Academic literature on the topic 'Degree Discipline: Geography'

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Journal articles on the topic "Degree Discipline: Geography"

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Simon, Josep. "Writing the Discipline." Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 46, no. 3 (June 1, 2016): 392–427. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/hsns.2016.46.3.392.

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The historiography of physics has reached a great degree of maturity and sophistication, providing many avenues to consider the making of science from a historical perspective. However, the big picture of the making of physics is characterized by a predominant narrative focused on a conception of disciplinary formation through leadership transfers in research among France, Germany, and Britain. This focus has provided the history of physics with a periodization, a geography, and a fundamental goal commonly considered to be conceptual and theoretical unification. In this paper, I suggest the interest of reassessing this picture by analyzing the temporal, national, and epistemological viewpoint from which it is written. I use for this purpose an exemplary case study: Adolphe Ganot’s physics textbooks in France and their translation by Edmund Atkinson in England. In this context, I suggest future avenues for the study of the making of physics as a discipline, which consider the canonical role of textbooks in disciplinary formation beyond the Kuhnian paradigm.
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Batista, Natália Lampert, Roberto Cassol, Elsbeth Léia Spode Becker, and Maurício Rizzatti. "“GEOGRAFIA E ENSINO I”: UMA EXPERIÊNCIA DE INTEGRAÇÃO UNIVERSIDADE-ESCOLA NA FORMAÇÃO DE PROFESSORES DE GEOGRAFIA / “GEOGRAPHY AND TEACHING I”: A EXPERIENCE OF UNIVERSITY-SCHOOL INTEGRATION IN TRAINING OF TEACHERS OF GEOGRAPHY." Geographia Meridionalis 3, no. 3 (January 9, 2018): 364. http://dx.doi.org/10.15210/gm.v3i3.12087.

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A docência orientada possibilita ao pós-graduando a experiência de ministrar aulas no Ensino Superior, permitindo outro olhar sobre a prática docente na Universidade. O presente relato se refere a Docência Orientada realizada na disciplina do curso de graduação em Geografia Licenciatura, Geografia e Ensino I, da Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, turma 10, do segundo semestre de 2016. Com a sistematização da disciplina no referido ano, objetivou-se desenvolver habilidades teórico-práticas para o Ensino de Cartografia no Ensino Fundamental; proporcionar aos alunos matriculados na disciplina Geografia e Ensino I um momento de vivência e de reflexão sobre o espaço escolar; e produzir e testar metodologias de Ensino de Cartografia com alunos Ensino Fundamental. A partir das oficinas desenvolvidas no espaço escolar, acredita-se que a organização da disciplina de Geografia e Ensino I, edição de 2016, contribuiu significativamente para a formação dos acadêmicos de graduação, pois integrou a teoria, referente ao Ensino de Cartografia, com as vivências no espaço escolar, que resultaram em motivação para o ser professor e reflexões sobre o ato de ensinar.Abstract:Oriented teaching enables the post-graduate student to teach classes in Higher Education, allowing another look at teaching practice at the University. The present report refers to oriented teaching carried out in the discipline of the undergraduate course in Geography Degree, Geography and Teaching I, of the Federal University of Santa Maria, class 10, of the second semester of 2016. With the systematization of the discipline in the mentioned year, the objective was to develop theoretical-practical abilities for the Teaching of Cartography in Elementary School; To provide the students enrolled in the discipline I a moment of experience and reflection on the school space; and produce and test Cartography Teaching methodologies with elementary students. From the workshops developed in the school space, it is believed that the organization of the discipline of Geography and Teaching I, edition of 2016, contributed significantly to the training of undergraduate students, since it integrated the theoretical about Cartography Teaching to experiences in space School, which resulted in motivation for being a teacher and reflections on the act of teaching.Keywords: Oriented Teaching; Teaching of Cartography; Teacher training.
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Clarke, Katherine. "In Search of the Author of Strabo's Geography." Journal of Roman Studies 87 (November 1997): 92–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/301371.

