AP Human Geography Unit 5: Agriculture and Rural Land Use Guided Reading Mr. Stepek (2024)

AP Human Geography Unit 5: Agriculture and Rural Land Use Guided Reading Mr. Stepek

Directions: Follow the page guidance as you complete this guided reading.

Re-read Rubenstein pg 274 to understand the terms LDC and MDC. Understand how they are roughly distributed by examining the map on page 282 fig. 9-11.(We will be coming back to this concept in more detail).

Rubenstein p 308.Read “Wheat Farmers in Kansas and Pakistan”.

  1. How is most of the work performed by the Pakistani farmer? ______
  2. What is most of their production used for? ______
  3. How is the wheat grown in Kansas used? ______

______

  1. (skip to Rubenstein p 310 – 314). Keeping the above in mind, note the differences between subsistence and commercial farming.

Subsistence / Commercial
Definition or
Purpose
Where found?
Farmers as a % of the labor force
Use of machinery (and other technology) / Make sure to supplement your understanding of the material to the right by also reading de Blij p 368 – 369 / deBlij p 374. Describe “shifting cultivation” (you can write sideways) / What machines have replaced manual labor?
Besides machinery, what other advancements have aided commercial farmers?
1.
2.
3.
Farm size / Note details about farm size and ownership.
What is being lost to urban sprawl?
Note trend in farm size (de Blij p 368)
What impact would the above facts have on agriculture density (not in book, this is review)?
Relationship of farming to other businesses / What is agribusiness?
Examples of those involved in agricultural support businesses (de Blij p 368).
Subsistence / Commercial
List types found in LDCs (detail and characteristics to follow) /

  1. shifting cultivation
  2. pastoral nomadism
  3. intensive wet rice dominant
  4. intensive wet rice not dominant

/

  1. plantation

List types found in MDCs (details and characteristics to follow) /

  1. mixed crop and livestock
  2. dairy farming
  3. grain farming
  4. livestock ranching
  5. Mediterranean
  6. commercial gardening and fruit

  1. (Rubenstein p 329 –335)What are some challenges being faced in both subsistence and commercial farming?

Subsistence Farming Challenges / Commercial Farming Challenges
In what two ways has population growth lead to the changes in subsistence agriculture?
1.
2. (make sure you understand what the term “intensification” means, you do not need to detail all of the various levels of fallow).
btw, do you know what fallow means? Define here.
What problem is faced by governments in LDCs as they try to expand production?
How are funds generated by LDCs in order to purchase agricultural improvements?
How is labor divided in LDCs with reference to subsistence farming and growing crops for export?
What dilemma is faced by LDCs?
To what exportcrop (in general) have many subsistence farmers in LDCs turned because of its lucrative return?
(de Blij p 393 - 394) What organizations have arisen in response to US government efforts to crackdown on drug trafficking?
What effect have these organizations had on areas under their control? / How are commercial farmers victims of their own success?
(skip “Importance of Access to Markets”)
What has caused overproduction?
Why has demand not increased with falling prices due to overproduction?
What three methods does the government use to address the problem of overproduction?
1.
2.
3.
What is sustainable agriculture?
Briefly summarize the three principle practices of sustainable agriculture?
1.
2.
3.

  1. Now that we’ve learned about the main differentiation between types of agriculture (subsistence vs. commercial) and the challenges faced by each in the modern world, let’s go back and learn about the history of the development of agriculture.

Use both Rubenstein p 308 – 310 and de Blij p 369 – 373

  1. (compare both sources) What is agriculture? ______

______

______

______

Do we have to eat what is produced for it to be considered agriculture? ______

  1. What does it mean to “cultivate” something? ______
  2. What is a crop? ______

Timeline on the Development of Agriculture:

