Academy Curricular Exchange
Columbia Education Center
Social Studies



TITLE:  The Continent Game

AUTHOR:  Chuck Condry; Mt. Burney, CA

GRADE LEVEL/SUBJECT: 4-6, Social Studies: others with adaption

OVERVIEW:  It is difficult for young people to compare the
earth's continents in terms of area, population, population
densities, annual growth, and other geographic terms.

PURPOSE:  To provide students with the skills to compare the
earth's continents in a variety of ways.

OBJECTIVE(s):  The students will correctly order the continents in
terms of area, population, and other geographic terms.

RESOURCES/MATERIALS:   index cards, envelopes, encyclopedias and other
reference materials as needed.

ACTIVITIES AND PROCEDURES:
  Review with the students the continents.  As they name them, write
them on the board in alphabetical order.  Ask the students to identify the
rule that you used to order the continents on the board.  Ask the students
if there are other ways that the continents might be ordered.  List some of
the possibilities on the board (these can be used to extend the lesson
later).
  Tell the students that they will be using area to list the continents in
order, from least to greatest.  Pass out paper (or ready made sheets, if
appropriate) and ask the students to predict the area order of the
continents, from the smallest (least land area) to the largest (greatest
land area).  Then ask for seven volunteers to come to the front of the
class.  Give each of these seven an envelope with a continent and an
ordering rule (land area) on the front.  Tell them not to open the envelopes
yet.  (In each envelope is an index card with information about the
continent. A sample set of data from Grolier's New Electronic
Encyclopedia, 1990 edition, is included below).  Ask them to arrange
themselves in order from the continent with the least land area to the
continent with the greatest land area.  After they have finished, write the
predicted order on the board.
  Next ask the students to open their envelopes and rearrange themselves
in the actual order (this is good practice in reading/understanding
numbers to the millions period).
  Provide time for the students to discuss the outcome.  How many got
them all correct?  Were there any surprises?  How did the group work to
decide the predicted order?  Was it effective?
  Continue the activity with envelopes for population, population density,
annual growth, etc.  After each new ordering rule is used, ask the students
to compare the lists.  Ask the students to draw conclusions from the lists.
Ask them how they could verify their conclusions.

ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES:
  Provide a set of envelopes for each seven children, and each group writes
their predictions on the board.
  Have students work in pairs or triads to develop an ordering rule and
collect the data.  Use their rule with the whole class.
Hint: often these facts can be found in a "fact box" in an encyclopedia
article.
  Students might create a data base if a computer is available.  Data could
be collected by country and manipulated to provide continental estimates
of various natural resources, arable land, GNP, per capita income, literacy,
religion, etc.
  Ask the students compute the percentage of each item that each
continent has (22% of the land area, 35% of the population, etc.).
  Ask the students to research to see if conclusions drawn earlier can be
verified.
  Ask the students to predict how various rankings will change in 100
years.  Why?  What are other factors that might keep this from happening?


TYING IT ALL TOGETHER: This activity is an awareness lesson to
familiarize the students with basic geographic and demographic
information.  It could be used in conjunction with a study of natural
resources and conservation, population and urbanization studies, or other
social science topics.

Data for the continent cards (Grolier's NEE, 1990): 

CAUTION: this particular data was collected by students - it  has not been
verified by an adult.

Land area:  

  Africa:  30,330,000 sq km (11,710,500 sq mi)
  Antarctica:  14,250,000 sq km (630,000 sq mi)
  Asia:  44,444,100 sq km (17,159,995 sq mi)
  Australia:  7,682,300 sq km (2,966,151 sq mi)
  Europe:  10,531,623 sq km (4,066,281 sq mi) 
  North America:  24,249,000 sq km (9,363,000 sq mi)
  South America:  17,804,526 sq km (6,874,600 sq mi)

Population:
  Africa:  601,000,000 (1987 est.)
  Antarctica:  several thousand in summer, only a few in winter
  Asia:  2,777,274,500 (1984 est.)
  Australia:  16,500,000 (1988 est.)
  Europe:  683,000,000 (1980 est.)
  North America:  410,750,000 (1987 est.)
  South America:  286,000,000 (1988 est.)

Population Density:
  Africa:  51.0 per sq km
  Antarctica:  less than one per sq km
  Asia:  62.0 per sq km
  Australia:   2.1 per sq km
  Europe:  65.0 per sq km
  North America:  18.6 per sq km
  South America:  16.0 per sq km

Annual Growth:
  Africa:  2.8%
  Antarctica:  0.0%
  Asia:  1.7%
  Australia:  0.8%
  Europe:  0.4%
  North America:  0.7%
  South America:  2.1%


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