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‘As intellectuals and academics we are constantly engaging in projects of representation, but in the dominant epistemologies that guide our work, our role as representers is effaced’.‘At the heart of the issue lies a fundamental insistence on the contextualised nature of all forms of knowledge, meaning and behaviour. There is a further recognition of the partial and partisan edge to inquiry, theory construction, and scholarly (re)presentation, as well as an explicit acknowledgement of the importance of the author's biography in this creative process’.The assertions of two modern geographers, Katz and Merrifield, are symptomatic of an underlying, but persistent, debate within their field of study. To what degree should academic prose aim at impersonality? The discipline of modern geography, perhaps more than any other academic subject at pains constantly to justify and redefine itself, has taken on this problem, formulated its history, and posited some solutions.
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Morote, Álvaro-Francisco, María Hernández, and Jorge Olcina. "Are Future School Teachers Qualified to Teach Flood Risk? An Approach from the Geography Discipline in the Context of Climate Change." Sustainability 13, no. 15 (July 31, 2021): 8560. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13158560.

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The aims of this research, based on a case study (trainee teachers of Primary degree and Secondary Education–MAES of the University of Valencia, Spain), are to analyse the students’ memories and perceptions of their training about floods; to examine the interest in teaching these contents in Social Science and/or Geography classes; and to analyse their proposals to improve teacher training. Methodologically, a questionnaire was distributed among 204 future teachers. The results indicate that the majority, in both groups, (degree and MAES) consider themselves to have a medium level of preparedness to teach these contents to schoolchildren (value of 3): 47.0% of the degree students and 47.4% of the MAES students. In both groups, the majority (89.2% degree; 57.9% MAES) indicate that they had not received training in the university or if they had, it had been insufficient. The study reveals that both those who have received training and those who have not believe themselves to have a similar level of preparedness. As the results of this study show, there is still a lot of ground to be covered in the field of education so that it may become an essential tool to generate a society that is more resilient to climate change.
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Jones, Andrew. "Navigating Bulkeley’s challenge on climate politics and human geography." Dialogues in Human Geography 9, no. 1 (March 2019): 18–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2043820619829921.

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While agreeing with the major tenets of Harriet Bulkeley’s timely and powerful argument for geographers (and social scientists more generally) to engage with climate change, this response raises three provocative challenges that arise from this intervention: the degree to which the epistemological and theoretical bases to these arguments are radical, the nature of the engagement problem in the discipline and, perhaps most importantly, how these arguments can be translated to a ‘progressive politics’. The response argues that there is much further to go in explaining the utility of socio-natural understanding of climate change if those beyond the social sciences and in the wider realm of policy and politics are to be convinced of the power of the approach being advocated. It also argues that geographers are well-positioned to develop the bolder and more interdisciplinary approach needed to achieve the kind of ambitious shift in thinking Bulkeley seeks.
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Boehm, Richard G., and Audrey Mohan. "Geospatial Technology." International Journal of Applied Geospatial Research 1, no. 1 (January 2010): 26–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/jagr.2010071602.

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Research into the nature and function of curricular matters in applied geography has provided an opportunity to assess the penetration and relative importance of geospatial technology to the discipline of geography. Departments of Geography with degree programs in applied geography were surveyed to find out how important geospatial technology was in the preparation of students for meaningful jobs and careers. The Applied Geography Specialty Group of the Association of American Geographers (AAG) was also surveyed about the value of geospatial technology, as was the 95 academic programs that listed applied geography as a “program specialty” in the AAG Guide to Geography Programs in the Americas. There was a uniform agreement across these various groups that geospatial technology occupied an extremely important position in their overall course offerings, and if you are watching the workplace, such courses are not only sensible but offer critical employable skills for students upon graduation. It is widely known that geospatial technology education and training require a large commitment of departmental resources, including faculty lines, equipment expenditures, space, and technical support. A geography department and its university’s administration have to understand these unique requirements and allocate resources, more akin to a computer science department than a traditional academic unit. This reality is of immediate importance to geography departments because almost one quarter of all academic jobs advertised in geography over the last six years have been in the broad area of geospatial technology. A final conclusion to this research is a policy matter that suggests geography departments take a strong proprietorial position toward providing education in geospatial technology because other disciplines and training programs see opportunities in a rapidly expanding workplace skill and they are aggressively pursuing a niche of their own.
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Biz, Ana Claudia, and Mafalda Nesi Francischett. "ASPECTOS METODOLÓGICOS DE PRÁTICA EDUCATIVA COM CARTOGRAFIA TÁTIL." Revista Brasileira de Educação em Geografia 10, no. 20 (December 31, 2020): 603–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.46789/edugeo.v10i20.758.

