🌎Geography 📖Theory Curriculum Lesson 3: 🗺Mapping ~ Cartographer(Making the Earth 🎈Flat) (2024)

Today, we are learning about maps and the process of mapping. We are currentlyreading National Geographic Kids Beginner’s World Atlaswhich is the next level reading after theNational Geographic Our World: A Child’s First Picture Atlas ~the atlas you wouldstart reading with your child at around two-and-a-half years.

A map is a drawing of a place as it looks from above. If you were a bird flying directly overhead, you would see only the tops of things. A map looks at places from a bird’s-eye view and utilizesdrawings called symbols to show thingsthat do not move. Thus, the map is flat, and it is smaller than the place shows. A map can help you find where you are and where you want to go.

A compass helps you travel in the rightdirection. It tellsyou where north (N), south (S), east (E), and west (W) are on your map. Sometimesit only shows where the northis. A map key helps youunderstand the symbols used by the map-makers to show things like houses or wateron the map.

We are usingMontessori Globeas a reference to trace continents on our balloon globe model.

From yourbackyard, Earth probably looks flat, however, astronauts see that Earth appears like a giantball with blue oceans, greenish brown land, and white clouds.

Offer your child to trace land, mountains, rivers, etc. Sharpies work best for this.

🌎Geography 📖Theory Curriculum Lesson 3: 🗺Mapping ~ Cartographer(Making the Earth 🎈Flat) (4)

Even in space, you see only the part of Earth facing you. To see the whole Earth at one time, we need a map. Maps takethe round Earth andmake it flat so that both hemispheres could be seen at one time.


By popping a balloonand stretching it, a child will get an idea how maps are made.

🌎Geography 📖Theory Curriculum Lesson 3: 🗺Mapping ~ Cartographer(Making the Earth 🎈Flat) (6)

If you could “peel” a globe like an orange, you would make the Earth flat, but there would be spaces between places.

🌎Geography 📖Theory Curriculum Lesson 3: 🗺Mapping ~ Cartographer(Making the Earth 🎈Flat) (7)

Cartographers (map-makers) stretch the land and the water at the top and bottom to fill in the spaces. This is how a map lets yousee the whole world all at once.

A cartographer is a person who makes a map, which is a picture that tells a story for exampleabout physical characteristics of our planet Earth or about the weather or natural hazards ☔️🌪🌨or about where to find places or things and how to go from one place to another.Maps can make a large place look small.

Maps were not always this complicated and advanced. Maps were first drawn with a stick in the dirt and then on cave walls. Later maps were made of clay, silk, parchment, and eventually of paper as we know them now. First map symbols were very simple and child-like ( a wave-like line would represent water). Symbols were used to indicate specific things like ⛰mountains, 👥population, 🏞rivers,and lakes, etc.

I illustrated to Adrian what primitive people might have used as symbols to create a map, and asked him to draw a primitive map, just like a cartographer would do. For this activity, you would need:

  • a container, a tray or a large cookie or baking sheet;
  • and either sand (white or colored), cornmeal, or we are using wheat flour;
  • I lined the bottom of the tray (we are using a floor-table) with an orange coloredcardstock paper to add a pop of color to his map drawing.

Adrian is mapping a 🌙 moon, a 🌲tree, 🏞water, 🏔mountains and a house ( t-pee ).

And, of course, there is a lot of sensory exploration!

Point of interest: how the sand/cornmeal/wheat flour feels (sensorial tactile exploration). Also, how the drawing stays in the “sand” tray after it has been traced.

The goal of this lesson: hand-eye coordination, concentration, ability to trace symbols, fine-motor development.

Language: cartographer, names of symbols, a map.

Furthermore, while reading another atlas book,National Geographic Kids United States Atlas (buy here), we learnedthat the maps’ symbols can stand for physical, political, economic, environmental features and more. For example, above, the economy symbols like a “sheep” and “dairy cows/products” describe which region’s economy produces most of this particular commodity.
A political map shows countries and often capitals of aparticular area.

I hope you enjoyed our Geography lesson on Mapping. For prior lessons, please see links below:

  • here Geography 🌎 Theory 📖 Curriculum Lesson 2: Introduction (Abstract – Pictures).
  • here Geography 🌎 Theory 📖 Curriculum Lesson 1: Introduction (Concrete – Objects).
  • Read a similar post here, where we cut a grapefruit to illustrate how we get two Antarcticas when making the Earth flat.

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🌎Geography 📖Theory Curriculum Lesson 3: 🗺Mapping ~ Cartographer(Making the Earth 🎈Flat) (2024)
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