Where We Live, by Emilie Van 
Beil Jacobs 
 
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Jacobs This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
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Title: Where We Live A Home Geography 
Author: Emilie Van Beil Jacobs 
Release Date: October 7, 2007 [EBook #22911] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WHERE 
WE LIVE *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, David Wilson and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
WHERE WE LIVE 
A HOME GEOGRAPHY
GENERAL EDITION 
by 
EMILIE V. JACOBS 
Supervising Principal of the Richardson L. Wright School, Philadelphia 
 
PHILADELPHIA, 1913, 1914 CHRISTOPHER SOWER COMPANY 
124 North Eighteenth Street 
 
CONTENTS 
Page Foreword 5 Introduction 7 
PART ONE I. Our School 11 II. The Streets and Roads 17 III. The 
Buildings 22 IV. The Town as a Whole 31 V. The People 36 VI. 
Industries and Occupations 42 VII. Animals and Plants 46 VIII. 
Transportation and Communication 50 IX. Physiography of the 
Neighborhood 54 X. Direction 66 
PART TWO I. The Earth as a Whole 73 II. The Seasons 79 III. The 
Zones 82 IV. North America 93 V. Countries of North America 100 VI. 
Trips 105 
 
MAPS 
I. The Western Hemisphere 74-75 II. The Eastern Hemisphere 74-75 III. 
The World 82 IV. Surface Map of North America 96 V. North America 
100 
 
FOREWORD
Once upon a time as four blind men sat by the roadside they heard the 
tramp of an elephant's feet, and said one to another, "Here comes an 
elephant; now we shall know what he is like." The first blind man put 
out his hand and touched the elephant's broad side. The second took 
hold of a leg. The third grasped a tusk, and the fourth clutched the 
animal's tail. 
"Now do you know what an elephant looks like?" asked a friend. 
"Yes," cried the first. "The elephant is broad and flat like a barn door." 
"What!" exclaimed the second. "The elephant is big and round like the 
trunk of a tree." 
"Not so!" cried the third. "The elephant is hard and smooth like a 
polished stone." 
"What are you all talking about?" cried the fourth. "The elephant is just 
like a piece of rope." 
Much so-called teaching of geography leads to just such incomplete 
and fantastic ideas about geographical concepts. Very many children 
have only vague, incomplete and incorrect conceptions of the things 
they see. Like these physically and mentally blind men we are too often 
satisfied with mere wordy descriptions of subjects when we might 
study the subject at first hand if we would. 
This little book is intended to prevent the giving of information by 
description, but to suggest ways of directing attention to those things 
which lie within reach of the child's senses, things which he might pass 
by, things which are needed now to stimulate an intelligent interest in 
his surroundings, things which are needed later for an appreciation and 
enjoyment of his study of the larger facts and concepts of geography. If 
the larger geographical concepts are to have accuracy and richness for 
the child he must have his attention directed to his surroundings. The 
trite expression "from the known to the unknown" is good pedagogy, 
but there must be a "known" on which to build.
The book is based upon the author's actual experience in the class-room 
studying the children at their geography tasks. It has been her 
experience that the efforts of the teachers to build broad geographical 
concepts were of no avail because the pupils did not have accurate 
intimate knowledge of the necessary home geography upon which to 
build. To correct this defect she set about collecting and classifying the 
necessary material. With the use of this material she not only found that 
the class teachers had much less difficulty in presenting the study of the 
earth as a whole, but that an interest beyond all expectation was 
apparent in the children. 
The following pages are valuable more on account of the things they 
suggest than for any geographical facts which they incidentally present. 
The book is not a text-book on geography; it is a compendium of 
suggestion on the study of the subject. It makes little effort to present 
facts, but rather it tells how to gather, classify and study facts. It is 
intended to be used with children during the age when they especially 
delight in the making of collections, and is intended to turn to a definite 
use this childish instinct. 
Map study is based entirely upon the child's experiences as he makes    
    
		
	
	
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