Wander over to Wanderlust
September 5, 2008
When I think “maps in the classroom,” I think: struggling with spring-loads, explaining out-dated political boundaries, and approximating locations off the map by pointing to a blank spot on the wall. It doesn’t have to be that way. Instructify has already written up a number of great websites (see related stuff below!) for changing the way you use maps in your classroom, and now we’ve got one more to add to the list: Wanderlust, brought to you by GOOD Magazine.
Wanderlust is an interactive graphic that allows you to take a gander at a number of famous paths. You’ll find factual routes (like Amelia Earhart’s second attempt to circumnavigate the globe) and fictitious routes (like Jules Verne’s A Journey to the Center of the Earth) and routes that are somewhere in between (like the Pan-Am Highway). Each of these historic journeys is plotted with points of interest, although, don’t expect too much content — it’s just a graphic after all. Wanderlust would be an ideal device to spice up a presentation. -MARIELLE PRINCE
Related Stuff:
Great Literature, Now With Road Maps
Worldmapper combines geography and social science