Describe how humans lived prior to around 10,000 years ago
According to de Blij, what two skills did humans master BEFORE the development of agriculture?
What is domestication (look it up?) / Crops / Animals
(see Rubenstein fig. 10-3)
Invention of Agriculture
(Neolithic Revolution or
First Agricultural Revolution) / South/SE Asia
SW Asia/Fertile Crescent
East Asia/China (Yellow/Yangtze)
Central Africa
Latin America
Second Agricultural Revolution
(de Blij p 375 –376)
When did this happen?
Where did it begin? / How are the Industrial Rev. and the Second Agricultural Revolution connected?
What new crops were introduced and from where?
What crop growing strategy were they able to implement?
What English law allowed farming innovations to take place? Explain.
What other technologies improved production as well? / Selective breeding (look it up and describe, then include examples from de Blij p 376)
Third Agricultural Revolution or the Green Revolution / Rubenstein p 336 – 337
What were the two main practices that led to increased agricultural production during the 1970s and 1980s?
Who won the Nobel Peace Prize for his development of the “miracle wheat seed”?
In order to take advantage of the new seeds, what are farmers required to use?
Therefore, what must governments in LDCs do in order to keep up the momentum of the Green Revolution?
Read Global Forces, Local Impacts p 332
What does “GM” (GMOs) stand for?
How widespread is the use of GM within the United States?
Why would LDCs (like those in Africa) be resistant to the adoption of GM crops?
1.
2.
3.
What types of corporations control the GM crops?
de Blij p 377 – 378 (this is the better discussion of this topic)
How far back and to where does the Green Rev. really begin?
With what crop was the Green Rev. MOST effective in increasing yields in Asia?
Since the Green Revolution has increased production, what has caused most famines?
Because of its focus on rice, wheat and corn, where has the Green Revolution been less effective? Why?
Rubenstein p 339 – 340: Case Study Revisited/Africa’s Food Supply Crisis
How did reality compare to Malthus’ thesis about the relationship of population growth to the increase in food supply?
What region is not growing its food supply as rapidly as its population? Give details.
In what two African sub-regions is this problem especially severe?
1.
2.
What factors have contributed to the food-shortage crisis in the region describes above under #2?
a.
b.
c.
d.
Criticisms of the Green Revolution (de Blij p 378 – 381) (Make sure to read/understand the criticisms of Vandana Shiva)
What are growing concerns regarding the higher inputs of chemical associated with the Green Revolution?
What are some economic concerns connected with the Green Rev.?
According to de Blij, why do some people have a problem with GMOs?
How has the Green Revolution, increase tensions within rural households in Sub-Saharan Africa?
What type of agricultural society has been most threatened by the impacts of modernization?

  1. Continued Food Insecurity (de Blij p 368, last paragraph). Despite the improvements in food supply provided by the Green Revolution, what are four major issues that continue to affect food security worldwide?
  2. ______
  3. ______
  4. ______
  5. ______
  6. Strategies to Increase the Food Supply (Rubenstein p 335)

Strategy / Describe strategy and related challenges
Expanding Agricultural Land / What is desertification?
Increasing Productivity / This relates to the methods used in the Green Revolution already discussed above
Identifying New Food Sources
Incr. Trade

  1. Read “Importance of Access to Markets” (exemplified by von Thünen’s model)(Rubenstein pg 329 – 330)

Draw von Thünen’s model (incl. a legend **) / Describe von Thünen’s model.
When was von Thünen’s model first proposed?
What is considered first by commercial farmers when deciding which crops and animals to cultivate?
What two costs does the farmer compare when making this consideration?
What pattern didthe model take? Describe w/reference to the diagram to the left.
**
What assumptions did the model make about site characteristics?
According to von Thünen, what could alter the basic shape of the model?
What did the model fail to take into account?
For what type of region was the model developed?

