I'm a teacher and the Author of the Amazon e-book;' Time Smart Teaching' and my mission is to create Geography resources to help teachers save time and reduce their workload. I am sharing additional time saving tips for teachers on my YOUTUBE channel ' Time Smart Teaching' if you fancy dropping by!
I'm a teacher and the Author of the Amazon e-book;' Time Smart Teaching' and my mission is to create Geography resources to help teachers save time and reduce their workload. I am sharing additional time saving tips for teachers on my YOUTUBE channel ' Time Smart Teaching' if you fancy dropping by!
Graphs, maps and their analysis feature heavily in GCSE geography papers and examinations across all specifications. I put this handy wall display guide together to help my GCSE Geography students identify and describe the most common types of graphs and maps that they may see in the paper 3 examinations. It also gives a brief overview of the advantages and disadvantages of each type of display method- something students often struggle to articulate. It helped middle ability students picks up easy marks in their paper 3 fieldwork examinations and also made a great addition to classroom displays for open evenings and parentās evenings. I hope you enjoy it!
As this is a FREE resource please consider buying a copy of my ebook ā Time Smart Teaching; 8 Insider Tips that Schools Donāt tell you!
This lesson includes simple tasks to work through and was designed for year 7 / 8 Geography at Ks3. The lesson focusses on the Geograhy of the North West England region to build up understanding in preparation for the GCSE Geography focus on the UK. Suitable for distance or remote learning.
This structured talking exercise can take place between small groups of 2 or more people. Each person rolls 2 die to be directed to co-ordinates on a grid which lead to a question or discussion point. Most questions are intended to be reflective and make connections between geographical understanding at GCSE level ( years 9-11) and the current pandemic lockdown and social distancing measures. This encourages students to form opinions and make wider connections with their geographical knowledge. It is appropriate for a classroom, or distance /home based learning and could be done with a parent or carer.
This lesson is designed to follow on from the Sumatra Earthquake case study lesson to look at how Chileās preparation planning and protection ( 3 Pās) helped it to cope with the aftermath of the large magnitude earthquake in 2010. Students then have to plan and write a 9 mark question comparing the 2 earthquakes. A detailed help framework and model answers are provided for each level ; basic, clear and detailed.
This lesson examines the ways in which we mitigate, or reduce the severaity of the impacts of global climate change using actions on a range of scales. The lesson focus is on the role of the Paris 2015 climate summit, but includes optional update on the USA Trump administration and their retraction on president Obamaās climate promises. This lesson works alongside the use of the blue AQA Oxford GCSE texts books, but could easily be done without.
Landforms along the coast that form as a result of deposition include beaches, spits, bars, salt marshes and sand dunes. This differentiated grid has a higher and middle ability version to allow students a head start if they need it. The sheet is deisgned to be used with ICT / internet so students can follow the weblinks on the sheet to get the required information of landform characteristics and and how they form. This would make an ideal revision/ intervention task for paper 1 ā UK Physical Landscapesā.
This 3 lesson bundle covers the reasons why earthquakes occur at plate boundaries, with map skills developed. Then 2 lessons comparing the primary and secondary effects earthquakes at 2 contrasting levels of development: Chile in South America and Sumatra Indonesia. These case studies complement the ones in the popular Oxford GCSE course textbooks.
Written for year 7, this lesson has a literacy focus and introduces students to some of the physical geography and landscape characteristics of the Tundra Biome and itās cold environment. Students analyse the descriptive vocabulary and adjectives used to describe Svalbard, then build a bank of keywords as a class to use independently in their travel writing. The aim of the lesson is to complete an extended piece of writing to take the reader on an imaginary journey through the tundra around the archipelago of Svalbard ( travel journalism skills). There is a writing frame worksheet to support students write about the physical and human geography using the 5 senses. This differentiated lesson could easily be adapted for year 8 or 9 and gets student familiar with cold environments at GCSE geography.
Whilst students and parents are at home during the Spring and Easter time they can work through this bee project booklet offline, simply print it out and complete. It has been designed for distance/ remote learning.
Understanding the concept of an ecosystem being made up of both living and living things is important at Ks2 to prepare students for science and Geography at KS3 and high school. This geography based project is suitable for ages 7-10.
The global and national population of bees is falling, and this is unsustainable as they play an important part on pollination and growing crops that sustain humans. There is a movement now to protect and care for bees as an important part of nature and ecology.
By the end of the project , students will know;
the living and non-living parts in a garden ecosystem
The jobs that honey bees do
How to classify 3 types of bees based on their appearance
define some keywords linked to bees
The types of plants that attract bees
How to encourage bees into your garden
How to build a wild-bee house
Label the different parts/ anatomy of a bee
There is a printable completion certificate and bee-themes greeting card also.
Food insecurity is where there is not enough physical, or financial access to a range of safe, nutritious food to keep a person healthy. The rise of global production chains and international food trading and export, has created food stress in various regions of the world, This has been made worse by climate change.
This GCSE lesson links to the topic ā Challenge of Resource Managementā under the AQA spec A curriculum for GCSE Geography.
Each group will be given a different impact of food insecurity ( rising prices, social unrest, malnutrition, environmental degredation). They must explain the impact and come up with at least 3 ideas/ ways in which the problem can be alleviated. Think policy/ technology/ education. They are given 3 internet links to use may use in addition to textbooks to help.
When the group presents their ideas/ solutions back to the group, each student must chose and write the best one and write this on their worksheet grid. This lesson is about students leading learning and teaching each other.
