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Five Ways to Foster a Love of Geography

A knowledge of our world is central to all other knowledge. 

This knowledge provides context to everything - science, history, literature, math, fine arts, and more.

Providing our children opportunities and resources to build their geography knowledge is simple, but it requires commitment and intentionality. It should be part of our ongoing committment to continually set a beautiful educational feast before our children in our homes.

Through homeschooling, we are able to provide this knowledge so much more effectively because we can immerse our student in the world - literally.

Five Ways to Foster a Love Of Geography

Following are 5 simple strategies to foster a love for geography in your children. I've seen these work with my own children.

Their knowledge of the world amazes me. It has inspired me to reclaim my own geography education. 

Recently, I posted a free hand drawing of Africa that my son had completed - I was shocked by the response this picture received.

So many of you asked what I did to help him achieve this. 

The answer is simple: provide tools, opportunities, and inspiration

This post outlines what we've done in our homeschool to inspire a love of geography.

5 Ways to Foster a Love of Geography

1. Surround Children With Geography

We've always surrounded our children with geography. Easy ways to do this:

 

  • Invest in Globes

Keep a learning globe in a place where your child can easily access it. Encourage them to play with it often. Talk to them while they play. Play together. Show a fascination in the globe and your child will follow your lead.

 

  • Hang Child-Friendly Maps

Dry-Erase Map Decals are fun in a child's room. 

A simple map of the world hung in your home will always provide a point of discussion.

 

  • Use Map Placemats

Don't you remember these from when you were a kid? (I do!) Geography placemats are one of the most simple way to cement that geography knowledge, and it's so easy to strike up a conversation or an impromptu quiz during a meal, right?

 

  • Talk to Children When You Go Places

Even if it was a simple day trip, I always was talking with my kids about geography.  

When they see you in the car with a physical map (shocker - don't use your phone with Google Maps!) they make the connection that following a map leads to interesting destinations and events. 

When we would take trips I would print notebooking pages and have the kids create a notebook for that journey - a great way to learn more about the place, but also to help with our knowledge of geography, too. 

(Pictured below are the state pages, but we've used Notebooking Pages for tracing countries of the world, too!)

 

2. Create a Geography Table - Blobbing & Tracing

This is the SINGLE MOST effective thing I did to nurture an interest in geography.

Read this post and watch the video below to see exactly what I included as part of our table and also what time of day we used the table. 

In the post and video I mention blob mapping quite a bit. My dear friend Brandy has an excellent post and printables that help with this!

Have your children blob map DAILY. I had five and six year olds in my CC Foundations class who had such a wonderful grasp of the continents, bodies of water, and things like the Tropic of Cancer, Capricorn and the equator. 

A whiteboard and a dedicated five minutes each day can go A LONG way!

 

Trace maps - A LOT of them!

Tracing maps turned out to be a bit of an obsession for my son. There's something about tracing paper, Ultra Fine Sharpies, and a collection of wonderful maps that just excites kids. 

 

Once your child is good at blobbing and tracing then they will move on to drawing freehand. This takes time, but with enough exposure and time, it will come naturally to them. 

 

 

3. Own Atlases & Geography Books/Read Widely

I've included my favorite geography books below. We have a geography section in our homeschool shelves that my children use liberally!

What's hard to include, however, are all of the beautiful picture and chapter books we read that took place ALL OVER the world. Each time we would read I would point out where things took place in the world. 

This goes back to surrounding your children with geography - have that globe nearby and talk to your kids about where stories and events take place. 

 

There's a Map on My Lap!: All About Maps (Cat in the Hat's Learning Library)National Geographic Kids Beginner's World AtlasThe Geography Bee Complete Preparation Handbook: 1,001 Questions & Answers to Help You Win Again and Again!The National Geographic Bee Ultimate Fact Book: Countries A to ZDraw Asia: Volume IDraw Asia: Volume IIDraw AfricaDraw EuropeDraw the USADraw Mexico, Central and South AmericaDraw the World: An Outline of Continents and OceansWhere on Earth? AtlasNational Geographic Family Reference Atlas of the World, Fourth Edition: Indispensable Information and More Than 1,000 Maps and IllustrationsLift the Flap Atlas

 

 

4. Play Geography Games

Anything is more enjoyable when it is a game. 

We started a collection of the 10 Days games a few years ago - these are hard to find, so if you see them at a thrift store or garage sale, or a used book sale, grab them! 

At some point in time, we have played each of these games, and they all inspire more geography knowledge. 

Even my youngest (who is 13 and in Classical Conversations Challenge A) asks me to sit down quite and often and play a geography game with him. It is just part of his daily geography time, and I LOVE that. 

Kids are never too old to play games! 

 

10 Days in Africa Game10 Days In The USA Board Game10 Days In Europe Game10 Days in Asia Game10 Days in the Americas - The Unpredictable Game of Making ConnectionsPassport To Culture® GameScrambled StatesGeo Bee Challenge GameBrainbox All Around The WorldGeoBingo World - Educational Geography Board GameProfessor Noggin's Countries of the World Card GameLearning Wrap-ups States & Capitals - US Geography KeysTicket To RideTicket To Ride - EuropeTicket To Ride Asia: Map Collection - Volume 1Ticket to Ride Map Collection Board Game: The Heart of Africa, Volume #3Ticket To Ride India: Map Collection - Volume 2Ticket to Ride: France/Old West Map 6Ticket To Ride: Nordic CountriesTicket to Ride Map Collection Volume 5 : United Kingdom Board GameTicket to Ride Germany Board GameTicket To Ride: First Journey

 

 

5. Challenge - Draw the World!

Because both of my children went through Classical Conversations Challenge A, they were required to draw the entire world. 

