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give an example of when youd use a circle map? why would you not want t…

Question

give an example of when youd use a circle map?
why would you not want to use a bubble map for brainstorming?
explain how a brace map can be used in the study of geography?
define the term \analogy\?

Explanation:

Response
Sub - question 1: Give an example of when you’d use a Circle Map?
Brief Explanations

A Circle Map is used for defining a concept or brainstorming related ideas. For example, when defining the concept of "Climate Change", we can put "Climate Change" in the center circle. Then, in the outer circle, we can write related ideas like "global warming", "melting ice caps", "rising sea levels", "extreme weather events" etc. This helps in exploring and organizing thoughts about a single concept.

Brief Explanations

A Bubble Map is mainly used for describing a concept with adjectives or descriptive phrases (focuses on attributes of a single concept). Brainstorming often requires generating a wide range of related ideas, not just describing attributes. For example, if we want to brainstorm ideas for a new product, a Bubble Map would limit us to describing the product's features (like "colorful", "portable") rather than generating ideas like different marketing strategies, target audiences, or complementary products. So, for brainstorming a broad set of ideas, a Bubble Map is not suitable as it is designed for descriptive purposes.

Brief Explanations

A Brace Map is used for breaking down a whole into its parts. In geography, for example, when studying a "River System" (the whole), we can use a Brace Map to break it down into parts like "source", "tributaries", "main channel", "mouth", "floodplain" etc. Another example is studying a "Mountain Range" (the whole), and breaking it down into parts like "individual mountains", "peaks", "slopes", "base", "surrounding valleys" etc. This helps in understanding the components of geographical features and their relationships.

Answer:

An example of using a Circle Map is when defining the concept of "Climate Change". Put "Climate Change" in the center circle. In the outer circle, write related ideas like "global warming", "melting ice caps", "rising sea levels", "extreme weather events" to explore and organize thoughts about this single concept.

Sub - question 2: Why would you not want to use a Bubble Map for brainstorming?