  1. Major Global Agricultural Regions(Rubenstein p 314 – 329, read de Blij p 386 – 392 to supplement)

Area / Type / Characteristics/Vocabulary / Future
LDCs / Shifting cultivation / What type of climate region/biome? Describe two chief characteristics.
How many people?
Describe slash-and-burn agriculture
swidden:
crops:
land ownership:
% of world’s land/compared to other types of agriculture / What competing activities are replacing shifting cultivation in tropical rainforests?
Why do defenders of shifting agriculture say it is environmentally sound?
The rate of this process which threatens our global environment has increased in Brazil?
Pastoral Nomadism / What is it?
Best climate? Where? Examples of nomadic groups? Global pop.? % of global land area?
How do the nomads feed their herds?
What are the four major types of animals?
Describe their pattern of movement.
transhumance:
pasture: / Describe how modern technology and governments threaten the pastoral nomadism lifestyle.
Intensive Subsistence / What does “intensive” mean (lecture)?
Major regions? What is the common trait?
Plot sizes?
How is the work done?
Land usage? / Wet rice dominant. Where dominant?
sawah (paddy):
How do wet rice farmers modify their land so it can be flooded?
double cropping:
Wet rice not dominant. What climate conditions? Where?
Two most common crops?
Plantation / What climate regions? Where?
Owners?
Crops sold where? / Examples of crops specialized?
Labor force?
Area / Type / Characteristics/Vocabulary
MDCs / Mixed Crop and Livestock / Where is this most common?
How are animals and crops integrated?
Advantages:
What are the two most important crops?
Dairy Farming / Located near what? Why?
What is this area called?
Why has this area expanded?
What % of dairy farming is now conducted in LDCs? / What two features of dairy farming have caused economic difficulties?
Grain Farming / What are examples of grains?
Who is the main consumer of grains?
Which is the most important, why?
What countries are the world’s largest grain producers?
What two machines have mechanized wheat harvesting? / Describe the two main grain production areas in the U.S.
Livestock Ranching / How is ranching land usage described?
In what areas is it best adapted for?
On whose land do 60% of cattle graze in the United States today?
Where are cattle fattened today?
What is a CAFO? What shift does this represent in the description of ranching? (lecture)
What other parts of the world have major ranching industries?
Mediterranean / Where does this activity primarily exist?
How is the physical environment similar in these areas?
What is horticulture?
What are the two most important crops?
Despite this, what is ½ the land in Mediterranean farming dedicated to? What is produced from this?
Commercial Gardening Fruit Farming / In what areas of the U.S. does this activity predominate? Why?
What is another name for this activity? Why?
What are some popular items with consumers grown on “truck farms”?

What imprint does agriculture make on the cultural landscape? (deBlij p 381 – 386)

  1. What is the purpose of a cadastral system? ______

______

  1. What is the dominant cadastral system in the United States west of the Appalachian Mountains? This is also known by as what type of survey system? ______
  2. What law helped to establish this cadastral system as dominant? ______
  3. What was the purpose of this law? ______

______

  1. What is the visual effect on the landscape of this cadastral system? ______

______

  1. What cadastral system predominates on the eastern seaboard? ______
  2. What is used to demarcate parcels of land under this system? ______
  3. Consequently, the shape of parcels of land under this system can be describes as what? ______
  4. Where was the Long-Lot Survey common? This shows the influence of what culture? ______

______

  1. Describe the shape of the lots? ______

______

  1. Why do you think is a fair way of surveying land? ______

______

  1. What is primogeniture division of land? ______

______

  1. What is the impact on the landscape of using this inheritance system? ______

______

  1. What is the effect on the landscape if primogeniture is NOT used? ______

______

  1. Traditionally where did most farmers live in relation to their farmland? ______
  2. What kind of settlement which is the most common rural residential pattern GLOBALLY in agricultural regions? Describe. ______

______

  1. How is the settlement pattern in the American Midwest different? Why? What is this called? ______

______

______

  1. What buildings might a prosperous American homestead include? ______

______

  1. Briefly sketch the five village forms (Fig. 11.13). Provide any details about their purpose/primary location below the sketch.

Linear / Cluster / Round / Walled / Grid

AP Human Geography Unit 5: Agriculture and Rural Land Use Guided Reading Mr. Stepek (2024)

FAQs

How do you score a 5 on AP Human Geography? ›

How to get a 5 on AP Human Geography exams
  1. Use the AP Human Geography score calculator.
  2. Practice with Past Exams.
  3. Utilize Review Resources.
  4. Develop Analytical Skills.
  5. Create Study Materials.
  6. Seek Help When Needed.
  7. Analyze Geographic Data.
  8. Apply Geographic Concepts.
Feb 9, 2024

What is the main idea of unit 5 ap human geography? ›

AP Human Geography: Unit 5 Summary

The first agriculturalists were hunter-gatherers who gradually, over thousands of years, adopted farming as another strategy to ensure their survival. By the beginning of the Colonial Period, agriculture was widespread throughout the world.

