The goal of this activity is to demonstrate, through a place with which learners are thoroughly familiar, how their unique perspectives can lead to very different interpretations of what seems like something obvious and concrete (a building).
Time frame: 30-40 minutes
Materials: Paper, colored markers, pencils and clipboards
In this activity learners work on their own or in groups of two to create a map of their educational setting (school, camp, synagogue). The goal is for a stranger to be able to learn about the place, what’s important, how to get around. The learners should try to reflect their space with two-dimensional lines and words. Challenge them to create simple maps that highlight details they feel are important for a new student coming to the school.
Learners can walk around as they figure out what to include, how to do so and so forth. They should be prepared to share their maps as part of a map exhibit. Once learners have completed their maps and hung them up, they should walk around and look at each others’ maps noting differences and similarities and images that surprised them.
- What differences stand out among the maps?
- If one of the maps includes places or information not included in other maps, is one map “correct” and the other “incorrect”? Why or why not?
- How did you decide what to include and what to omit?
- Why do you think the same spaces were represented in different ways?
If possible, display a traditional world map printed in the US and the Gall-Peters version for learners to explore later in the module. Leave learners with the question (or put it as a caption near the maps): Which one is right? Why?