I’m not familiar with the resource you’re talking about, but I can tell you (loosely) what Charlotte Mason did with little ones. She recommended taking them outside and just talking about geography, starting with what’s on your own street. Learn how to tell direction and then challenge your child to go on a scavenger hunt, using direction as his only way to find the treasure (ie. walk out the front door and go north. Turn west on Cherry Street, etc.).
There is also a great little book called Me on the Map that helps children understand what geography is, starting with their room, then moving outward to their street, town, state, country, and finally, world. After reading that book, challenge your child to make a map of his room or your house. Mine also really love looking at the globe and finding places they’ve never found before and then looking those places up on the Internet or in a book like Hungry Planet or Material World.
If you have friends or family that live out of state or in other countries, you can help your son find those locations on a globe or world map, and then trace the route to their state from your town or state.
You can talk about various ecosystems in the context of geography. Find a desert, such as the Sahara, point it out on a map and where it is in relation to where you live, then talk about the climate of the desert, the animals that live there, how people find water, etc. Then find a mountainous region and do the same thing, and discuss the differences between the two geographical regions. That’s science and geography combined!
You can teach your son about mountains, plateaus, cliffs, canyons, rivers, lakes, oceans, and more, using just living books. The Bears on Hemlock Mountain is a book that just popped into my mind that would be perfect for your son’s age.
I also taught my 7yos the continents and four major oceans using map studies and map drills. If your son isn’t able to write, you can have a color key for him to identify the continent. For example, color North America red, color South America green, color Asia purple, etc. Add a continent or ocean at the end of the week and keep it going until you’ve covered all of them.
Hope that helps! Geography is so much fun. Map study and map drill are my children’s favorite things to do, and they’re now 10 and almost 9!
Blessings,
Lindsey