**Geography Coloring Book Series** **History Coloring Book Series**
U.S. Historical Migration Patterns & Processes: Explore the historical immigration patterns of the United States through a series of charts and maps with the help of QR codes. These are perfect for your Human Geography, US History, or other humanities course that discusses U.S. immigration and its policies.
These blank U.S. Historical Immigration maps and charts are ready for students to color. Students can see how the U.S. demographics changed over time. Each map is color-coded so that students can work independently or in groups to uncover the stories behind U.S. immigration policies throughout the nation’s history. Flow charts of people obtaining lawful permanent resident status, are also color-coded by place of last residence. An inverted black and white flow chart was created based upon Talia Bronshtein’s, 200 Years of U.S. Immigration data visualization.
There are 25 pages included and SIX different ways to conduct this lesson.
Included:
- Top Country of Origin by State & Year: 1850-2010, blank for coloring (16pg. PDF, Full layouts)
- Top Country of Origin by State & Year: 1850-2010 (2pg. PDF, tiled layout 2×8)
- Historical U.S. Immigration Flow Chart 1820-2015 (1 Full Color & Vectorized based upon the original)
- Historical U.S. Immigration Flow Chart 1820-2015 (Blank for coloring)
- Historical U.S. Immigration Flow Chart 1820-2015 (Lecture Notes)
- Historical U.S. Immigration Flow Chart 1820-2015 (Lecture Space for Students)
- Historical U.S. Immigration Flow Chart 1820-2015 (Key push/pull factors provided on timeline)
- Instruction Page on how to use the materials in SIX different ways.
- Source page with QR codes for web access.
This item was created using open-source maps, source charts that were inverted to black/white using Adobe Illustrator, and Autodesk Sketchbook by the Human Imprint. These took 20 hours to complete.
This coloring book series is inspired by the Wynn Kapit Geography Coloring Book, that hasn’t been updated since 2003. It’s provided many hours of geography inspiration for myself and I hope to spread the same.
$$ Any earnings from the sale of my maps helps to pay for professional illustrations that I have made for my online illustrated comic text about Human Geography. $$
Let me know if I can make this better!
Copyright HumanImprint 2019
All works are meant for the purpose of the classroom and personal use. Downloaded materials are not meant to be redistributed via social media or in shared file folders (i.e. Dropbox, Google Drive, etc.), aside from those that are shared with students (i.e. Schoology, Google Classroom, or other closed LMS). Please do not post any of my downloaded illustrations to publicly viewable websites where others can download, including publicly viewable websites meant for students.
Thank you.
Relevant Terms: AP Human Geography, Push Factor, Pull factor, Immigration, United States, Refugee, Asylum, Asylum Seeker, Emigration, Immigration Policy, Push/Pull Factors, Migration Patterns and Processes, Population and Migration, US History, American History, Immigration debate, Historical Migration, Border Control, Border Policy, APUSH, AP US History, Change over time.