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Este artigo apresenta aspectos metodológicos de prática educativa com Cartografia Tátil desenvolvida com licenciandos, do segundo ano de Geografia/Licenciatura, na disciplina de Cartografia Escolar, na UNIOESTE. O objetivo é discutir as possibilidades de ensinar por meio de mapas táteis e de atividades que se constituem em orientações metodológicas a respeito da educação inclusiva, com questões gerais sobre a linguagem na Cartografia Tátil, especificamente a leitura de mapa. Para tal, foi elaborado o mapa tátil da região Sudoeste do Paraná, com destaque para o município de Francisco Beltrão. Esta experiência vem sendo desenvolvida por pesquisadores no Laboratório de pesquisa RETLEE (Representações, espaços, tempos e linguagens em experiências educativas), cujo intuito é de trabalhar o ensino de Geografia com estudantes cegos. PALAVRAS-CHAVE Geografia, Linguagem, Cartografia tátil. METHODOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF THE EDUCATIVE PRACTICE WITH THE TACTILE CARTOGRAPHY ABSTRACT This article presents methodological aspects of the educative practice with the Tactile Cartography develops with the graduates, of the Geography Degree second grade, in School Cartography discipline, in UNIOESTE. The objective is discuss the possibilities to teach through tactile maps and activities that constitutes in methodological guidelines to respect the inclusive education, with general issues about the language in Tactile Cartography, specify the map reading. For this, was elaborating the tactile map of the Parana’s southwestern region, with emphasis to the Francisco Beltrão municipality. This experience has been developed by researchers in RETLEE Research Laboratory (Representations, spaces, times and languages in educative experiences), whose intention is works the Geography education with the blind students. KEYWORDS Geography, Language, Tactile Cartography.
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Valéria Rosa da Silva, Cláudia, and Rejane Dias da Silva. "A FORMAÇÃO INICIAL DO(A)PROFESSOR(A)DE GEOGRAFIA: UM ESTUDO DAS REPRESENTAÇÕES SOCIAIS DO SER PROFESSOR(A)." COLLOQUIUM HUMANARUM 17, no. 1 (November 2, 2020): 264–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.5747/ch.2020.v17.h499.

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This article presents part of the results of the research carried out in the master's degree in education, in which the social representations of geography graduates about being a teacher were investigated. This research aimed to understand the social representations of undergraduate students in geography about being a teacher in this discipline. To this end, we sought to identify the semantic field of the social representations of the graduates and the internal structure of such representations. To achievethese objectives, we used the Theory of Social Representations as a theoretical-methodological approach (MOSCOVICI, 1961), as well as the structural approach (ABRIC, 1994). We used as instruments of data collection questionnaire of free association of words and semi-structured interview. For data analysis, we used the Iramuteq software and the content analysis technique (BARDIN, 1977). 149 research subjects in geography from two federal higher education institutions in the Metropolitan Region of Recife (RMR) participated as research subjects. As results found we have the social representations of the undergraduate students in geography falling into four categories: disciplinary, pedagogical, affective and professional, with the disciplinary and pedagogical category having the greatest expressiveness. These results do not exhaust the discussions about the social representations of being a teacher, in reality they are propositional for the development of new researches that think about the initial formation ofthe geography teacher
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Atabekova, Anastasia. "Heritage Module within Legal Translation and Interpreting Studies: Didactic Contribution to University Students’ Sustainable Education." Sustainability 13, no. 7 (April 2, 2021): 3966. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13073966.

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This article explores the hypothesis that the concept of heritage is relevant for a university-based degree course in legal translators and interpreters’ training. The research rests on the legal and academic understanding of cultural heritage. The study explores its specifics regarding the English-taught discipline on Legal Translation and Interpreting Studies within the above-mentioned graduate program. The research integrates qualitative tools and statistical instruments, starts with the theoretical consideration of legislative and academic sources, proceeds to the empirical studies of heritage samples, and considers their relevance for the heritage module design within the specified discipline. The experimental design of such a module and its use for the training of students are also part of the present investigation that further explores students’ perceptions of the heritage module under study, with reference to their future career tracks. The study reveals the specifics and components of the heritage framework for the discipline under study and identifies those areas of professional activities for which students consider the heritage module as most useful and relevant. These issues have not been a subject for academic research so far, which contributes to the research relevance and novelty.
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Fang, Xiaoping. "Bamboo Steamers and Red Flags: Building Discipline and Collegiality among China's Traditional Rural Midwives in the 1950s." China Quarterly 230 (May 11, 2017): 420–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305741017000625.

