revista Brasileira de Cartografia
issn 0560-4613
1808-0936
publishDate 2015-06-01
description On the teaching and learning of Geography, at least in Europe, School Geographic Atlases have earned credit among the didactic materials since the early nineteenth century. The fi rst school atlas of the european continent was the germanic «Kleiner Atlas Scholasticus», concluded in 1710. Other similar atlases appeared, conceived as simplifi cations of the great General Reference Atlases. The «Atlas Général Vidal-Lablache: histoire et géographie» (1894) was a classic that inspired other derivations. The fi rst Brazilian School Atlas was the Atlas of the Empire of Brazil, by Cândido Mendes de Almeida, published in 1868. As a result of the evolution of cartography, a wide range of School atlases, not only global but also national, regional, state, provincial and even local atlases, are currently available in print, digital and electronic media. In order to develop a School Geographic Atlas, the initial step is the interlace of two basic guidelines in which space and time are present: fi rst, the teaching the map, considering the theoretical and methodological bases about the construction and representation of space in the child. This representation process in the child starts with its own spatial reality and later, it continues with the reality of other people; second, the teaching with the map, practiced in Geography to achieve the knowledge of the world, from the close and known experience (the place) to the distant unknown (the world space), not linearly, but going back and forth through the various levels of approach. Thus, there will be the understanding how the local reality has a strong relationship with the rest of the world. The student will be able to think on a particular context without having experienced it before. The next step deals with the defi nition of the Atlas contents and the delimitation of the spatial area, taking into account the methodological basis of the Geography. In addition, the Thematic Cartography can be considered as a monosemic language. As a consequence, the thematic maps can be constructed by applying various methods, with their own level of adequacy to represent the selected theme, in a static or dynamic appreciation. Moreover, the reality can be glimpsed inside an analytical or synthesis reasoning. Within the previous outlook, this speculation will give emphasis to the participation of maps, as the integral elements of school geographic atlas, constructed in accordance with a static or dynamic appreciation, developed following two distinct levels of reasoning, either analytical or even synthesis.
url http://www.seer.ufu.br/index.php/revistabrasileiracartografia/article/view/44746
work_keys_str_mv AT marcellomartinelli staticanddynamicmapsdevelopedfromananalyticalorsynthesisreasoninginschoolgeographicatlasthemethodologicalfeasibility
AT elizabethdesouzamachadohess staticanddynamicmapsdevelopedfromananalyticalorsynthesisreasoninginschoolgeographicatlasthemethodologicalfeasibility
_version_ 1725436068732338176