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Visualizing data: Health and Wealth over 200 years

Today in class we went over visualizing data again, but this time in a different manner. We went over a presentation conducted by a man that goes by the name of  Hans Rosling. The data began in 1810 and portrayed every country in terms of wealth and health. In 1810, all the countries started with low life expectancy and virtually no wealth compared to standards today. As the industrial revolution happened, all the countries boomed and after awhile China shot up after the people's revolution. This lead China to shoot up almost as much as the Americas and Britain, but it was still very poor in rural areas.

population triangles

Today in class we started a new unit. We were introduced to the population pyramids. Population pyramids. A population pyramid gives a clear understanding and shows in data form the number or percentage of people of a target demographic and shows the life expectancy and can be used to predict the population in the future.  A population pyramid gives a clear picture of how a country transitions from high fertility to low  fertility rate . The broad base of the pyramid means a relative majority of the population lies between ages 0–14, which tells us that the fertility rate of the country is high and above population  sub-replacement fertility  level.

Test back

Today in class we got our test back. Like I had suspected, I had aced it. My final score was 98. I'm am not sure if this because of the right to privacy and such, but I believe I might've gotten the highest score in the class. I talked to the very smart people and all of them got at a maximum of 96. I got two questions wrong, first was a very simple one that I shouldn't have messed up. It asked the amount of oil that the USA imports a day. I read total production which is slightly more so I got it wrong. The second question I got wrong was about which country had the greatest RNI out of three countries. I didn't know it so I guessed and got it wrong. Looking back, I should've picked the developing nation because of 90% of the population growth takes place in developing nations.

Test on Population/ CIA World Factbook

Today in class we took a test about population and settlement, which we have been studying for a few weeks. The test was comprised of 4 sections. The first section was to test our knowledge and mobility with the CIA WorldFactbook by asking a serious of random questions and having to test takers look it up on the factbook. We only had 20 minutes to take that section to make sure we were able to find the information quickly. The next section was key terms that we had to know. It almost tripped me up but I believe that I did well on it. The next section was the hardest in my opinion. It was comprised of general knowledge questions that I had not anticipated, even still, I think and hope that I only got a few off. Next was a section about push and pull forces that I was able to come up with easily. There were a few easy bonus credits that I'm almost positive I got.

Review for test tomorrow

Today in class we went over the unit in desperate preparation for the test overmarrow. A couple of questions confirmed to be on the test are using statistics and math to find a net increase in certain topics such as migration, population increase, and fertility. There will also be a section where we have to use the CIA World Factbook to find answers. A few questions that are probable to be on the test overmarrow are the number of people on Earth currently, that the majority (90%) of the population growth takes place in developing nations, that in 1804 the population reached a billion, and the rate of increase flatlined around 1974-2011. A few more good things to know are that women, almost in every country, live longer than males (on average), the definitions of crude birth, crude death, and RNI (rate of natural increase), net migration rate, different push and pull forces and countries that have them, and the total fertility rate. Also, keep in mind that the TFR must be 2.1 for consta...

Going over questions from class

Today in class we went over the questions that we answered yesterday. We had to answer 21 questions. This was done as a way to familiarize ourselves with the CIA Factbook. In addition to that, I believe that this was also done as a way to familiarize ourselves with the world and to get more general knowledge of the USA in comparison with the rest of the world. A couple days ago, we went over a video where a man is asked what makes America the best country. He responded by stating that it wasn't the best country. Overall, I believe it to be pretty foolish to try to pick a country as "the best". There are many categories to consider. In terms of overall GDP, both total and PPP, the US has the best economy, but if you consider only total or only PPP, the US is beaten.

Questions

1. 1,384,688,986  people in China.  1,296,834,042 in India. 2.  1.42 children born/woman 3.  5.8 deaths/1,000 population 4.  23-28%, no because not all people could be officially surveyed. 5. 82.7% 6.  $59,500 7.  $5,900 8.  $105,100 9. 246,809,221 10.  13,513  in America.  1,218   in Russia. 11.  1.201 billion 12.  4.5 deaths/1,000 live births in Canada.  5.7 deaths/1,000 live births in the USA.  4.4 deaths/1,000 live births in Cuba. 13. Total-  38.2%. Men-  52% Women-  24.2% 14. Mocano, Japan, Singapore. 15. Lesotho, Zambia, Afghanistan. 16. Monaco 17. Vietnam- 7.3%, USA- 8.6%, South Korea- 10.4%. 18. Germany- 1.24%, China- 1.87%, USA- 3.16% 19. The USA-  10,962,000 BBL/Day. Russia-  10,759,000BBL/Day. Saudi Arabia-  10,425,000 BBL/Day. 20. The USA-  7,969,000 BBL/Day, China-  6,710,000 BBL/Day, India-  4,057,000 BBL/Day. ...