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CCOG for GEO 204 Spring 2024

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Course Number:
GEO 204
Course Title:
Geography of Middle East
Credit Hours:
4
Lecture Hours:
40
Lecture/Lab Hours:
0
Lab Hours:
0

Course Description

Introduces the physical and human characteristics of the Middle East, including the regional and international significance of its geographic location, vital natural resources, and present day geopolitics. Explores the geographical dimensions of population increase, resource use, internal conflicts, external interventions, and contemporary border and territorial disputes in the region. Prerequisites: WR 115, RD 115 and MTH 20 or equivalent placement test scores. Audit available.

Intended Outcomes for the course

Upon completion of the course students should be able to:

  • Describe main geographic qualities related to the physical and human landscapes of the Middle East.
  • Distinguish various Middle Eastern countries and describe their present day economic, social, and political status.
  • Analyze the interrelationship between human, culture, and the physical environment in a regional context.
  • Describe the ethnic, linguistic, and religious diversity within the Middle East and how these differences relate to current internal conflicts and external interventions.
  • Analyze the distribution of regional features using maps, graphs, and visuals. 

Social Inquiry and Analysis

Students completing an associate degree at Portland Community College will be able to apply methods of inquiry and analysis to examine social contexts and the diversity of human thought and experience.

General education philosophy statement

Regional geography courses examine the relationships of cultural and environmental phenomena within different areas of the world. Students study characteristics of the region including ethnic groups, religions, languages, physical landscapes, politics, and economies. Students are asked to examine their own place in the global community and their relationships with other regions of the world, providing a foundation to recognize and appreciate cultural differences as they appear on the landscape. This includes considering connections between resource use and human rights issues, to increase awareness of the condition of women, minorities, and foreign workers in other parts of the world. This will lead students to become more informed and engaged consumers and global citizens.

Aspirational Goals

The main aspirational goals of the proposed course are the following:

  • Learn how cultural, physical, political, and environmental components of the Middle East interact.

  • Have a basic understanding of the Middle Eastern countries in terms of both their uniqueness and similarities, and learn about the natural and cultural diversity of the region.

  • Acquire geographic analytical skills applicable to a variety of professional tasks where the analysis of spatial information is required, ranging from the simple reckoning of locations to the understanding of the spatial structure and process that maps represent.

  • Compare and contrast one’s own dominant value system with those of Middle Easterners and confront their possible stereotypes and ethnocentrism.

Course Activities and Design

Class will include lectures, films, documentaries, reading assignments, map activities, quizzes, essays, class discussions, and a research project.

Outcome Assessment Strategies

Students will be expected to demonstrate mastery of themes, concepts, issues, competencies and skills by any combination of the following:

  • In-class discussions

  • Exams and quizzes

  • Mapping activities

  • Class assignments and exercises

  • Conducting research

  • Field observation exercises and projects

Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)

Themes, Concepts, Issues:

  • Middle East as a region 

  • Significance of the geographical position of the region. 

  • Boundaries and major physiographic regions.

  • Natural environment: relief, climates, water bodies, biogeography. Modification of the region’s environment and physical and cultural landscapes.

  • Population and Resources: population distribution and demographics dynamics, resource distribution and resulting conflicts, urban and rural systems, the concept of nation-states and nations without states. 

  • Historical Background: The historical evolution of the Middle East political map and current political geography with relations to colonialism and foreign interventions.

  • Economic Geography: natural resources, agriculture, manufacturing, services, international trade, and ideas for possible economic and political integrations.

Competencies and Skills:

  • Demonstrate how to use maps and other geographic representations to interpret the cultural landscapes in the Middle East.
  • Demonstrate how to analyze the spatial organization and spatial interaction, and how to use those ideas in describing demographic, economic, and political phenomena across the region.
  • Demonstrate how physical systems affect human systems and how resource distribution, usage, and climate patterns and change can affect human life in the region.
  • Demonstrate how humans' actions modify the physical environment and how societies can devise solutions for environmental change in the region.