This is an incredibly valuable skill. Not only did they learn every country, capital and feature in our world, but they also developed a habit of discipline and perseverance to learn the sheer amount of geography knowledge necessary to complete the task. 

My son is steadily working his way through each continent and takes a tremendous amount of pride in his drawings. 

Keep in mind, this has been accomplished in large part because of a commitment to geography we've had for many years. 

I'm so impressed with Challenge A and the geography strand in particular. 

5 Ways to Foster a Love of Geography
Five Ways to Foster a Love For Geography

Geography is one of the most accessible, enjoyable, and valuable subjects we can expose our children to in our homeschools.

We have a unique opportunity with ample time, resources, and motivation -- seize the opportunity and give your children the WORLD!

 

Do you study geography in your homeschool?  What does it look like? Leave me a comment below!

 

 

Create a Geography Table in Your Homeschool

When children are in the grammar stage (elementary years) they are ripe for memorizing facts and yearn for more.

Geography is the perfect subject to let them sink their teeth into.  There is just SO MUCH they can learn.

Being a part of Classical Conversations  brought to light the importance of geography. It equipped me to organize facts about geography and assist my children in memorizing them. 

As is so often the case, I am merely facilitating their learning - and learning right along with them. One resource I have recently discovered is Prisoners of Geography - fabulous for us to understand the WHY behind a lot of geography and to share that with our children - particularly our Challenge age children!  I also highly recommend reading the section about geography in The Core. 

 

Create a Geography Table in your Homeschool

* This post contains affiliate links.

As a part of Cycle 3, my Foundations student learn 24 geography facts - all of these related to the United States of America. He learned all of the state capitals, mountain ranges, rivers, lakes, features, etc... 

Our last time through Cycle 3 I wanted to facilitate an even deeper understanding of geography. I created a very simple geography table. (As you will see in the video at the end of the post, I simply repurposed a coffee table and put it in a sunny spot in our home.)

If I learned anything that year, it is that the memory work in CC is ENOUGH. First and foremost, I wanted my children to memorize the grammar of geography. My go to resource was ALWAYS the Foundations guide

*These resources are geared towards a study of US geography.

geotable1.png.png

Supplies for a Geography Table

{These supplies are highlighted in the video below.}

Globe and/or Atlas

DK Atlas (recommended by Classical Conversations)

Globe

Small White Board

Tracing Paper

Notebook with LOTS of sheet protectors  (I made the cover for the notebook in my word processing program.)

Continental Blob Mapping Packet (LOVE this!)

Traceable Maps (various maps I choose from CC Connected)

Sharpies

Geography Coloring Book(s)

Smart About the 50 States

Notebooking Pages    (My membership to Notebooking Pages comes in handy for so many things... particularly geography!)

Daily Geography Routine 

This was always an independent activity for my son. I need this time at the beginning of the day to meet with my daughter and get her moving with her schoolwork. Usually 30 minutes was spent at the geography table.

My son did the following EACH DAY: 

  • Copy the continental blob map on the white board
  • Draw the blob map from memory on the white board  (Doing this is SO beneficial -- I cannot stress this enough!)
  • Trace that week's map from the folder
  • Work on a state coloring page or notebooking page corresponding to the memory work
  • Review previous maps (this way we will be more well prepared for Memory Master at the end of the year!)
  • Free reading/reference:  Use Smart About the 50 States

Here's a video to explain about the geography table in more details.  Enjoy!  


Geography Resources

Prisoners of Geography: Ten Maps That Explain Everything About the WorldFoundations Guide, 4th Edition Fourth EditionThe Core: Teaching Your Child the Foundations of Classical EducationInteractive Globe for Kids, 2 in 1, Day View World Globe and Night View Illuminated Constellation MapDarice 9-Inch-by-12-Inch Tracing Paper, 100-SheetsBoard Dudes Metalix Magnetic Dry Erase Board 8.5 x 11 Inches (DDT37)Compact Atlas of the World: 6th Edition (Compact World Atlas)Smart About the Fifty States: A Class Report (Smart About History)Sharpie Fine-Tip Permanent Marker, 24-Pack Assorted ColorsAmazonBasics Clear Sheet Protectors - Letter Size (100 Pack)United States Coloring Book (Dover History Coloring Book)The 50 States: Facts & Fun (Dover Little Activity Books)Geography Coloring Book (3rd Edition)Geography from A to Z: A Picture Glossary (Trophy Picture Books (Paperback))

 

 

Is geography a subject in your homeschool?

 Do you study it on its own, or do you incorporate it into your history curriculum?  

I'd love to hear how everyone approaches geography!

 

You might also like:  

5 Ways to Supplement Foundations:  Simple Additions to Your Homeschooling Day

Goodies for CC Cycle 3