Thursday, June 27, 2019
Words With Impact: Discern Typology Geography
Workshop: Discover
Words That Sing
“For some minutes
Alice stood without speaking, looking out in all directions over the country –
and a most curious country it was… ‘I declare it’s marked out just like a large
chessboard!’” Lewis Carroll
There is a geography app game for children (and adults) that
help to learn about world countries. Three sections ask questions such as
language or landmarks or capitals, and then there is another that is by shape
only. You have to identify the country by its image, like a puzzle piece.
Two things surprised me while playing with my five-year-old
grandson. One, how much I’d forgotten about world geography factually, and two,
that it was almost impossible for me to identify a country based on shape only.
However after playing the game only a few times, my grandson had almost instant
recall on all the shapes and a high percentage of recall on flags. Whenever it
was my turn he cheerfully showed me the right answers. The game had become a
mutual teaching opportunity, as I in turn helped share with the capitals. At
least I had one high area to succeed in.
The ability to step back and see the landscape through an
unexpected image opens up a flow of possible thematic and plot ideas that might
not have occurred otherwise. It gives us a chance to stop and play again with
our creativity, especially as we move deeper in the middle of the story, which
sometimes becomes sluggish and difficult to navigate.
Twists and turns, ragged edges and soft flowing lines turn
into new metaphors, new possibilities, and new connotations to explore. What
symbolism can we apply to a land that is shaped like a chessboard, or a stone
dragon, or a blue marble? How can we turn them into theme types?
Action Steps:
1. Take different portions of the
map you are using for your setting whether a full world or a small town. Make
copies. Then ignore all the names and usual details and instead find shapes
within in. Draw random lines around them.
2. Color-code them.
3. Or draw a shape over a section
of the map and then look closely to see what is highlighted within that
section. Color-code the new details.
Share: What
perspective or theme or metaphor did you discover in your map world by seeing
it as shape only.
Read deep, marcy
Labels:
Creative Writing Prompt,
Discern Typology,
Discover Words That Sing,
Eight Communication Basics,
Free blog workshop,
Geography,
Words with Impact
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