Opinion
Federal Opinion

Geography and ‘Generation G’

By Daniel C. Edelson — January 23, 2009 6 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Volatile global economies. Bouncing fuel prices. International food shortages. Our world is changing, not always for the better. Yet we are doing too little to prepare young people for troubled new realities. As we enter a new era in American politics, it’s time to ask how we fix this problem.

The children in school today are America’s first global generation. They make up what I call “Generation G.” Gen-G inhabits a planet in which our generation’s assumptions no longer hold. Just as the generations preceding ours were wrenched from their isolation by world wars—and we from our insulation by 9/11—the lives of America’s children are being transformed by the world’s increasing interconnectedness.

Problems such as terrorism, climate change, and the global economic crisis show us clearly that we can no longer behave as if change elsewhere does not affect us. This new reality may, in the long run, be good for America. But unless we prepare Gen-G for all its dimensions, the adaptation will be painful.

As educators, we must ask ourselves if we are meeting our responsibility to do this. Are we teaching Gen-G students what they need to know about their world in order to succeed in that world? Are we, for example, creating workers who know how to minimize the use of energy in making and transporting goods? Are we preparing citizens to make decisions about how to use scarce freshwater, whether to irrigate wheat or to provide habitat for salmon to spawn? Are we preparing them for a culturally rich society in which descendants of European immigrants are no longer the majority?

The stark answer is that we are not. The K-12 curriculum contains shockingly little instruction about either the social, cultural, and political world or the world of the physical environment.

While this diagnosis will come as no surprise to most Americans, the recommended treatment might: If we want to prepare Gen-G for the challenges of its world, we need to restore geographic education to a place of importance in the K-12 curriculum.

As a geography educator, I have grown accustomed to skepticism in response to this recommendation because of the out-of-date understanding most people have of geography. For most Americans, the term geography evokes images of memorizing state capitals, coloring and labeling maps, and other exercises in trivia.

But modern geography is very different from the geography that most of us experienced in school. It is not about facts and descriptions. It is about planning, problem-solving, and decisionmaking in a complex world. Good geographic education teaches students how both the physical and the social world work, and prepares them to function effectively in both.

What will a strong geographic education prepare Gen-G students for? The best way to answer that is to break geography down into the two categories that geographers tend to use, human geography and physical geography, which roughly correspond to the division between social studies and science in K-12 schools.

On the human-geography side, a 21st-century education will teach Gen-G students information such as how the distribution of natural resources on Earth influences economic opportunities in different places and how trade, migration, and communication systems connect us to each other locally, nationally, and globally.

On the physical-geography side, a 21st-century geographic education will give students knowledge in such areas as how their drinking water gets to them and what the cost of transporting it is. And it will show them such cause-and-effect processes as how decisions about fertilizer application in Illinois and Maryland influence the health of the seafood industries in the Gulf of Mexico and the Chesapeake Bay.

From both sides of the discipline, students will learn about human-environment interactions. They also will learn to analyze situations geographically, using data and spatial-analysis techniques to understand trends and patterns. This ability is widely recognized as an important 21st-century workforce skill.

Neither human nor physical geography has a secure place in today’s K-12 curriculum (and, by extension, neither does human-environment interaction or geospatial analysis). To the extent that either kind of geography is being taught at all, it has generally been pushed to the margins. And federal policy in education is tending to push them even further to the periphery as an unanticipated side effect of the narrow focus of the No Child Left Behind Act’s accountability requirements.

Human geography has, like other social studies, been left out of NCLB’s accountability requirements entirely. And while the sciences are being tested now as part of No Child Left Behind, physical geography has fared little better in science than human geography has in social studies, since most education reformers overlook the geosciences and ecology in favor of the sciences associated with more-traditional careers.

Fortunately, much of the foundation for reform in geography education has been laid. For 20 years, dedicated geographers and educators have been working out of the public eye to modernize the discipline. These researchers and practitioners have banded together in “geography alliances"—grassroots professional-development and advocacy organizations committed to the cause of geographic education—in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.

These coalitions of academic geographers and K-12 practitioners have succeeded in designing an engaging, purposeful approach to geographic education that bears almost no resemblance to the shower of trivia most of us experienced in school. They have helped create national geography standards that embody the new approach, and to establish geography standards in all 50 states.