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AbstractThis paper explores how the new Communist government developed a political consciousness of discipline and collegiality among traditional rural midwives in Chinese villages during the 1950s. It argues that selected traditional rural midwives were taught to observe discipline by attending meetings and studying, and to develop collegiality with peers through criticism and self-criticism of their birth attendance techniques and personal characters in short training courses from 1951 onwards. A legitimized midwife identity gradually formed in rural communities, but with it came conflicts and rivalry. By keeping these midwives under institutional surveillance and creating a dynamic and constant moulding process, the new government intended to foster professional and political discipline and collegiality within the group based on a normativized notion of selflessness performed within a changing series of indoctrination schemes that demonstrated continuity and complementarity and which I have described as common, preliminary, institutionalized, and dynamic schemes. This article examines how the state attempted to retrain marginalized and derided midwives with appropriate class backgrounds in order to incorporate them into the modern medical world, then still dominated by doctors and nurses with suspect class backgrounds. Ironically, in creating “socialist new people” to intervene in traditional rural birthing practices and introducing fee-for-service professionalism, the CCP accidentally created a degree of petit-capitalist thinking among women whose traditional mode of work may have been more selfless, thus complicating the process of indoctrinating selfless dedication.
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Book chapters on the topic "Degree Discipline: Geography"

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McKercher, Bob, and Bruce Prideaux. "Epilogue." In Tourism Theories, Concepts and Models. Goodfellow Publishers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23912/9781911635352-4724.

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This book explored a range of theories, concepts, models and ideas that shape how we think about tourism, the way we do. In doing so, it revealed that tourism is a true multi-discipline. It is informed by such core disciplines as geography, anthropology, sociology, psychology, economics, leisure and demography, as well as by a multitude of other disciplines and fields of study as identified in Chapter 2. Historically, though, tourism studies has been beset by a high degree of silofication – a varied field of study examined strictly within the confines of individual disciplinary silos. Even when attempts have been made to be multi- disciplinary, the results have often been less than satisfactory, for usually one school of thought dominates, while others are placed in subservient roles. Add to this the force field of tourism, and it is not surprising that tourism studies have been labelled as fragmented and disjointed, typified by multiple communities of discourse with historically little cross-fertilization between communities.
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Ting, Rachel Sing Kiat, and Pei Lynn Foo. "Counseling Chinese Communities in Malaysia." In Research Anthology on Rehabilitation Practices and Therapy, 1175–201. IGI Global, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-7998-3432-8.ch058.

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This chapter presents the experiences of Chinese in Malaysia (CIM), in the context of mental health services. As the second largest ethnic group in Malaysia, CIM is diverse in its dialectic subculture, education, generation, geography, and degree of assimilation to the mainstream culture. The chapter introduces the ecological characteristics of CIM and how they shape the unique psychological challenges. Though CIM are known for their multilingual ability, strong work ethics, emphasis on education, and family piety, the clashes between tradition and modern values, the marginalized position in the Malaysian political arena, the stereotype of overachiever in education, and the “brain drain” movement of young elite CIM, have all caused a strain in CIM families as well as individuals. Moreover, they face both external and internal barriers in getting quality mental health care. It is therefore imperative to promote a mental health discipline that is open to serve CIM, as well as being sensitive to its cultural and historical backdrop.
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Ting, Rachel Sing Kiat, and Pei Lynn Foo. "Counseling Chinese Communities in Malaysia." In Multicultural Counseling Applications for Improved Mental Healthcare Services, 23–49. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-6073-9.ch002.

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This chapter presents the experiences of Chinese in Malaysia (CIM), in the context of mental health services. As the second largest ethnic group in Malaysia, CIM is diverse in its dialectic subculture, education, generation, geography, and degree of assimilation to the mainstream culture. The chapter introduces the ecological characteristics of CIM and how they shape the unique psychological challenges. Though CIM are known for their multilingual ability, strong work ethics, emphasis on education, and family piety, the clashes between tradition and modern values, the marginalized position in the Malaysian political arena, the stereotype of overachiever in education, and the “brain drain” movement of young elite CIM, have all caused a strain in CIM families as well as individuals. Moreover, they face both external and internal barriers in getting quality mental health care. It is therefore imperative to promote a mental health discipline that is open to serve CIM, as well as being sensitive to its cultural and historical backdrop.
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Varela, Miguel Escobar, Andrea Nanetti, and Michael Stanley-Baker. "Digital Humanities in Singapore." In Digital Humanities and Scholarly Research Trends in the Asia-Pacific, 91–117. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7195-7.ch005.

