Curriculum

Geography

Curriculum intent, implementation, and impact

About the subject

We want every Burton Borough student to be able to “go out into the world as a thoughtful citizen, understand what is going on and understand how you can choose to make a difference in our ever-changing world.” As Michael Palin, past president of the RGS stated, ‘Geography illuminates the past, explains the present and prepares us for the future.  What could be more important than that?’

About the KS3 Curriculum intent, implementation, and impact

To achieve our intent, we have designed, and continually refine, a curriculum which challenges students to think, act, write and speak like geographers.

In the planning and refinement of our curriculum, we prioritise providing a knowledge rich experience with regular opportunity to develop the skills needed to think like a geographer. We offer a broad and balanced curriculum which is logically sequenced such that students are able to build upon prior learning as they progress throughout key stage 3.

Our guiding principles when developing our curriculum are:

  • Locational knowledge: ensuring every student has a secure, and ever widening, knowledge of locations from a local to a global scale, and ensure students have the framework to understand locational knowledge.
  • Place knowledge: our curriculum starts with the personal experiences of students and develops an increasingly complex understanding of places; our curriculum brings meaning to places to enable meaningful comparisons.
  • Human and physical processes: we deepen understanding of how processes shape environments.

Geographical skills: students have extended practice at gathering, analysing, presenting and interpreting information.

Year 7 curriculum implementation

Build a foundation of locational knowledge – where in the world are we? In relation to other places? – Knowledge of the continents and oceans; knowledge of where  we are within the UK, our setting

Build a foundation of core skills which can be drawn upon throughout the rest of our Geography lessons.  – Mapskills; Core Graphicacy skills; Ability to describe place in relation to other parts of the world

Begin to explore processes and place in relation to the real world.

 

Year 8 curriculum implementation

Broaden students’ foundation of locational knowledge – where in the world are we? In relation to other places? – Knowledge of the continents and oceans; knowledge of where we are within the UK, our setting; How do we differ from other parts of the world? How are we similar to other parts of the world?

Broaden students’ foundation of core skills which can be drawn upon throughout the rest of our Geography lessons.  – Mapskills; Core Graphicacy skills; Ability to describe place in relation to other parts of the world; ability to explain basic geographical processes; ability to make values-based judgements

Begin to explore processes and place in relation to the real world. How are coastal and river landforms created? How do we manage the landscape?

 

Year 9 curriculum implementation

Deepen students understanding of locational knowledge and how it influences people – where is the Middle East and why is so different to the UK? Why is Africa so different to the UK, what challenges does it face?

Deepen students’ knowledge and ability to use Geographical skills which can be drawn upon throughout the rest of our Geography lessons.  – Map skills; Sophisticated Graphicacy skills (Climate Graphs); Ability to describe place in relation to other parts of the world; ability to explain geographical processes (e.g. why deserts are located where they are); ability to make values-based judgements

Explore processes and place in relation to the real world. How does climate influence life in the Middel East? How has Ice shaped the landscape? How does energy procurement impact places on a local and a global scale?

As Barrack Obama said “The study of geography is about more than just memorizing places on a map. It’s about understanding the complexity of our world, appreciating the diversity of cultures that exist across continents.”, If our students on finishing year 9 have a reasonable understanding of how varied and wonderful our world and the people and cultures that exist within it are, and how they can make conscious positive contributions, however big or small, then we will have done our job.

Homework at KS3, depending on the year group is set every 2-3 weeks and uses a range of strategies from completion of work to help support classwork, students will also use retrieval practices through quizzes, questions and application of skills to help support Knowledge retention and engagement. Each task is designed to enrich the learning opportunities and encourage students to work independently.

Careers involving Geography are regularly featured in our lessons. The skills you will learn in Geography can be applied throughout your life. You will develop communication and teamwork skills. You’ll learn how to analyse and evaluate while looking for connections and explanations. These are key skills required by employers in your future. In fact, geographers are seen as some of the most employable graduates in the UK thanks to their range of skills and ability to think laterally.

