Geography Key Stage 3
What can students do to develop their skills in this subject area?
- Get involved in Geography Club.
- Create a revision guide for the unit of work that they are studying.
- Create a glossary of new vocabulary that they acquire during Geography lessons.
- Take a lead role in teaching key concepts and ideas to others during lessons.
- Try to make links between geographical theory and ideas and places that they have studied.
- Read and use maps when visiting places outside of the Academy.
- Watch the news and keeping up to date with current events and their link to Geography.
What wider reading can be completed to support the curriculum?
- Students could read and critically evaluate the presentation of Geography within any national newspapers.
- Students could keep a 'Geography in the News' scrapbook – printing off or cutting out any stories they hear about that are related to Geography.
- Equally, on holiday, they could similar scrapbook about the human and physical environment of the place.
The following texts may be of interest:
- Read the Horrible Geographies series.
- Familiarisation and use of atlases.
- Using encyclopaedias/country fact file books.
- Reading of world fact books.
What websites could students visit to support the curriculum?
www.metoffice.gov.uk
www.earth.google.co.uk
www.earthfromtheair.com
www.geographypods.com
www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/mapzone
www.bbc.co.uk/education
www.usgs.gov
www.youtube.com - YouTube account for Mr Parr for Geographical songs.
Can television and film assist with supporting the curriculum?
Certain television programmes can be useful:
- Planet Earth (BBC).
- Coast series (BBC2).
- Search Dr Iain Stewart in YouTube for tectonics and processes.
- Watch the news for stories with a geographical connection
- Various BBC documentaries by Simon Reeve, covering both physical and human geographical themes.
Watching films such as:
- Ice Age: Continental Drift.
- Madagascar.
- The Day After Tomorrow.
- Dante's Peak.
- The Jungle Book.
How can parents/carers help and what can be done at home?
- Discuss and debate current affairs, particularly issues related directly to Geography.
- Discuss geographical events/festivals that are taking place, e.g. music festivals, carnivals, sporting events.
- Encourage your son or daughter to explain their own views on a range of geographical issues, but also encourage them to reflect on why others may not share these views.
- Support your son or daughter with additional knowledge linked to homework (i.e. what you know, your opinion, how things have changed?)
- Visit places of geographical interest, either locally (e.g. Lincolnshire Wolds, Hubbard's Hills, Rimac Saltmarsh, Hull) or further afield (e.g. Dorset coastline, The Eden Project, Brimham Rocks, London, Leeds, etc).
- When on holiday, take note of human and physical environments such as coastal processes, cultural behaviour and transport systems).
- Look for evidence of Geography where you might not expect to find it, e.g. sporting rivalries, museums, adverts, music and art.
- Encourage your son or daughter to investigate or join a conservation organisation, e.g. WWF, Woodland Trust, Surfers Against Sewage.
Geography Key Stage 4
What can students do to develop their skills in this subject area?
- Attend after Academy revision sessions.
- Do additional research about the case studies provided in the revision guide.
- Create a revision guide for the unit of work that they are studying.
- Create a glossary of new vocabulary that they acquire during Geography lessons.
- Take a lead role in teaching key concepts and ideas to others during lessons.
- Try to make links to between geographical theory and ideas and places that they have studied.
- Ask teachers for access to past exam papers/sample questions and answers.
- Read and use maps when visiting places.
- Watch the news and keep up to date with current events and their link to Geography.
- Enhance maths skills that link to Geography by applying ideas from maths lessons and putting them into a Geographical context.
What wider reading can be completed to support the curriculum?
- Students could read and critically evaluate the presentation of Geography within any national newspapers.
- Students could keep a 'Geography in the news' scrapbook – printing off or cutting out any stories they hear about that are related to Geography.
- Equally, on holiday, they could similar scrapbook about the human and physical environment of the place.
The following texts may be of interest:
- Reading the Horrible Geographies series.
- AQA textbooks and revision guides.
- Atlases
- Encyclopaedias/country fact file books.
What websites could students visit to support the curriculum?
www.nhm.ac.uk
www.rgs.org
www.ready.gov/volcanoes
www.fema.gov
www.usgs.gov
www.metoffice.gov.uk
www.environment-agency.gov.uk
www.100people.org
www.oxfam.org.uk
www.cia.gov
www.nhc.noaa.gov
www.earth.google.co.uk
www.earthfromtheair.com
ww2.defra.gov.uk
www.gapminder.org
www.coolgeography.co.uk
www.aqa.org.uk
www.cia.gov
www.geographypods.com
www.youtube.com - YouTube account for Mr Parr for Geographical songs.
Can television and film assist with supporting the curriculum?
Certain television programmes can be useful:
- Planet Earth (BBC).
- Coast series (BBC2).
- Kevin Mcleod Slumming it (Channel 4).
- Search Dr Iain Stewart in YouTube for tectonics and processes.
- An Inconvenient Truth (Climate Change).
- Various BBC documentaries by Simon Reeve, covering both physical and human geographical themes.
- Watch the news for stories with a geographical connection.
- Countryfile.
Watching films such as:
- The Impossible.
- The Day After Tomorrow.
- 2012.
- San Andreas.
- Slumdog Millionaire.
- Flood.
- Dante's Peak.
How can parents/carers help and what can be done at home?
- Discuss and debate current affairs, particularly issues related directly to Geography, e.g. EU referendum, geopolitical debates.
- Discuss geographical events/festivals that are taking place, e.g. music festivals, carnivals, sporting events.
- Encourage students to explain their own views on a range of geographical issues, but also encourage them to reflect on why others may not share these views.
- Support students with additional knowledge linked to homework (i.e. what you know, your opinion, how things have changed?)
- Encourage students to use road maps when planning a journey rather than a satellite navigation system.
- Visit places of Geographical interest, either locally (e.g. Lincolnshire Wolds, Hubbard's Hills, Rimac Saltmarsh, Hull) or further afield (e.g. Dorset coastline, The Eden Project, Brimham Rocks, London, Leeds, etc.).
- When on holiday, take note of human and physical environments such as coastal processes, cultural behaviour and transport systems).
- Look for evidence of Geography where you might not expect to find it, e.g. sporting rivalries, museums, adverts, music and art.
- Find out about or join a conservation organisation, e.g. WWF, Woodland Trust, Surfers Against Sewage.