This one-of-a-kind resource contains 500 pages of jaw-dropping hacks, mods, and customizations. These include creating mashups with data from other sources such as Flickr, building a space station tracker, hacking Maps with Firefox PiggyBank, and building a complete community site with Maps and Eart
Mapping Skills with Google Earth
โ Scribed by Paul Bramley
- Publisher
- Classroom Complete Press
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Series
- Social Studies
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Extend the basic knowledge of map reading to give your elementary students a thorough understanding of maps. Our resource allows students to learn in-depth how to read and create maps. Explore all the elements on a map, such as scale, index, grid system, and surrounding area. Take your understanding of a grid system one step further by examining lines of latitude and longitude. Compare the different times zones found in your country. Learn about topographic maps before exploring steep and gradual elevations in Google Earth™. Draw a map of a rural and urban area to see the differences created by cultural features. Compare the climate of different areas of your country before heading to your hometown and examining the weather through Google Earth™. Label a map of the world according to temperature, such as tropical, mild, cold, or polar. Aligned to your State Standards and written to Bloom's Taxonomy, additional map activities, crossword, word search, comprehension quiz and answer key are also included.
โฆ Subjects
Education, Sociology, Study Aids & Workbooks, Nonfiction, EDU029020
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
I purchased this book to give me some insight into programming Google Earth solutions, however this book is 85% about Google Maps (the two are completely different). It took me about ten minutes to read the Google Earth content, and I learned essentially the same things I learned from browsing the I
I purchased this book to give me some insight into programming Google Earth solutions, however this book is 85% about Google Maps (the two are completely different). It took me about ten minutes to read the Google Earth content, and I learned essentially the same things I learned from browsing the I
<p>Have a Google Maps mashup that youโd like to expose to millions of users on maps.google.com? New to the mapping craze, but have an idea for a killer mapโbased application? Want to learn how to create GeoRSS and KML feeds with your geotagged content, exposing your customer to new ways of exploring