Maps & inquiry
The ur-example of a map being used for inquiry is John Snow's cholera map of 1854. (Large-scale image here.)
Let's use the data / tools / inquiry framework to break it down
- Data: Cholera cases & water pumps. Both of these are POINT data, not polygons or paths.Â
- Tools: Street map, with suggested subdivisions of houses
- Inquiry: What is the spatial pattern between the two data types? What causal relationship can be inferred from this relationship?Â
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Thus far, our mapping tools are Google Earth and Google Maps. Can you use them to do the same sort of inquiry? Sure thing. In fact, here's Snow's data, re-created in a webmap:Â
For more contemporary data, take a look at a mapped database of 25 years of political donations
And now to turn to more local and more modest examples built using Google Earth & Google Maps, see
- A local history project, documenting the life of Bethlehem Steel worker Henry Noll: Wikipedia entry, Google Map on Noll's life.Â
- A project I've been doing periodically in my social studies methods classes. It's an adaptation of an old social studies lesson plan, Weaving the Globe:Â https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/62251098/Weaving%20the%20Globe%2C%202011-2012.kml
(And in case we get into the idea of inquiry vs. narrative: To get some background on Henry Noll and the narrative in which Frederick Winslow Taylor placed him, see pp. 43-47 in Taylor's Principles of Scientific Management, 1912. Taylor refers to Noll as 'Schmidt'; the passages characterizing him start at the bottom of p. 43.)
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