Master World Geography from first principles
Texas CBE prep · TEKS §113.43 (NOT AP® Human Geography / APHG). Eight TEKS strands: history, geography, economics, government, citizenship, culture, science & technology, social studies skills. This service prepares Texas HS-level World Geography Studies for CBE credit through UT High School / Texas Tech K-12; it is not designed for the College Board AP® Human Geography exam (which has a different scope). AP® is a registered trademark of the College Board.
Foundations of World Geography: The 5 Themes and Analytical Tools
Every World Geography CBE question sits inside one of five analytical themes — location, place, human-environment interaction, movement, and region. Master these and you have a mental checklist for every question. This lesson also covers the cartographic tools (map projections, scale, thematic map types) the exam expects you to interpret.
Physical Geography I: Climate, Biomes, and the Global Circulation
Why do deserts sit at 30° latitude? Why is Iceland warmer than you'd expect at its latitude? Why does South Asia have a distinct wet season? Every one of these physical-geography 'why' questions comes down to a few atmospheric and oceanic patterns. Learn the mechanics once and you can answer them all.
Physical Geography II: Landforms, Tectonics, and Water Systems
The Andes, Himalayas, Ring of Fire, Great Rift Valley, Nile Delta — every one of these landmark features comes from plate tectonics or water. Learn the three plate boundary types and the major water systems and you have the vocabulary for most physical-geography questions.
Historical Geography: Trade Routes, Empires, and Colonization
From the Silk Road to European colonization, the geography of trade and empire explains why the modern world looks the way it does. Master the four great historic trade networks and the two waves of European expansion and you can explain contemporary language, religion, and border patterns worldwide.
Population & Migration: Demographic Transition, Refugees, and Growth
Why does Japan face a labor shortage while Niger has one of the world's fastest population growth rates? Why did 10-15 million people move at Indian partition? Population and migration questions hinge on a handful of concepts — demographic transition, dependency ratio, refugees vs IDPs, push-pull factors.
Economic Geography: Sectors, Development, and Globalization
Why do some countries specialize in raw materials while others specialize in high-tech services? Why has global trade grown so rapidly since the 1950s? Economic geography connects development, sectors, trade blocs, and supply chains — the framework that explains modern global inequality.
Political Geography: States, Boundaries, and Supranational Organizations
Why does the world have ~200 sovereign states? Why do some borders align with ethnic groups while others cut through them? What role do supranational bodies (UN, EU, NATO) play? Political geography connects sovereignty, borders, and international institutions.
Cultural Geography: Language, Religion, and Cultural Diffusion
Why does Spanish dominate Latin America, French across parts of Africa, English in India? Why is Bali predominantly Hindu when Indonesia is Muslim-majority? Language, religion, and cultural diffusion trace the geographic footprint of colonial and pre-colonial history.
Environment & Sustainability: Climate Change, Water, and Biodiversity
Sea-level rise, water stress, deforestation, biodiversity loss — the 21st century's most urgent geographic issues. Understand the mechanisms behind each and you can analyze exam questions about environmental change confidently.
Urban Geography: Cities, Megacities, and the World City Hierarchy
From the ancient Fertile Crescent to modern megacities, urban settlements have been engines of economic and cultural life. Modern urbanization is fastest in the developing world, producing informal settlements alongside skyscrapers and reshaping national economies.
Analytical Skills: Reading Maps, Charts, and Geographic Data
The CBE consistently tests analytical skills — reading choropleth maps, interpreting climographs, distinguishing correlation from causation. This lesson gives you the checklist for every visualization-based question.