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- EDUCATION, Page 53Quick! Name Togo's Capital
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- An inventive teacher battles against geographic illiteracy
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- By SAM ALLIS
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- If you're in Senegal and want to get to Chad, which
- countries would you cross to get there?
-
- Mmmm. Let me get back to you on that.
-
- No such luck if you are one of the 23 seventh-grade students
- in David Smith's geography class at the Shady Hill School in
- Cambridge, Mass. That question is typical of the brainteasers
- he tosses out to his tribe throughout the school year in an
- effort to teach them what the world looks like. By June, the
- answer is as obvious as, say, the capital of Burkina Faso
- (Ouagadougou).
-
- On the opening day of school in September, Smith, 46, gives
- his students blank grids and tells them to draw their versions
- of the globe. These are revealing documents. One student
- skipped Europe altogether. Another put Antarctica at the North
- Pole. A third had Asia due north of Europe, while a fourth
- placed England squarely in Africa. "My first map was a complete
- disgrace," admits Adrian Nivola. Recalls Tao Nguyen: "I drew
- a big blob."
-
- Never mind. One in 7 Americans cannot find the U.S. on a
- blank world map, and 1 in 4 cannot locate the Pacific Ocean,
- according to a 1988-89 Gallup survey commissioned by the
- National Geographic Society. In the same poll, American
- students ages 18 to 24 came in dead last among ten countries
- tested in geography. Half did not know that the Panama Canal
- cuts sailing time between New York City and San Francisco.
-
- Smith puts away his students' charming first efforts and
- goes to work, devoting two or three weeks to each continent or
- land mass. Africa, hands down the toughest nut, warrants four
- weeks. "It's got a lot of little countries and weird names,"
- explains Sara Stonberg. There are no tricks to this process,
- which is the point. Students spend two hours in class each week
- and another couple of hours on homework, learning the
- old-fashioned way. They memorize names and shapes, and draw
- over and over the outlines of countries and land masses (the
- northern edge of the Soviet Union is particularly nettlesome)
- until they get them right. Creative use of mnemonics helps.
- "Beware of hot gorillas eating nitrates casually, pop" is code
- for the Central American countries of Belize, Honduras,
- Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama. Smith
- leavens the work load with games like geography baseball, in
- which a home-run problem might be: name the 15 Soviet
- republics. Later in the year, it would become: name each of
- their capitals. Slowly, the contours of the world come into
- focus.
-
- "They are learning how to learn," Smith explains. "They end
- up dealing comfortably with maps and the ability to decode
- information from maps, to use an atlas, read latitude and
- longitude." The class accomplishes this in an atmosphere of
- controlled chaos. Students throw questions at one another as
- they pore over their material. "Does Tasmania belong to
- Australia?" shouts one student. "Since Greenland belongs to
- Denmark, does that make Copenhagen its capital?" asks another
- of no one in particular.
-
- Just before the end of the school year, Smith gives his
- students blank, 17-in. by 27-in. map boards and tells them to
- try again. They have about 14 hours of class time over several
- weeks to complete the job from memory. No tracing or reference
- material is allowed. The results are breathtaking. The class
- produces richly colored maps, complete with longitude and
- latitude and close to 150 countries accurately identified and
- located. Most are in proper scale. Many maps include capitals,
- mountains and rivers. Some are festooned with whimsical
- touches. Ethel Weld drew a school of fish, blowing bubbles, off
- Montevideo. Alice Gearhart fashioned the lost city of Atlantis
- in one part of her map and, inexplicably, the Grim Reaper in
- another.
-
- "What is more important is not the map but the process,"
- says Smith, who does not grade the final products. "The kids
- take something they're completely terrified of in September and
- in June draw the world and make it beautiful and enjoy the
- process. When they arrive here, I tell them they'll end up with
- 150 countries, and they tell me, `No way.' As teachers, we face
- kids who have attention spans of 20 seconds. This takes nine
- months and goes against everything American society is pushing.
- This is rote memory, enriched by mnemonics and practice and the
- real use of knowledge -- the way people learn anything."
-
- Word of Smith's success is spreading. In the past year, he
- has spoken in California, Kentucky, Missouri, Connecticut and
- Massachusetts to educators interested in his approach to the
- subject. Geography is making a comeback in this country after
- a long decline, according to National Geographic Society staff
- member Jane Tully. In Tennessee, for example, enrollment in
- high school geography classes is up more than 100% since 1987.
- "Geography simply got lost as a subject," she explains. "It got
- folded into social studies after World War II, and it lost its
- identity. This also meant that a whole generation of teachers
- didn't learn geography, and it stopped being taught."
-
- By the end of the year, Smith's students feel confident, if
- not smug, about their grasp of the world. "I used to hear about
- countries on television and think they were over there
- somewhere. I hadn't heard of half of them," admits Leila
- Nesson. "Now I can figure out better what's going on in the
- world. I'll always know that Angola is in Africa and not just
- over there somewhere." Says Eleanor Pries, as she examines her
- final map: "We saw our originals and we just laughed."
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