What is slash and burn agriculture AP Human Geography? ›

Explanation: “Slash-and-burn” agriculture involves burning a portion of forest so that the soil there can be used for agricultural purposes. The community then uses this land for a short time, possibly a few years, and then moves on to a new area, which is, in turn, burned for agricultural use.

What is agribusiness AP Human Geography? ›

Agribusiness. Definition: Commercial agriculture characterized by integration of different steps in the food-processing industry, usually through ownership by large corporations. Example: Tyson Chicken or Smithfield Pork. Application: Agribusiness is a very large and powerful sector in the U.S. Agriculture.

Is a 5 a perfect AP score? ›

As the table below shows, each AP exam is scored on a scale of 1-5, with 5 being the highest possible score.

Is a 3 passing on an AP exam? ›

A score of 3 on an AP exam is considered passing, and while it may not be the most impressive score, it won't necessarily harm your application either. Colleges, especially selective ones, primarily focus on the rigor of the courses you've taken and the grades you earned throughout high school.

What is Unit 5 AP world called? ›

Why is Unit 5 called “Revolutions?” In the simplest sense, AP World Unit 5 is about two different types of revolutions: political revolutions inspired by new Enlightenment ideas and the economic changes sparked by the Industrial Revolution.

What are the 5 themes of AP Human Geography? ›

Geographers study the processes that cause changes like these. To help you understand how geographers think about the world, consider geography's five themes—location, place, region, movement, and human-environment interaction.

What is Unit 7 of AP Human Geography? ›

Unit 7: Industrial and Economic Development Patterns and Processes. You'll study the origins and influences of industrialization, along with the role industrialization plays in economic development.

What is ranching AP human geography? ›

Ranching is the act of running a ranch, which is essentially an extensive farm for the sole purpose of raising livestock and crops. Ranches are usually owned by a single family, and the raising and harvesting of livestock and crops constitute its livelihood.

What is dairy farming AP human geography? ›

Dairy farming refers to the agricultural practice of raising cattle specifically for milk production. It involves the management and breeding of dairy cows, as well as the processing and distribution of milk and other dairy products.

What is shifting cultivation ap human geography? ›

Shifting cultivation: This is a type of agriculture that involves clearing a small area of land, planting crops for a few years, and then moving on to a new plot of land when the soil fertility declines. Shifting cultivation is often practiced by small-scale farmers in tropical regions.

Why is tea a luxury crop? ›

Chinese teas are often considered luxurious due to their long history of cultivation and exquisite flavors. The unique growing conditions in China, such as high altitudes and diverse climates, contribute to the teas' exceptional quality.

What is agriculture in human geography? ›

Agriculture: The raising of animals or the growing of crops on tended land to obtain food for primary consumption by a farmer's family or for sale off the farm.

What is the AP Human Geography major? ›

People study human geography to understand how their existence has changed the Earth's surface. Course topics include cultural patterns and processes, population and migration patterns and processes, and cities and urban-land-use patterns and processes.

What percent is a 5 on APHG? ›

75% or more = 5.

How do you score 5 on AP? ›

Give yourself plenty of time to revise into the course material, practice exam questions, and review important concepts. To make your study sessions even more effective, consider creating a personalized study plan that organizes your learning into specific topics within the subject.

What percent is a 5 on AP World? ›

To achieve a 5 on the AP World History exam, you'll generally need to score around 70-75% of the total possible points. However, this can vary slightly each year based on the difficulty of the exam and the performance of the test-takers.

How do you score a 5 on AP World? ›

To achieve a score of 5 on the AP World History exam, you need to thoroughly prepare and demonstrate a strong understanding of the course material. It is important to practice exam-like questions and the free-response question rubric.

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