Standard Number:9
Xpedition Hall
Check out:
X3: World Viewer

Standards
- Standard #3: How to analyze the spatial organization of people, places, and environments on Earth's surface

Activities
- The Riddle of the Russian Lights

Lesson Plans

---
Grade level:
---
Select Lesson Plan:  
The United States at Night
Overview:
This lesson has students look at a map of Russia as seen at night, showing the lights that indicate settlement patterns. They will then look at United States maps to figure out what the U.S. might look like at night, and will draw U.S. maps illustrating their findings.
Connections to the Curriculum:
Geography, social studies
Connections to the National Geography Standards:
Standard 3: "How to analyze the spatial organization of people, places, and environments on Earth's surface"
Time:
Two to three hours

Materials Required:
  • Computer with Internet access
  • United States maps (physical, political, satellite, road map) [available online]
  • Crayons, markers or paint, construction paper
Objectives:
Students will
  • explore and discuss the Riddle of the Russian Lights activity;
  • view a United States road atlas, a population density map, and some Web sites to figure out what the United States might look like at night;
  • discuss how studying maps of population patterns in the United States might help them or others; and
  • draw maps of the United States at night, showing the patterns of lights.
Geographic Skills:

Acquiring Geographic Information
Organizing Geographic Information
Analyzing Geographic Information

S u g g e s t e d   P r o c e d u r e
Opening:
Have students do the Riddle of the Russian Lights activity and discuss the activity as a class. How did the maps help them to understand the pattern of settlement in central Russia?
Development:
Do students think there would be similar patterns in the United States? How can looking at a series of maps like this help people plan for future human activities, such as construction or transporting or selling products?

Ask students what they think the United States would look like if they could view it from outer space at night. Have them look at a United States road atlas, the population density map at the Riddle of the Russian Lights site, and the following Web sites to see the patterns of settlement in the U.S.:

National Geographic: A View From Above—The United States Satellite Map
National Geographic: MapMachine—United States Physical Map
National Geographic: Xpeditions Atlas—United States Political Map

Closing:
Ask students to discuss how they might use the knowledge they gained from investigating the United States maps. How could businesses, the government, and the public use the information depicted on the maps?
Suggested Student Assessment:
Have students draw or paint nighttime maps of the United States, showing what they think the country would look like at night. They should take into consideration the major cities, transportation routes, and other settlements.

Students can do this by painting a piece of paper black, tracing the country's outline onto the page, and then painting the lights in yellow or white onto the country. It would be best if they practiced first with pencil on a standard outline map, available at the Xpeditions atlas.

Extending the Lesson:
Have students look at the climate and population density maps at the Riddle of the Russian Lights activity, and, for each map, ask them to write three statements describing what these maps show. For example, they can state that Europe and Asia have the world's highest population densities.

Ask students to switch back and forth between these maps a few times to answer the following questions:

  • Which climate types have the lowest population density? Why?
  • What climate types exist in India and China—two of the world's most populous nations?
  • What parts of the United States are the most densely populated? How does this relate to the climate types present in the United States?
Related Links:

 

 

 
National Geographic Marco Polo Lesson Plans Activities Atlas Standards Xpeditions Hall Search Xpeditions Xpeditions 00 Introduction 01 The World in Spacial Terms 02 The World in Spacial Terms 03 The World in Spacial Terms 04 Places and Regions 05 Places and Regions 06 Places and Regions 07 Physical Systems 08 Physical Systems 09 Human Systems 10 Human Systems 11 Human Systems 12 Human Systems 13 Human Systems 14 Environment and Society 15 Environment and Society 16 Environment and Society 17 The Uses of Geography 18 The Uses of Geography