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In Singapore, digital humanities (DH) is inclusive of the larger spectrum of the humanities, including not only its traditional disciplines (e.g., languages and literature, philosophy, law, geography, history, art history, musicology) but also anthropology, heritage studies, museum studies, performing arts, and visual arts. Multilingual, interdisciplinary, and audiovisual projects are particularly prominent. A community is growing around an emergent concept of DH, and it is developing results mainly in society-driven research projects. Although the DH label is relatively new, and DH dialogue across Singapore institutions is at its early stages, Singapore-based researchers have carried out digital research for decades. An increasing number of projects are home-grown, but several projects have also migrated to Singapore recently due to the high degree of mobility at Singaporean institutions. Current trends suggest that the next stage of DH history in Singapore will include the development of more formal institutions and more participation in global DH conversations.
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Hamerow, Helena. "Rural Centres, Trade, and Non-Agrarian Production." In Early Medieval Settlements. Oxford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199246977.003.0010.

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In contrast to the relative scarcity of publications dealing with the buildings and layouts of rural settlements, many volumes have been devoted to the development of early medieval trade and craft production (e.g. Jankuhn et al. 1981; 1983; K. Düwel et al. 1987, vols. 1–4; Hodges and Whitehouse 1983). Archaeological research into these topics has been made more fruitful—as well as more complex—by the contributions of neighbouring disciplines such as history, geography, and numismatics. It has, however, tended to focus almost exclusively on towns, monasteries, and royal centres, yet craft production, trade, and exchange also played a significant role in farming communities before and after the emergence of such specialized centres. Indeed, the rural settlements of northwest Europe were already significantly differentiated in their economies in the Migration period, suggesting a high level of socio-economic complexity several centuries earlier than has generally been supposed. The evidence now available for trade and non-agrarian production, which derives almost wholly from archaeology, calls for a thoroughgoing reassessment of when and how centralized authorities emerged in northern Europe after the collapse of the western Empire. This is particularly true for northern Germany and southern Scandinavia, where early state formation has conventionally been dated to the late Viking period. Research into state formation has in the past focused on the origins of towns and market centres, the latter usually seen as arising from participation in long-distance trade which was controlled by kings or magnates. Yet, several centuries before there were kings or towns in northern Europe, rural settlements emerged which point to a degree of political centralization. This chapter considers the evidence for these rural centres and the role of non-agrarian production and exchange in rural settlements generally: what was the scale and context of the production, distribution, and consumption of non-agrarian goods? Who controlled these activities, and how, if at all, did the long-distance trade networks which fuelled the nascent towns of Merovingian and Viking Age Europe affect the economies of the communities which lay in their hinterlands?
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Conference papers on the topic "Degree Discipline: Geography"

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Liu, Ming, and Feng Song. "Urban morphology in China: origins and progress." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.5654.

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Author name: Ming Liu, Feng Song* Affiliation: College of Urban and Environmental Sciences. Peking UniversityAdress: Room 3463, Building Yifuer, Peking University, Haidian district, Beijing, China 100871 E-mail: liumingpku1992@163.com, songfeng@urban,pku.edu.cn*Telephone nember: +8618810328816, +8613910136101* Keywords: urban morphology, disciplinary history, Conzen, China Abstract: This paper traces the origins and development of indigenous urban morphological research in China. It also considers the adoption of the theories and methods of the Conzenian School. Urban morphological research in China is carried out in different disciplines: mainly archaeology, geography, and architecture. The earliest significant work was within archaeology, but that has been widely ignored by current urban morphological researchers. As an urban archaeologist whose first degree was in architecture, Zhengzhi Zhao worked on the Studies on the reconstruction of the city plan of Ta-Tu in the Yuan Dynasty in 1957. He uncovered the original city plan of Ta-Tu (now Beijing) in the Yuan Dynasty by applying street pattern analysis. Before the Cultural Revolution, Pingfang Xu recorded and collated the research findings of Zhao, who was by then seriously ill, so that the methods he developed could be continued with the help of other scholars especially archaeologists. His methods of study are still used in studies of urban form in China today. Later, the dissemination of the Conzenian School of thought, aided by two ISUF conferences in China, promoted the development of studies of Chinese urban form. With the help of Jeremy Whitehand, researchers, including the Urban Morphology Research Group of Peking University, applied the theories and methods of the Conzenian School through field work and empirical studies. Taking the opportunity of the 110th anniversaries of the birth of both M.R.G. Conzen and Zhengzhi Zhao, this paper summarizes multidisciplinary urban morphological research in China.
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