Thursday, September 1, 2011

How to Learn the Map of Europe

To learn the map of Europe you have to begin somewhere. But where do you begin. There are so many countries, so many portions of land sticking out into the sea (they are called peninsulas) and they you have to learn the seas surrounding the map of Europe. How do you start learning all of it.

You might have purchased fine atlases and invested in map softwares or even browsed sites on the net to put it all in your head. But to no avail. It does not seem to stick, for some reason. The borders between the countries are wiggly lines with apparently no geometric features that you can identify and seek to remember. The countries are too of different shapes and sizes and are juxtaposed against each other. You may be able to identify some of them, the prominent ones or the ones that you have known about but what if your goal was to know all of them. Could you find a way.

The problem is most sites or books or atlases give very detailed descriptions of the map of Europe but they do not show you any method by which you can learn to recognize and remember the components of the map. They give you a lot more information than you can absorb in a hurry, or even after a considerable length of time. In any learning task the lessons ought to be graded which these atlases etc do not provide. They put it all of it at one place all together and leaves you in the lurch, so to say.

The fact is that there can be a system which takes you step by step, which first shows you simple outline of the map, with its salient features, absolutely the main points only not overloading you with data that you cannot immediately absorb. For example, you can note that there is the boot like promontory to the south of Europe. This is Italy.

Next, the graded lessons must provide you simple ways to sub-divide the different regions of Europe so as to form a clear picture regarding the main parts of the map of Europe.

And only then would you get in, onto the countries and how they are laid out. This ensures that you are on a solid footing. You don't miss out on the main features. At the same time, any simplification must also take care to be accurate. It must tell you exactly where the countries are located. There must not be mistakes regarding the sequence of the features inside the map.

Once you know the map in this way, pointing at any country on the map becomes very easy. And following any story in the media regarding any country becomes a cinch. You feel more informed. You can gain in confidence and know that you are no longer geographically challenged.

To learn about a wonderful method to learn the map of Europe or of any continent in a graded learning method which handholds you step by step even teaching how to draw the map of Europe from memory with all the countries exactly in place, you can check out this website - http://map-of-the-whole-world.weebly.com/


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