Spatial concept development and the teaching of geography in primary schools.
Date
1980
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Abstract
Until recently educational geographers have concerned themselves largely
with questions regarding those parts of the discipline which should be
included in school and university curricula (Fitzgerald, 1969; Thomas, 1978).
The advent of the quantitative and more recently the behavioural approaches
to geography have focused attention on the nature of the discipline and
educationalists faced with the change in emphasis from a regional to quantitative
approach have incorporated new areas of study into the school
curricula, without (in many cases) considering the needs of school children
and their stages of conceptual development.
The emphasis in geography teaching has in this manner moved away from a
factual basis towards the teaching of concepts. Geographic concepts which
are important for children to acquire have been defined by academic geographers
(Hagget, 1975) but unfortunately little research has been undertaken into
the teaching of these concepts. Only recently have geographers begun to show
an interest in the way in which concepts are acquired by young pupils. In
particular, the works of Blaut and Stea (1973, 1974), Catling (1978, 1978b,
1979), Balchin and Coleman (1973), Naish (1977), Cole and Beynon (1968, 1969),
Rushdoony (1971) and Cracknell (1976) have focused attention on the need for
geographic educators to understand the way in which pupils develop spatial
concepts so that teaching strategies can be correctly planned.
Deep seated prejudices regarding what children can understand at primary
school are being subjected to careful analysis with sometimes surprising
results (Blaut and Stea, 1974). Research into spatial concept formation
and the teaching of geography is still in its infancy and more research is
needed to enable geography at the primary school level to play a meaningful
part in the total development of the child. In this regard the emphasis
placed on the teaching of graphicacy needs special attention and mapwork
skills need to be improved (Balchin and Cole, 1973).
In this thesis an attempt is made to analyse and discuss the major theories
of spatial concept development and to apply the ideas of the theorists to
the practice of geography teaching in senior primary schools. The research
into childrens' spatial concepts in two Natal primary schools, and into
ways in which mapwork concepts can be utilised to aid spatial concept
development, should help to improve the effectiveness of geography
teaching at this level.
Description
Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, 1980.
Keywords
Geography--Study and teaching., Education, Primary--Curricula--South Africa., Theses--Geography.