6. THEMES OF GEOGRAPHY
• The study of geography includes
specific topic such as landforms,
climates, population and culture.
Geography also entails a number of
unifying interrelated concepts.
Among the most important concepts
are the five themes of geography.
7. • As the historians organize time the
geographers organize space in much. To
help organize space, geographers are
concerned with asking three important
questions about things in world.
Where is it?
Why is there?
What are the consequences of its being
there?
8. THE FIVE
THEMES OF
GEOGRAPHY
• No one theme can be
understood with the
others. The themes are
connected with one
another, as are all
components of our
world. No part of our
world can be understood
in isolation
1. Location
2. Place
3.Human-
Environmenta
l interaction
4. Movement
5. Region
9. 1. LOCATION
• Where something can be found on the
Earth.
• Geographers want to know where things
are located, both by themselves and in
relation to other things
• Location has also 2 types the ABSOLUTE
& RELATIVE Location
10. A. ABSOLUTE LOCATION
• Shows the exact point on the Earth’s
surface where something is located.
• It is identified as a grid coordinate as the
surface of the Earth.
A. Address
B. Longitude/ Latitude
11. B. RELATIVE LOCATION
• Explains where something is in relation
to another.
A. Cardinal direction (North, South, East
& West)
B. Next to, Down from
12. 2. PLACE
• This theme considers the
characteristics that make one place
different from all places on Earth.
• It describes what a location looks like.
• Place is describe according to
PHYSICAL & HUMAN Characteristic.
13. A. PHYSICAL
CHARACTERISTIC
• Include anything that is native made
from geological, hydrological,
atmospheric and biological process.
A. Landforms
B. Bodies of water
C. Trees, shrubs
D. Rocks
14. B. HUMAN CHARACTERISTIC
• Include anything that is human made.
• It comes from human ideas and actions
1. Building, roads, cars
2. Human culture, language, customs
16. MODIFY
• Means that human change the
environment.
• Humans modify the natural environment
to meet their needs
1. Build house
2. Dam, cut trees
17. ADAPT
• Means humans change their life to live/
survive in the environment.
1. Air-conditioning, heat
2. Sunglasses
18. DEPEND
• Human rely on the environment for their
basic needs
1. fishing, crops
2. oxygen
19. 4. MOVEMENT
• How people, goods and ideas move
between places.
• Movement has 3 spatial interaction:
Movements of GOODS, PEOPLE &
IDEAS.
20. • Movement of Goods
1. truck, ship
2. plane, train
• Movement of People
1. bus, car
2. walking, bike
• Movement of Ideas
1. internet, e-mail
2. phone, letters
21. 5. REGION
• The basic unit of geographic study.
• It is defined as an area that has unifying
characteristics (two or more places)
• There are 2 types of region: PHYSICAL
& POLITICAL Regions
22. • Physical Region
1. Desserts
2. Mountains
3. Lakes
4. Rivers
• Political Region
1. States
2. Countries
26. A. HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
•This is a main branch in geography
and it mainly covers studies of the
human race. This normally involves
their backgrounds, how they
interact and the perceptions that
they have for various ideologies
affecting them.
27. A. ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY
• Geographers under this branch
normally study the manner in which
products are usually produced and
consequently distributed in their
respective niche markets. In addition to
this, they also study the way in which
wealth is distributed in various regions
over the planet.
28. B. POPULATION GEOGRAPHY
• In most cases, scholars usually equate
population geography to demography
even though this is usually not the case.
This is mainly owing to the reason that
population geography is deeper than
the study of the patterns of a group of
people with regards to birth, marriage &
death as is the case with demography.
30. C. MEDICAL GEOGRAPHY
• In this branch, geographers normally
study the patterns in which particular
diseases spread. This means that
pandemics & epidemics are usually
studied here as well as common
illnesses, general health care and death
as well.
31. B. PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
• is the branch of natural science which
deals with the study of processes and
patterns in the natural environment.
• is one of the two primary branches of
geography. Listed here are sub-
branches or sub-fields of physical
geography. These sub-fields of
physical geography study processes
and patterns in the natural environment.
32. EXAMPLES OF PHYSICAL
GEOGRAPHY
• Geomorphology- is the field concerned with
understanding the surface of the Earth and the
processes by which it is shaped, both at the present
as well as in the past.
DESER
T
33. • Hydrology- is predominantly concerned with
the amounts and quality of water moving and
accumulating on the land surface and in the
soils and rocks near the surface and is
typified by the hydrological cycle.
OCEAN
34. • Glaciology- is the study of glacier and ice
sheets, or more commonly
the cryospehere or ice and phenomena that
involve ice.
GLACIER
S
35. • Climatology- is the study of
the climate, scientifically defined as
weather conditions averaged over a
long period of time.
CLIMATE
CHANGE
36. • Meteorology- is the interdisciplinary
scientific study of the atmosphere that
focuses on weather processes and
short term forecasting.
STORM
37. • Pedology- is the study of soils in
their natural environment.
SOIL
39. Common Method of
Geography
1. Quantitative
Method
2. Qualitative
Method
Data
Collection
Analysis
Presentation,
etc.
Case Study
Conclusion, etc.
40. 1. QUANTITATIVE METHOD
• can be used to verify which of such
hypotheses are true
• Geographers use quantitative
approaches to describe, understand,
and assess geographic phenomena
41. DATA COLLECTION
• is the process of gathering and
measuring information on targeted
variables in an established systematic
fashion, which then enables one to
answer relevant questions and evaluate
outcomes.
42. ANALYSIS
• a detailed examination of anything
complex in order to understand its
nature or to determine its essential
features
47. STATISTICS
• the practice or science of collecting and
analyzing numerical data in large
quantities geographic information
system.
48. GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
SYSTEM (OR GIS)
• is a system designed to capture, store,
manipulate, analyze, manage, and
present spatial or geographic data.
49. 2. QUALITATIVE METHOD
• produce information only on the particular
cases studied, and any more general
conclusions are only hypotheses.
• Qualitative research is often used to gain a
general sense of phenomena and to form
theories that can be tested using further
quantitative research.
50. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN QUANTITATIVE
AND QUALITATIVE METHOD
Qualitative Methods Quantitative Methods
Methods include focus groups,
in-depth interviews, and
reviews of documents for types
of themes
Surveys, structured interviews &
observations, and reviews of
records or documents for numeric
information
Primarily inductive process
used to formulate theory or
hypotheses
Primarily deductive process used
to test pre-specified concepts,
constructs, and hypotheses that
make up a theory
More subjective: describes a
problem or condition from the
point of view of those
experiencing it
More objective: provides
observed effects (interpreted by
researchers) of a program on a
problem or condition
51. Text-based Number-based
More in-depth information on a few
cases
Less in-depth but more breadth of
information across a large number of
cases
Unstructured or semi-structured
response options
Fixed response options
No statistical tests Statistical tests are used for analysis
Can be valid and reliable: largely
depends on skill and rigor of the
researcher
Can be valid and reliable: largely
depends on the measurement device
or instrument used
Time expenditure lighter on the
planning end and heavier during
the analysis phase
Time expenditure heavier on the
planning phase and lighter on the
analysis phase
Less generalizable More generalizable