You are in the official 1968-69 General Catalog for California State University, Fresno.




COURSES

 

Note: City and Regional Planning courses are under Political Science.

 

Geography (Geog)

3. Economic Geography (3)
World distribution of significant commodities, their uses in cultures; agricultural and mineral resource patterns; regionalization of economic activity; implications for contemporary society.

4. World Geography (3)
Cultural and physical features; economic development; resources; man-land relationships. The approach is by continents and/or cultural regions.

5. Meteorology (3)
Weather analysis; factors basic to weather forecasting and climatological studies.

7. Physical Geography (4)
Fundamental concepts of the movement of the earth in space, the shape of the earth, soils, natural vegetation, and land forms.

103. Industrial Geography (3)
Study of form and function; internal, interregional and extraregional connections of the world's industrial regions.

104. Cultural Geography (3)
Spatial aspects of cultural phenomena in the evolution of early and advanced civilization.

105. Physical Climatology (3)
Meteorological instruments and methods of investigation; use of climatological observations; application of climatological methods. Worldwide variations and interrelationships of simple and complex climatological elements.

108. Regional Climatology (3)
Prerequisite: Geog 5 or equivalent, Climates of the earth and their significance to man.

109. Natural Vegetation Regions of the World (3)
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Geographic character, distribution, and environmental relationships of natural vegetational features of the main land masses, land forms, and climatic regions of the world.

110. Physiography of the United States (3)
Prerequisite: Geol 1. Natural divisions of the United States based on surface features and their interrelationships.

111. Map Interpretation (3)
Interpretation of foreign and domestic maps; symbols, scale, methods of showing topography, vegetation, culture, land use; soils, water and water levels; characteristics of projections.

112. Aerial Photograph Interpretation (3)
Aerial photographs as a means of determining culture, topograohy, and vegetation; scale, use of index, vertical and oblique photographs and stereoscopes.

115. Cartography (3)
Use of instruments for dtafting and lettering of maps; construction and use of standard map projections; relief presentation and map reproduction; cartographic source materials and literature; field trips.

116. Political Geography (3)
Power factrors in international relations; concepts of space, resources, industry, agriculture, technology, population, and food supply; cultural groups related to states and their association.

120. Urban Geography (3)
The region as a geographic unit; urban settlements as regional centers; city-region relationships; morphology and structure of villages, towns and cities, and their internal functional relationships; case studies.

124. Geography of the USSR (3)
Regional distribution of resources and industries of the USSR.

125. Geography of the Middle East (3)
Comprehensive study of the physical features of the Middle East and the cultural traits of its people. The area under consideration extends from the Turkish Straits to the Pamir Knot, and from the Caucasus to the Sudan.

126. Australia and New Zealand (3)
Geographic relationships of natural and cultural features to social and economic development.

127. Europe (3)
Geographic regions of Europe emphasizing the relation of human activities to physical factors areal in their distribution and influence.

128T. Eurasian Regions (3; max total 9, if no area repeated)
Geographic regions of Eurasia emphasizing physical and cultural features.

129. Africa (3)
Systematic survey of Africa; cultural and natural features related to economy of individual countries.

130. Geographic Literature (3)
Primary and secondary source materials; literary background of geography. Papers required.

135T. Topics in Quantitative Techniques (3; max total 9 if no topic repeated)
The application of quantitative techniques to geographic problems, especially spatial analysis related to economic location, circulation, politico-geographic relationships, landform patterns, climatic data, and vegetation distributions. (1 unit may be scheduled as a 2-hour lab)

140. Canada and Alaska (3)
Regional study of the advantages and limitations of the natural environment upon present and future problems involving resource distribution, human activities and regional and interregional adjustments.

141. Conterminous United States (3)
Systematic and regional study of the United States; cultural and physical phenomena related to the economy.

142. South America (3)
Relationship of natural and cultural features; economic and social development; man-land relationships. Countries considered individually.

143. Caribbean America (3)
Relationship of natural and cultural features in Mexico, Central American countries, and Carribean islands and countries; social and economic development; man-land relationships.

