EdWorld Internet Topics



Fundraisers & Fundraising Ideas:
Earn 90% Profit!

Leading Trade and
Vocational Career
savings.


Online Degree Directory

Walden University
M.S. in Education
Degrees Online


Online Schools
University Degrees
College Programs


Seeking leadership within education

College-Review
Reviews of Top US Colleges


Paper jams vanish at fellowes.com/jamproof.

Search Colleges
Online Schools
University Degrees


EducationInc.com
University of Phoenix
& Accredited Colleges

NEC Star Student
Cashback Rewards 

Enroll Today! 





Our Top 10
Lesson Plan Features

Article Archive
Box Cars Math Games
Every-Day Edits
Five-Minute Fillers
Holiday Lessons
Learning Games
News for Kids
Show-Biz Science
Work Sheet Library
Writing Bug

More Lesson Plan
Features

Animals A to Z Edits
Calculator Lessons
Coloring Calendars
Fact Monster Hunts
Friday Fun Lessons
Geography A to Z
Internet Scav Hunts
It All Adds Up Puzzles
Lesson of the Day
Math Cross Puzzles
Month of Fun
Mystery State
Phonics Word Search
Sudoku Puzzles
Vocab-u-lous!
Waffenschmidt
Word Search Puzzles

Lesson Plans
By Subject

The Arts
Health & Safety
History
Interdisciplinary
Language Arts
Lesson of the Day
Math
PE & Sports
Science
Social Science
Special Ed & Guidance
Special Themes

More LP Resources
Early Childhood
Free LP Newsletter
LP Message Board
Submit a Lesson
Teacher Lessons

Visit Our
Other Channels


Article Archive
Meet Our Columnists
Reading Room
Strategies That Work
Teacher Features
See more...


Article Archive
Free Admin Newsltr
Admin Columnists
Ideas Library
PR for PRincipals
See more...


Article Archive
Sites to See
Tech Lesson of Week
Tech Team Articles
Techtorial How-To's
See more...


Article Archive
EW Goes to School
Regina Barecca Humor
School Issues Glossary
Wire Side Chats
See more...





A+ Site Reviews
Advertising Info
Contact Us
EDmin Planning Center
Education Standards
Financial Tips
Free Newsletters
Message Boards
Subjects/Specialties
Tips Library
Tools & Templates
See more...
Featured Programs
   E-Learning

Home > Lesson Planning Channel > Lesson Planning Archives > Lesson Planning Article

LESSON PLANNING ARTICLE
Create a Country

Map Lessons

Return to Map Lessons: The Route to Improved Geography Skills

Subjects

Arts & Humanities
  • Language Arts
  • Visual Arts
Mathematics
  • Measurement
  • Statistics
Science
  • Physical Science
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental
Social Studies
  • Economics
  • Geography
  • Regions/Cultures
  • Sociology
Grades

  • 3-5
  • 6-8
  • 9-12

Brief Description

Students apply geography skills to create a map of an imaginary country. Included: Connections to every area of the curriculum!

Objectives

Students will
  • work in small groups to list features and elements found on a variety of grade-appropriate maps.
  • develop a class list of map features and elements to draw from as they create a map of an imaginary country.
  • include all the required elements in their maps.
  • complete extension activities as directed.

Keywords

map, imagine, imagination, country, political, natural resource, landform, river, mountain, map key, biome, geography, measure

Materials Needed

  • drawing paper
  • art supplies
  • a variety of maps from textbooks and/or other sources

Lesson Plan

In this lesson, students use the geography skills they have developed to create a map and related materials for an imaginary country. This lesson might be done in a couple of class sessions or it can extend for weeks by incorporating many areas of the curriculum, including

  • math -- students include a distance measurement key on their maps or create a currency for their country.
  • science -- students include at least two different biomes on their country map or map the weather conditions on a recent day.
  • language arts -- students create a brochure or a TV commercial to promote travel to their imaginary country.

Depending on the grade and skill level of your students, the lesson might also incorporate different types of maps, including

  • political maps -- showing the country capital and large cities, states, or counties…
  • physical maps -- showing the wide range of landforms in the country.
  • color key maps -- showing average temperature, population density, elevations…
  • natural resource maps -- showing locations of centers of agriculture, manufacturing, education…

This lesson has unlimited possibilities. Decide in advance how you plan to proceed. The lesson below offers a basic framework that is easy to adapt.

Before you begin the lesson, collect a variety of maps that students will be familiar with. (The maps will vary according to your grade level and curriculum.) Arrange students into small groups. Challenge each group to look over a variety of maps and make a list of the elements that comprise those maps. Students’ lists will begin with elements such as countries, capitals, boundaries… Give students 10 minutes to complete this part of the activity. Then gather as a class to share lists and make a class list of map elements.

If students did not include landforms on their lists, direct them to think in those terms. Ask: What different types of landforms do you see on the maps? Add landforms -- such as rivers, mountains, deserts, and islands to the list.

For additional landform ideas, you might refer to online resources such as
Landform Glossary
Landforms List
Landforms and Definition List
Landform (Wikipedia)

You might also talk about other elements that appear on maps if students have not already mentioned them and if they are appropriate for your grade level. Those elements might include a compass rose, map keys, and a scale of miles.

When the list is complete, you might use a word processing program to type up the list as a resource for students as they do the activity.

