Dr. Paul N. McDaniel, Associate Professor of Geography, recently presented at the 2024 National Council for Geographic Education (NCGE) 109th Annual Conference. The conference, held in Tempe, Arizona, brought together secondary and post-secondary geography educators, researchers, and professionals from across the country to share ideas and discuss best practices in the field.
Dr. McDaniel’s presentation, titled “Active and Experiential Learning in Geography through the Lens of a Local Urban Development Project,” co-authored with Dr. Ranbir Kang, Assistant Professor of Geography and Geospatial Sciences, focused on high-impact practice examples of incorporating use of the Atlanta BeltLine development for active and experiential learning. The presentation is one component of Dr. McDaniel and Dr. Kang’s larger project, “Assessing Implications of Human and Physical Geography in Public Art Landscapes of the Atlanta BeltLine,” funded by a Department of Geography and Anthropology 2023-2024 Intradepartmental Research Initiative Grant.
Metropolitan regions require innovative strategies for rapidly changing populations. One example is the Atlanta BeltLine, a major urban redevelopment program. With an estimated cost of $4.8 billion and projected economic impact of $10 billion, the Atlanta BeltLine is a nearly complete 22-mile loop of multi-use trails and planned transit on a former railway corridor encircling Atlanta, Georgia, one of the fastest-growing metro areas in the United States. There are intersections of both human and physical geography on the Atlanta BeltLine landscape, including an ever-changing collection of public art and murals that link to broader societal changes, current events, and public discourse around many topics intersecting with the social sciences and natural sciences.
The presentation highlighted examples of integrating a local urban development project such as the Atlanta BeltLine into geography education, fostering active and experiential learning and promoting high-impact practices such as field trips and undergraduate research. Examples include field trips and class activities and semester projects using geospatial technology like Google Earth and ArcGIS Online in Urban Geography courses, and incorporating undergraduate researchers for high-impact practice undergraduate research experiences.