Irrigation is the human process of artificially watering crops on a large scale using networks or canals ans sprinkler systems. Although irrigation can improve water availability and yield of crops in arid areas, it can also lead to contamination of local drinking water supplies which in turn creates substantial health problems.
This lesson is appropriate for self-study/ remote learning from home and is designed for the AQA GCSE Geography specification A curriculum. It has tasks with lots of prompts, a card sort with answers and a 9 mark exam practice question with a detailed PEEL structure to follow;
ā(9marks) For a large scale agricultural scheme you have studied, explain how successful you think it has been in improving food supplies.ā
The lesson looks at the positive and negative impact of the Rajasthan Canal in India on agriculture and the local population. Students have to evaluate whether overall they think that the canal is good or bad for the region.
The characteristics of sustainable cities must encompass social/ environmental / economic advantages to be holistic. This lesson introduces the concept of a sustainable city, by looking at the Bedzed zero carbon residential development in London. The lesson is aimed at the middle ability. mains tasks involve a gap fill to complete statements on what sustainable cities should look like, and be doing. Following this there is a video to make notes on Bedzed, which they then annotate around an image of the development. Finally there is a 9 mark GCSE past exam question with a mark scheme for peer assessment. This lesson fits in with the Urban Issues and Challenges topic, where students must know an example of a sustainable city.
This GCSE Geography lessons looks in-depth at the land use patterns around the edge of Manchesterās city, or the urban-rural fringe. This area is where the city meets the countryside and is desirable for a range of development opportunities including golf courses, airports and out of town shopping centres.
This lesson looks at an OS map of Manchester for the starter task, although using BING maps online will substitute if you do not have hard copies. The lesson develops map skills and annotation skills. There is a brownfield site card sort activity also to help students understand the advantages and disadvantages of building on brown field sites.
This lesson was written to compliment the AQA spec A GCSE curriculum, and briefly touches on the Burgess model, and how Manchester fits into this framework. It is part of other Manchester-based case study resources, also available from my shop. To go with the Urban Issues and Challenges topic SOW.
This worksheet allows students to test their knowlege and understanding on their chosen developing city case study and the causes, effects and responses to ward environmental pollution and over-crowing in slums. The sheet comprises of a range of short and longer GCSE exam type questions. The 6 and 8 mark questions have a hint-link underneath so that if the student struggles, they can click on it and be taken to the right part of the GCSE geography BBC bitesize revision page to answer it. Once complete there is an accompanying mark scheme at the back, so the student can self-assess their progress.
Quiz -Quiz trade is a card trading learning game, encouraging students to ask each other questions in order to learn from one another. A type of peer lead learning. It involves student getting out of their seats and checking other studentās understanding on the topic ā Living Worldā and ecosystems knowledge for AQA exam specification. Tropical Rainforests are a core topic , which means that this content is likely to be more broadly tested in their GCSE Geography examination series. There are 15 separate quiz cards linked to rainforest climate, soils, challenges and characteristics. These quiz cards provide fairly in depth information and responses, and are suited to the middle and higher ability levels generally.
Threats to the tropical rainforest stem from population pressure and climate change. This fragile biome is used for subsidence farming mineral extraction and hydro-electric power. This code breaking resource can be used to introduce threats for the first time, or as a revision activity. This worksheet is designed for Edexcel B specification, however it is suitable for AQA also/ The completion requires access to the textbook 'Edexcel geography B - pages 270-271 in the Pearson Textbook by John Hopkin et al ISBN: 9781446927762. ( page copy available with this resource) The resource is a reading comprehension exercise where they find relevant information from the 2 page of text and images.
This resource builds on students prior understanding of the biotic and abiotic parts of the pond ecosystem, to develop critical thinking skills or thunks. This resource present series of scenarios where man-made or natural actions cause an element of change in the pond ecosystem and food chain. Students must annotate their blank pond diagram, like the example shown, in order to likely or possible changes that happen as a direct or indirect result. This flexible activity could be done as a starter, in pairs or larger groups. Possibly as a carousel revision activity, or as a stimulus for an exam response. I would encourage students to share their annotations with the class and explain why they think these things will happen. Links with the āLiving Worldā aqa GCSE Geography specification.
This game has been adapted to encourage students to use the proper GCSE Geography language of ā DESCRIBEā in order to cross off landforms on the sheet such as wave cut platforms, beaches bars, tomboloās arches and stumps. Instead of pupils asking the questions on the features of people, they ask each other questions on the features of the landforms; is it made by erosion? Is it tall or flat? Is it exposed at low tide? etc. This will encourage students to become lead learners and have dialogue about their knowlege. perfect for an easy, no plan revision or intervention schedule. The best way to play the game is to insert each coloured sheet into a clear plastic wallet and hand each student one of these and a wipeable marker pen. That way you donāt end up continually photocopying and wasting resources.
This full lesson and associated worksheets examine the causes effects and responses to his UK based extreme weather flooding event. This lesson includes a fact file of key information like dates, times and damage impacts to help students complete a case study mind map or overview sheet. Could be used as a revision exercise or introducing this natural hazard event for the first time.
Extreme weather can be defined as atmospheric conditions that lie outside what is normal or expected based on location and previous climatic averages. Some experts argue that climate change is leading to more extreme weather events becoming more common in the UK and globally. This lesson examines the role of the turbulent jet stream as a key influencer on UK climates, and how if it gets ā stuckā our weather patterns also become static leading to heatwaves, droughts and flooding. This lesson includes article analysis from the Guardian, the use of the blue Oxford GCSE textbooks to fill in a table plus infographic analysis. Past paper worksheet included. Full lesson.