Now you are ready to introduce the main thrust of the lesson: Tell students that they are going to create a country of their own! The first thing they need to do is create a map of the new country. Develop a list of required elements for the students’ maps; the list should be based on grade-appropriate geographic knowledge and should be drawn from the students’ brainstormed list of map elements. If you want a rubric students can use to make sure they include all the required elements, you might assign a score to each element and ask students to make sure their elements add up to 100 points. Tell students to name their countries, as well as the cities and major landforms in their countries. The following list can serve as an example of a rubric a fourth grade teacher might provide for students:

REQUIRED ELEMENTS FOR YOUR COUNTRY MAP
  • compass rose -- 5 points
  • country boundaries -- 5 points
  • country name -- 5 points
  • capital city -- 5 points
  • five cities -- (2 points for each city) 10 points
  • scale of miles -- 10 points
  • landforms -- (at least five different ones, five points each) 25 points
  • icons to show five natural resources found in the country -- 5 points each (25 points)
  • neatly color the map -- 10 points

Adapting the Lesson
As mentioned previously, this lesson can be adapted in many, many ways; it can include any area of the curriculum and involve many skills you might be teaching. In addition to the lesson adaptations listed above, here are a few more activity ideas:

  • Create a fact sheet or an almanac page for the imaginary country. This sheet might present a wide variety of information and statistics about the country. As an example, share with students the World Factbook. Select a country from the drop down menu at the top of the page and see the kinds of information that might be included in each student’s country fact sheet.
  • Create graphs to show information related to the imaginary country (for example, populations of the largest cities, population or income growth over the last century, or value of goods produced by major industries). Students can use art supplies to create colorful graphs, or they might use graphing software or the online Create a Graph tool.
  • Write brief interviews with citizens from different parts/cultures within the country.
  • If graph plotting and scale of miles skills are taught at your grade level, students can create their maps on graphing paper.
  • Invent a currency for the country and create a chart to show equivalencies between the country’s currency and U.S. dollars.
  • Hold a culture fair in which each student shares her or his map with the class and tells about some of the cultural elements of the country’s people.

Assessment

Students will include all the required elements in their maps of imaginary countries.

Lesson Plan Source

Education World

Submitted By

Gary Hopkins

National Standards

FINE ARTS: Visual Arts

  • GRADES K - 4

  • NA-VA.K-4.1 Understanding and Applying Media, Techniques, and Processes
    NA-VA.K-4.3 Choosing and Evaluating A Range of Subject Matter, Symbols, and Ideas
    NA-VA.K-4.4 Understanding the Visual Arts In Relation to History and Cultures
    NA-VA.K-4.6 Making Connections Between Visual Arts and Other Disciplines
  • GRADES 5 - 8

  • NA-VA.5-8.1 Understanding and Applying Media, Techniques, and Processes
    NA-VA.5-8.3 Choosing and Evaluating A Range of Subject Matter, Symbols, and Ideas
    NA-VA.5-8.4 Understanding the Visual Arts In Relation to History and Cultures
    NA-VA.5-8.6 Making Connections Between Visual Arts and Other Disciplines
  • GRADES 9 - 12

  • NA-VA.9-12.1 Understanding and Applying Media, Techniques, and Processes
    NA-VA.9-12.3 Choosing and Evaluating A Range of Subject Matter, Symbols, and Ideas
    NA-VA.9-12.4 Understanding the Visual Arts In Relation to History and Cultures
    NA-VA.9-12.6 Making Connections Between Visual Arts and Other Disciplines
LANGUAGE ARTS: English MATHEMATICS: Measurement
  • GRADES Pre-K - 2

  • NM-MEA.PK-2.2 Apply Appropriate Techniques, Tools, and Formulas to Determine Measurements
  • GRADES 3 - 5

  • NM-MEA.3-5.2 Apply Appropriate Techniques, Tools, and Formulas to Determine Measurements
  • GRADES 6 - 8

  • NM-MEA.6-8.2 Apply Appropriate Techniques, Tools, and Formulas to Determine Measurements
  • GRADES 9 - 12

  • NM-MEA.9-12.2 Apply Appropriate Techniques, Tools, and Formulas to Determine Measurements
MATHEMATICS: Communications
  • GRADES Pre-K - 12

  • NM-COMM.PK-12.1 Organize and Consolidate Their Mathematical Thinking Through Communication
    NM-COMM.PK-12.2 Communicate Their Mathematical Thinking Coherently and Clearly to Peers, Teachers, and Others
MATHEMATICS: Connections
  • GRADES Pre-K - 12

  • NM-CONN.PK-12.1 Recognize and Use Connections Among Mathematical Ideas NM-CONN.PK-12.3 Recognize and Apply Mathematics in Contexts Outside of Mathematics
MATHEMATICS: Representation
  • GRADES Pre-K - 12

  • NM-REP.PK-12.1 Create and Use Representations to Organize, Record, and Communicate Mathematical Ideas
    NM-REP.PK-12.3 Use Representations to Model and Interpret Physical, Social, and Mathematical Phenomena
SOCIAL SCIENCES: Economics SOCIAL SCIENCES: Geography TECHNOLOGY

See more geography lesson plans and resources in Education World’s Geography Center.

Click to return to Map Lessons: The Route to Improved Geography Skills.

Originally published 11/08/2002
Links last updated 01/31/2008



Copyright 1996-2008 by Education World, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Home | About Us | Reprint Rights | Help | Site Guide | Fellows | Contact Us | Privacy Policy