With this foundation in place, what more is needed to bring a meaningful geographic education to all students? Here are three concrete steps to consider:

First, we need policies that create demand for geographic education. We cannot allow the field to be a forgotten stepchild of accountability. We should make sure that geographic literacy, on both the social studies and science sides, is part of the accountability requirements for all schools.

Second, we must have resources to meet the need for high-quality geographic education for all students. Geography is the only one of the nine core subjects listed in the No Child Left Behind legislation that has no federally funded program to support improvements in its teaching. Congress, to its credit, has recently taken notice, with the proposed Teaching Geography Is Fundamental Act, which would fund research and implementation of reform in geography education, gaining bipartisan sponsorship in both the House and the Senate. We should encourage Congress to pass this legislation without delay.

Third, we must learn from past reform movements. The quiet, grassroots transformation in geographic education has been relatively small-scale. To update and re-energize the subject nationwide, we will have to learn from the previous large-scale reform movements in literacy, math, and science. One benefit of being late to the party is this opportunity to learn from their experiences. Because our need is pressing and our resources limited, we must do this quickly and well, so that we can not only achieve better outcomes, but also achieve them more rapidly and less expensively.

One way or another, Generation G will come to understand the hard realities of our new, interconnected world. If we don’t prepare these young people in advance, they will learn through painful experience. As educators who understand this, we have the responsibility to act now.

Related Tags:
Federal Policy Opinion

A version of this article appeared in the January 28, 2009 edition of Education Week as Geography and ‘Generation G’

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Assessment Webinar
Reflections on Evidence-Based Grading Practices: What We Learned for Next Year
Get real insights on evidence-based grading from K-12 leaders.
Content provided by Otus
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Artificial Intelligence Webinar
Promoting Integrity and AI Readiness in High Schools
Learn how to update school academic integrity guidelines and prepare students for the age of AI.
Content provided by Turnitin
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Reading & Literacy Webinar
What Kids Are Reading in 2025: Closing Skill Gaps this Year
Join us to explore insights from new research on K–12 student reading—including the major impact of just 15 minutes of daily reading time.
Content provided by Renaissance

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Federal Linda McMahon Abruptly Tells States Their Time to Spend COVID Relief Has Passed
Secretary Linda McMahon said the Education Department would no longer honor the extensions it had granted states.
3 min read
Secretary of Education Linda McMahon sits before President Donald Trump arrives to speaks at an education event and executive order signing in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, March 20, 2025.
Secretary of Education Linda McMahon sits before President Donald Trump arrives to speaks at an education event and executive order signing in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, March 20, 2025. In a letter Friday, McMahon told state leaders on March 28 that their time to spend remaining COVID relief funds would end that same day.
Ben Curtis/AP
Federal McMahon Says Schools With 'Gender Plans' Could Be Violating Federal Privacy Law
The U.S. Department of Education opened investigations under FERPA into two states, alleging violations of parents' rights.
5 min read
Secretary of Education Linda McMahon speaks to reporters at the White House in Washington, Thursday, March 20, 2025.
Secretary of Education Linda McMahon speaks to reporters at the White House in Washington, Thursday, March 20, 2025. McMahon said that the U.S. Department of Education would make a "revitalized effort" to pursue federal student privacy law violations for parents' rights, asserting that school "gender plans" that aren't available to parents violate the federal law.
Ben Curtis
Federal Dramatic Cuts to Ed. Data Programs Will Have Far-Reaching Consequences, Researchers Warn
Education research organizations asked Congress to intervene in cuts to ed. data, research staff.
6 min read
Image of performance data analysis.
NicoElNino/iStock/Getty
Federal See Which Schools Trump's Education Department Is Investigating and Why
The agency has opened more than 80 investigations. Check out our map and table to review them.
2 min read
President Donald Trump speaks before signing an executive order barring transgender female athletes from competing in women's or girls' sporting events, in the East Room of the White House, Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2025, in Washington.
President Donald Trump speaks at the White House on Feb. 5, 2025, before signing an executive order barring transgender females from competing in women's or girls' sports. Transgender athlete policies have been a common subject of investigations into schools, colleges, state education departments, and athletic associations by the U.S. Department of Education since Trump took office.
Alex Brandon/AP