A Level Geography is a fantastic bridging subject for the Arts and Sciences giving you the flexibility and breadth of knowledge to be able to apply yourself to a range of possible careers.

Degree Level Geography allows you to focus more specifically on a chosen area of the subject for example oceanography, geology, population, Geographical Information Systems or environmental sustainability.

Careers through Geography are simply too diverse to mention them all here. You could be an environmental management consultant, an urban planner, a meteorologist, a seismologist – so many roles there is surely something for everyone. We’re not sure there is a job out there that can’t be done better with a Geographical qualification.

About the KS4 Curriculum intent, implementation, and impact

To achieve our intent, we have designed, and continually refine, a curriculum which challenges students to think, act, write and speak like geographers.

In the planning and refinement of our curriculum, we prioritise providing a knowledge rich experience with regular opportunity to develop the skills needed to think like a geographer. We offer a broad and balanced curriculum which is logically sequenced such that students are able to build upon prior learning as they progress throughout key stage 3.

Our guiding principles when developing our curriculum are:

  • Locational knowledge: ensuring every student has a secure, and ever widening, knowledge of locations from a local to a global scale, and ensure students have the framework to understand locational knowledge.
  • Place knowledge: our curriculum starts with the personal experiences of students and develops an increasingly complex understanding of places; our curriculum brings meaning to places to enable meaningful comparisons.
  • Human and physical processes: we deepen understanding of how processes shape environments.
  • Geographical skills: students have extended practice at gathering, analysing, presenting and interpreting information.

At KS4 we follow the Edexcel specimen A course, We feel this gives our students a good broad knowledge of the world around us and an overview of many of the complex relationships occurring within it.

As such the course is broadly split into Human and Physical Geography. Within Physical Geography we study Rivers, Coastal landscapes, Weather and associated Hazards (Tropical storms and Droughts) and Climate change and Ecosystems. Whilst in Human Geography we study Global Development and focus in on the rapid development in India to showcase a range of aspects of development; Resource Management in which focus in on Energy and finally Changing cities, where we contrast  growth and change overtime in Manchester against growth and change overtime in Mexico City.

At KS4 homework is set each week and will often be a task that supports the progress and development of the student’s core knowledge. This may be as a consolidation of the work covered in our lessons, or as a “flipped learning” activity that will enable students to delve deeper into a topic in class and dispel common misconceptions.

To enrich the learning of our GCSE students we currently run two fieldwork visits. To deepen knowledge and understanding of our rivers unit we take students to Carding Mill Valley where they complete a river study looking at how the river characteristics change as we go downstream – comparing width, depth, velocity and the bedload within the river.

Later in the course we undertake our second fieldwork visit, this time to Salford Quays to look at the impacts of Urban regeneration and ask the question “Has Urban regeneration at Salford Quays been successful”. Here students carry out a range of different techniques such as environmental surveys, pedestrian counts, transport surveys, visitor interviews and visual impact surveys.

In the past we have taken KS4 visits to Iceland. Currently no foreign visit is planned but the department are looking into options to change this.

Careers involving Geography are regularly featured in our lessons. The skills you will learn in Geography can be applied throughout your life. You will develop communication and teamwork skills. You’ll learn how to analyse and evaluate while looking for connections and explanations. These are key skills required by employers in your future. In fact, geographers are seen as some of the most employable graduates in the UK thanks to their range of skills and ability to think laterally.

A Level Geography is a fantastic bridging subject for the Arts and Sciences giving you the flexibility and breadth of knowledge to be able to apply yourself to a range of possible careers.

Degree Level Geography allows you to focus more specifically on a chosen area of the subject for example oceanography, geology, population, Geographical Information Systems or environmental sustainability.

Careers through Geography are simply too diverse to mention them all here. You could be an environmental management consultant, an urban planner, a meteorologist, a seismologist – so many roles there is surely something for everyone. We’re not sure there is a job out there that can’t be done better with a Geographical qualification.