AP © Human Geography
Unit 7: Urban Geography & Environment
Monday March 3rd-Wednesday April 9th
95 pages of reading
Free Response Test: 04.08.14
Multiple Choice Test: 04.09.14
VII . Cities and Urban Land Use ...... 13–17%
A . Development and character of cities
1 . Origin of cities; site and situation characteristics
2 . Forces driving urbanization
3 . Borchert’s epochs of urban transportation development
4 . World cities and megacities
5 . Suburbanization processes
B . Models of urban hierarchies: reasons for the distribution and size of cities
1 . Gravity model
2 . Christaller’s central place theory
3 . Rank-size rule
4 . Primate cities
C . Models of internal city structure and urban development: strengths and
limitations of models
1 . Burgess concentric zone model
2 . Hoyt sector model
3 . Harris and Ullman multiple nuclei model
4 . Galactic city model
5 . Models of cities in Latin America, North Africa and the Middle East,
sub-Saharan Africa, East Asia, and South Asia
D . Built environment and social space
1 . Types of residential buildings
2 . Transportation and utility infrastructure
3 . Political organization of urban areas
4 . Urban planning and design (e .g ., gated communities, New Urbanism,
and smart-growth policies)
5 . Census data on urban ethnicity, gender, migration, and socioeconomic
status
6 . Characteristics and types of edge cities: boomburgs, greenfields, uptowns
E . Contemporary urban issues
1 . Housing and insurance discrimination, and access to food stores
2 . Changing demographic, employment, and social structures
3 . Uneven development, zones of abandonment, disamenity, and
gentrification
4 . Suburban sprawl and urban sustainability problems: land and energy use,
cost of expanding public education services, home financing and debt
crises
5 . Urban environmental issues: transportation, sanitation, air and water
quality, remediation of brownfields, and farmland protection
If You Learn Only Seven Things In This Chapter:
1) All cities fit within Christaller’s central place theory. Some cities have greater ranges and need bigger thresholds. Range is the maximum distance people are willing to travel to get a product or service. Threshold is the minimum number of people needed for a business to operate.
2) There are three basic models of urban structure in the United States. The concentric zone theory, developed by Burgess, describes expansion in concentric rings around the central business district. The sector model, developed by Hoyt, suggests that growth extends along transportation routes. The multiple nuclei model, developed by Ullman and Harris, suggests that growth is independent of the central business district.
3) Different continents have cities with different characteristics. European cities are older and more historic. Asian cities are usually built on ports for trade. Latin American cities possess a spine of high-quality housing extending from the central business district. African cities have three separate central business districts, including a colonial central business district, contemporary central business district, and a market zone. Islamic cities are focused on the principles of the religion.
4) Cities have problems such as race relations, traffic, water delivery, pollution, and urban sprawl that can negatively affect their inhabitants unless handled appropriately by local government.
5) The three world cities are New York City, London, and Tokyo. Other cities are rated and ranked based on their economic, cultural, and political importance to the areas they serve.
6) The hierarchy of cities from smallest to largest is hamlet, village, town, city, metropolis, and megalopolis. The largest metropolis int eh United State is New York City with over 18 million people in its metropolitan areas.
7) Primate cities have at least twice the population of the next-largest city in the same country. London, Paris, and Buenos Aires are examples of primate cities.
Date / In-Class Activities / HomeworkMonday
Day 1
March 3 / Test Correction Day / Fouberg 274-288
Tuesday
Day 2
March 4 / A Look at the Ukraine
Clicker Check / Fouberg 288-290
Getis 381-387
Reminder: (This is the day the reading is assigned, it is “due” Thursday. When assigned on Thursday, it is “due” on Tuesday. Vocab Quizzes only have “due” readings in them)
Wednesday
Day 3
March 5 / Revisiting Site & Situation & Hearths / Work on notecards
Thursday
Day 4
March 6 / Economic Base of a City
MCT Re-Takes (During Lunch) / Fouberg 290-296
Getis 388-397
Work on notecards
Friday
Day 5
March 7 / Vocab Quiz
Notecards Due
Monday
Day 6
March 10 / Christaller’s Central Place Theory / Work on notecards
Tuesday
Day 7
March 11 / Christaller’s Central Place (cont)
Clicker Check / Fouberg 296-303
Getis 407-415
Work on notecards
Wednesday
Day 8
March 12 / The Urban Hierarchy, Rank Size Rule, Primate City, and World Cities / Work on notecards
Thursday
Day 9
March 13 / World Cities (cont.)
Clicker Check
Unit 6 FRT Re-Takes (During Lunch) / Fouberg 304-314
Getis 398-404
Work on notecards
Friday
Day 10
March 14 / Vocab Quiz
Notecards Due / Work on notecards
Spring Break / Spring Break / Spring Break
Monday
Day 11
March24 / English STAAR / Work on notecards
Tuesday
Day 12
March 25 / Patterns of Land Use, Concentric Zone, Sector Model, Multiple Nuclei.
Clicker Check / Fouberg 315-317
Work on notecards
Wednesday
Day 13
March 26 / Patterns…cont. Differences in Core, Periphery, and Semi-Periphery / Work on notecards
Thursday
Day 14
March 27 / International Cities
Clicker Check / Fouberg 418-426
Work on notecards
Friday
Day 15
March 28 / Vocab Quiz
Notecards Due / Work on notecards
Monday
Day 16
March 31 / Globalization & Environment / Work on notecards
Tuesday
Day 17
April 1 / Globalization & Environment
Clicker Check / Fouberg 427-440
Work on notecards
Wednesday
Day 18
April 2 / Natural Disasters & Settlement Patterns / Work on notecards
Thursday
Day 19
April 3 / Climate Change
Clicker Check / Work on notecards
Friday
Day 20
April 4 / Vocab Quiz
Notecards Due
Monday
Day 21
April 7 / South & Central Asia Quiz
Tuesday
Day 22
April 8 / FRT
All Unit 7 Quiz Re-Takes During 1/2st half of lunch
Wednesday
Day 23
April 9 / MCT
Vocabulary
acid rain
acropolis
agora
agricultural surplus
agricultural village
aquifers
atmosphere
basic sector
blockbusting
central business district
central city
central place theory
city
commercialization
concentric zone model
deforestation
disamenity sector
economic base
edge cities
environmental stress
first urban revolution
Forum
functional zonation
gated communities
gentrification
global warming
Griffin-Ford model
hinterland
Huang He and Wei
hydrologic cycle
Indus River Valley
informal economy
leadership class
McGee model
McMansions
megalopolis
Mesoamerica
Mesopotamia
metropolitan area
multiple-nuclei model
multiplier effect
new urbanism
Nile River Valley
nonbasic sector
oxygen cycle
peripheral model
primate city
rank-size rule
redlining
renewable resources
River Valleys
sector model
shantytowns
site
site
situation
situation
social stratification
spaces of consumption
suburb
suburb
suburbanization
Sunbelt phenomenon
tear-downs
town
trade area
urban
urban hierarchy
urban influence zone
urban morphology
urban realm
urban sprawl
urbanized area
world city
zone
zoning laws