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THINK what did we do last lesson?. BUT…why do you think we did it???. REMEMBER NO SHOUTING OUT!!!. How do we know if a country is an LEDC or MEDC???. LEDC. MEDC. Development indicators LO: Investigate less developed, developing and developed countries?
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THINK what did we do last lesson? BUT…why do you think we did it??? REMEMBER NO SHOUTING OUT!!!
Development indicators • LO: • Investigate less developed, developing and developed countries? • Look at how we measure development in countries. • How will achieve the lesson: • Understand what development means? • Look at development indicators in 10 countries. • Sort these countries out into 3 categories and locate them on a world map. • Analyse the location, is there a pattern?
Before we can go any further • What does DEVELOPMENTmean ??? • Think about this individually. • Then share with your partner. • Then we will let the dice decide on some answers.
What are development indicators? There is not a single way to calculate the level of development of a country. Geographers use a series of development indicators to compare the development of one country to another. *Can you think of any indicators?*
Health. Does the population have access to medical care? • Industry. What type of industry dominates? LEDCs focus on primary industries, such as farming, fishing and mining. MEDCs focus on secondary industries, such as manufacturing. The most advanced countries tend to focus more on tertiary or service industries, such as banking and information technology. • Education. Do the population have access to education? Is it free? What level of education is available (ie primary, secondary or further/higher education)?
Using the map describe the distribution of wealth / income that it shows
The Human Development Index HDI • Another way to look ay measuring development is the HDI - Life expectancy, education and GDP are taken into account.
Countries Development IndicatorsTask Lets visit 10 countries from around the world
United Kingdom Population 65 million GDP ($US) 36039 Health 17 Life expectancy 78 Birth rates 12 Death rates 10 Urban 89% HDI 0.939 Employment tertiary 69% Employment primary 2%
Russia Population 143million Employment primary 24% GDP ($US) 4078 Employment tertiary 29% Health 42 HDI 0.795 Life expectancy 71 Urban 53% Birth rates 10 Death rates 12
Bangladesh Population 144million GDP ($US) 405 Health 2 Life expectancy 61 Birth rates 27 Death rates 8 Urban 23% HDI 0.520 Employment tertiary 19% Employment primary 65%
Italy Population 58million GDP ($US) 29047 Health 61 Life expectancy 80 Birth rates 9 Death rates 10 Urban 1.4% HDI 0.934 Employment tertiary 60% Employment primary 9%
Kenya Population 33million GDP ($US) 480 Health 1 Life expectancy 47 Birth rates 38 Death rates 15 Urban 25% HDI 0.474 Employment tertiary 13% Employment primary 80%
Brazil Population 184million GDP ($US) 3384 Health 21 Life expectancy 71 Birth rates 21 Death rates 7 Urban 81% HDI 0.792 Employment tertiary 54% Employment primary 23%
China Population 1.3billion GDP ($US) 1272 Health 16 Life expectancy 72 Birth rates 12 Death rates 6 Urban 37% HDI 0.755 Employment tertiary 13% Employment primary 72%
Ethiopia Population 77million GDP ($US) 116 Health <1 Life expectancy 48 Birth rates 41 Death rates 16 Urban 15% HDI 0.367 Employment tertiary 12% Employment primary 86%
United States of America Population 300million Employment primary 3% GDP ($US) 39752 Employment tertiary 28% Health 55 HDI 0.944 Life expectancy 78 Urban 79% Birth rates 14 Death rates 8
Jamaica Population 3million Employment primary 25% GDP ($US) 3013 Employment tertiary 52% Health 9 HDI 0.738 Life expectancy 73 Urban 10% Birth rates 19 Death rates 6
Label a map • 1 for developed • 1 for developing • 1 for less developed
Using the indicators work out • Using the data from the countries identify if you think the country is developed, developing or less developed? • Once you have decided try to order the countries into a rank of where you think they would come – from best to lowest.
Question Using countries you have studied as examples discuss how LEDCs and MEDCs differ in their level of development
Home work Due next week - measuring development sheet. Answers in your book/ paper
What most important to you? Money Family Friends Clean water Being healthy Being happy Love Toilet Food Sex Rank these of importance What cant you live without?? Extension: now do a list that someone might have in an LEDC
homework Have you got it…… be honest…. Ben and Elliot – I need your homework that was due last monday
Standard vs. Quality LOs: To understand the difference between standard of living and quality of life To explain how people in poorer countries can improve their quality of life
Standard of living Standard of living – takes into account GDP per capita. People on a dollar a day http://www.worldmapper.org/posters/worldmapper_map179_ver5.pdf
Quality of life The Quality of life is different to standard of living This measure whether people have a longer life expectancy, literacy and number of years spent in school, and GDP. It also takes into account a safe, clean environment, voting rights, rights to privacy.
Matopeni – slum in Nairobi (Capital of Kenya. 60% of people in Nairobi live in places like this. No clean drinking water, no toilets, no education or healthcare. What should be done? In pairs think of what could be done to improve the quality of life You will be presenting to the rest of the class what you think should be done Write it in your book!
Matopeni – slum in Nairobi (Capital of Kenya. 60% of people in Nairobi live in places like this. No clean drinking water, no toilets, no education or healthcare. What should be done? In pairs think of what could be done to improve the quality of life You will be presenting to the rest of the class what you think should be done Write it in your book! What has been done Christian Aid have donated money for ‘water and development’ Residents have used the money to build 5 toilet and shower blocks. Employed local people to clean and maintain them. They charge people a small fee for using them. They use the money to improve other parts of the community - emergency healthcare Put in a well Organised rubbish collection Educates people about health
The development gap What happens as rich places get richer and poor places get poorer? LO: to understand how the physical and human factors make the gap between richer and poor countries wider. There is a big development gap between the richest and poorer countries. Factors make the gap wider.
Explain how access to safe water can improve people’s standard of living. (500 words) What is the problem Include statistics How this is linked to GDP What charities could do How would clean water reduce the gap Extended piece of writing with examples evident. use the sheet that you have just been given.
It is mostly stony desert ENVIRONMENTAL It has plenty of copper to export but the price of copper has fallen sharply over the years It was a British colony for more than fifty years It is really mountainous and hard to reach A tribal war has been going on there for years The people who colonised it built no factories POLITICAL Millions of people are suffering from AIDS There are few schools so people can’t learn the skills the country needs It suffers serious flooding almost every year Bacteria and viruses that cause diseases love its warm damp climate In the past, several million of its healthy adults were sold as slaves ECONOMIC A small group of people owns most of its wealth Other countries refuse to trade with it, because of its politics It has to repay millions of dollars a year on loans Card sort activity