171. Soils and Water (3)
World distribution of soil types and factors of soil genesis; geographic aspects of the world's surface waters developed in detail.

177. Historical Geography of the United States (3)
Regional settlement of the United States; peopling of physiographic regions, creation of economic (cultural) regions, and geographic factors related to broad trends in American history. One week-end field trip required.

180. Field Geography (1-6, max total 6)
Week-end or summer field tours.

181. Technical Field Geography (3)
Gathering and analysis of rural land use data-crop distribution related to topography, climate, soils, water, markets; urban land use-delineation of central business district (CBD), foot and automobile traffic flows, housing quality, retail and wholesale trade territories, population concentrations and ethnic groupings. (Saturdays 4-8 hours)

182. Seminar in Geography of Environment (3)
Prerequisite: 20 units of geography or senior standing. Interactions of man and his environment and some of the effects of the environment upon human activity. Class discussion, research, and report writing.

189. Geography of California (3)
Natural and cultural patterns of California; historical and regional geography of the state.

190. Independent Study (1-3; max total 6)
See Regulations and Procedures -- Independent Study.


GRADUATE COURSES


Geography (Geog)

203. Seminar in Economic Geography
Prerequisite: Theory, concepts, and methods in economic geography.

205. Seminar in Regional Geography (3)
Theories of regional geography; method in regional delimitation; applied regional geography.

206. Seminar in Physical Geography (3; max total 6 if no field repeated)
Principles, concepts, and theories in the systematic study of physical geography and its methodology. Each offering will be chosen from the fields of landforms, climate, water and soils, or natural vegetation.

215. Advanced Cartography (3)
Prerequisite: Geog 115 or permission of instructor. Advanced techniques in planning, compilation, and execution of maps and diagrams; research using primary and secondary source materials; use of advanced cartographic instruments, map reproduction methods. (2 3 -hour labs per week)

230. Seminar in Contemporary Geographic Thought (3)
Current theories of geography and their evolution.

270. Seminar in Selected Regions (3; max total 6 if no region is repeated)
Prerequisites: undergraduate course on the region under study or permission of instructor. Study of geographic conditions in relation to economic, social, and political problems in a selected region of the world.

290. Independent Study (1-3; max see reference)
See Academic Placement -- Independent Study.

299. Thesis (2-6; max total 6)
Prerequisite: See Criteria for Thesis and Project. Preparation, completion, and submission of an acceptable thesis for the master's degree.


301. Recent Interpretations in Geography (2; max total 12 if no topic repeated)



Planning (PLAN)


200. Seminar in Planning Theory (3)
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. The origin and evolution of cities and the urban region; the urbanization process: historical and contemporary problems and goals; theories of urban and regional planning; evolution of the general plan and comprehensive planning.

201. Seminar in Planning Research (3)
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Program formulation; analytical methods as applied to land-use, transportation, housing, public facility and resource plan- ning; theory of systems analysis and simulative models; application of techniques to problems and group projects.

202. Seminar in Elements of Design (3)
Prerequisite: permission of instructor. Theory of urban design and aesthetics, examination of underlying concepts and principles, case-studies of historic and contemporary city designs and development of model forms.

203. Practicum in Physical Design (3-3)
Design of the physical environment; application of principles and theories in the preparation of limited scope and comprehensive plans; studies of spatial relationships; supervised laboratory and field projects.

210. Seminar in Planning Process (3)
Prerequisite: Plan 200, 201, 202 and 203A-B or permission of instructor. Goal and policy formulation; scheduling; methods of plan implementation; administration of laws and ordinances; role of politics and public relations in the decision-making process.

280. Planning Internship (4)
Professional practice in a public agency: preparation and implementation of comprehensive urban and regional plans; study of interrelationships and roles of governments, pub- lic agencies, and private enterprise.

290. Independent Study (1-3; max see reference)
See Regulations and Procedures-Independent Study.

299. Planning Thesis (4)
Prerequisite: see Master's Degrees -- Thesis Requirement. Preparation, completion, and submission of an acceptable thesis for the master's degree.

Return to Courses Menu
Return to General Catalog Home Page