Saving the Best School Supply for Last – Comment for a Give-Away!
Posted October 1st, 2012 by Homa TavangarWith school supply shopping for three daughters at three different schools safely behind us, there’s one last item I’m actually excited about. It isn’t on a single school supply list and doesn’t have a power cord, but it’s essential for 21st Century learning – which is why I wanted to share this with the MomsRising Community.
It’s a world map.
One of the most-cited suggestions from Growing Up Global is also one of the simplest: “Keep the world at your fingertips. Purchase an up-to-date globe and keep it handy for easy reference. Cover a wall near the kitchen table or other central location with an oversized, laminated world map. (There’s nothing like munching on cereal in the morning and staring at the geography of Indonesia.)”
A world map serves as a perfect window to our wider “home.” When you keep a globe or world atlas handy, your children will be more likely to start visualizing the range of countries and your area in relation to so many others. Current events, new neighbors, folk tales, sports teams and unfamiliar names can be matched with a spot on the earth, seen in context with other locations, and maybe start to make more sense, especially for young minds whose familiarity with the wider world will be imperative as they grow.
In spite of how helpful it is to know where we are in the world and where we might like to go, our kids get almost no world geography exposure in school. In the 2006 National Geographic/Roper poll, half the eighteen to twenty-four-year-olds surveyed could not find New York on the map and sixty-three percent of them could not find Iraq, even though tens of thousands in their own peer group were deployed in war there since 2003. There’s no reason to believe the numbers have improved, as more schools are doing away with geography and world language study every year.
This makes our efforts at home matter more than ever. There’s a proliferation of globe-inspired products, like area rugs, shower curtains, puzzles, and especially, awesome wall maps. Learning about the world can be informative as well as fun and beautiful.
Here are a few of my favorite maps (and keep reading to win one each week!), described in order from top to bottom:
- Uncommon Goods Scratch Map: The world literally unfolds before your eyes as you scratch off the gold foil on the locations you’ve visited (or: have read about, know someone from, or have eaten the cuisine). Interactive. Simple. Elegant. The company’s entire map gifts collection is found here.
- Global Compassion Map from Children Inspire Design: Artist Rebecca Peragine is donating 100% of the proceeds from this delightful map to Future Fortified to help millions of women and children around the world gain access to the essential nutrients they need to lead healthy and enriched lives. Each print gives a month’s worth of nutrients to 20 children in Kenya. When you see the map, you’ll be reminded how giving is beautiful.
- WallPops Peel & Stick World Dry-Erase Map with Marker. Like a big colorform sticker, this world map invites you to stick it anywhere and mark it up. A destination you’ve dreamed about visiting? Where grandma was born? The countries your friends come from? My daughter who is a senior in high school has already claimed this for decorating her future dorm room, since she won’t have to pin or nail it to a wall.
- Medecins Sans Frontiers (MSF) map: We received several of these maps as unexpected, free gifts for making small donations to MSF, or Doctors Without Borders. This is a great incentive gift for donating to a cause making a real difference globally. I keep one on a shelf in the kitchen, one among a stack of magazines in the TV room, and one in a bin of school supplies for my kids’ easy reference. The point is, maps or globes don’t need to be fancy to be effective.
I am excited the companies making the first three maps have ALL agreed to a GIVE AWAY. I’ll run one contest per week, starting with Uncommon Goods (also on Facebook and Pinterest) this week, which has generously offered a $50 Gift Certificate for the winner. To be entered to win, please share in the comments here and/or on Growing Up Global Facebook page, or at the growingupglobal.net blog: Where would you hang your World Scratch Map? Or anything else you’d care to share! Multiple responses on various sites improve your chances in the random drawing.
(Disclosure: these companies sent me sample maps for review, but I receive no compensation from any of them.)




6 Comments
October 2, 2012 at 9:15 am by Molly MartinWe would hang it in our hallway. My 6 year il is always wanting to know which places are “real” and where they are. This would be a great reference for her and help me brush up on my geography.
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October 2, 2012 at 8:35 am by CyndiMy daughter is 5. I just got her a globe, and she already has a map of the US hanging in her room. It’s a magnetic one that you can add the state magnets to as you visit places, and when we travel somewhere she loves to add that new state(s) to her map when she gets home.
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October 1, 2012 at 8:48 pm by MarieI would hang a new world map near the computer desk in the study. I was horrified to learn that many high school age children could not locate Africa on a map, recently. I would continue to encourage my children to point out various countries, states and major cities.
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October 1, 2012 at 3:10 pm by LisaI was trying to buy a globe for my kids (ages 7 & 9) before school started, and was surprised at how difficult they are to find in stores. I agree that a map/globe is an important item for every household. As we become a more global society, it is more important than ever that our children have ready access to this information.
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Homa Tavangar Reply:
October 9th, 2012 at 7:10 am
@Lisa, CONGRATULATIONS! Please get in touch with me – you are the winner. Go to contact at http://www.growingupglobal.net. Yippee.
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How fun. I had a 2 large maps in my room as a kid. One of the United States, and one of the world. I loved them and have always wanted to get one to put up for the kids. I would put one up in my living room.
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