The Royal Geographical Society's 'Young Geography Teacher of the Year' (2014) and
currently the Head of Geography at the 'Best British School Overseas' - Dubai College, UAE. I have a decade of experience as a practitioner teaching GCSE (AQA) and A Level (AQA and Edexcel) and mark Edexcel's A Level paper 3.
The Royal Geographical Society's 'Young Geography Teacher of the Year' (2014) and
currently the Head of Geography at the 'Best British School Overseas' - Dubai College, UAE. I have a decade of experience as a practitioner teaching GCSE (AQA) and A Level (AQA and Edexcel) and mark Edexcel's A Level paper 3.
This is the first booklet in Edexcel’s Globalisation Unit. The PowerPoint is designed to be printed as a booklet so that it doubles up as both a PowerPoint presentation and a medium through which students complete the lesson activities and notes. I am very active on Twitter (Quigley_Becki) so please credit accordingly and do not replicate for re-sale. Many thanks
This is a fully resourced, completely fresh, and contemporary take on Globalisation for KS3. Based on Darshini David’s ‘Almighty Dollar’ this is an engaging and challengin scheme of work which is fully resourced with powerpoints, worksheets, and activities!!
Lesson 4- Place Attachment and Identity with significant focus on Tuan's place attachment theory. The focus then turns to place making through rebranding, regeneration and re-imaging. Hull City of Culture is used as a case study (as referenced in the AS Changing Places Exam)
The third lesson from my Changing Places scheme. This is an extensive lesson and took me 3 hours to get through as a range of case studies (including Detroit, South Africa, Grenfell Tower) are used to cover spatial segregation, social exclusions and insider/outsider perspectives.
A lesson from my Changing Places Scheme of Work which centres around the difference between a sense of place and our differing perceptions of place and the factors which may influence this. Las vegas, Thailand and Venice feature as mini case studies along with an extensive focus on Tuan's Topophilia(1974) and Place memory.
The first lesson in my contrasting lesson set. I have focused on Scarborough as a contrast to Sheffield.
The idea behind the lesson is to NOT tell the pupils where the contrasting place is. Set the 'sources' up around the room and give each pupil worksheet (all found as slides in the powerpoint). They are to try and work out where the place is whilst evaluating the sources.
There is then a card sort activity (which can be downloaded for free form my shop) for Scarborough's history.
This is the first lesson set in the local place study (AQA A-Level Changing Places) which I have chosen; Sheffield. It focuses on cultural and economic change through 3 key rebrands of the City since industrial decline. It focuses firstly on the City of Steel and why Sheffield had previously never taken control of its own identity as steel had always implicitly done this. Then, following industrial decline, Sheffield wavered and needed a 'new' identity which made it stand out and deliver a message that Sheffield was a city open to development. It did this through the strategic rebrands of City of Sport (World Student Games 1991) City of Retail (Regeneration of the Lower Don Valley and opening of Meadowhall) and, most recently (2016+) The Outdoor City.
This lesson has a complimenting workbook which is also for sale in my shop.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/-new-aqa-geog-a-level-changing-places-place-study-booklet-11473705
Please note that this powerpoint is approximately 6 hours worth of lesson time (it actually took me longer than this but my year 12s are very engaged with the unit and so we tend to have some very in-depth discussions which does eat into our lesson time!) There are 3 main lessons within this powerpoint (each with title slides and individual stepped outcomes) hence the costing.
I have included links to relevant articles and documents in the notes section and please see the bibliography (available for free in my shop) for further sources of info.
Lessons to follow will include: socio-economic inequality and demographic change with a focus on people's lived experience of Sheffield. Keep an eye on my shop..they are coming soon!
I have divided the 'local' place study into 4 key themes: economic change, cultural change, demographic change and socio-economic inequalities (in line with the spec). This is the first booklet which focuses on economic, cultural and demographic change in Sheffield through the 4 rebrands of the city from:
Steel City -> City of Sport -> City of Retail (and regeneration of Lower Don Valley) -> Outdoor City
The booklet relies on a number of data based sources which I have found online. I cannot upload them as I do not own them BUT there is a free bibliography available to download in my shop.
Accompanying powerpoint lesson coming soon along with more resources!!!!
The lesson focuses on representations of place through quantitative and qualitative sources. Pupils are required to identify these sources along with evaluating their usefulness. Exam practice features using the specimen paper.
This is a 14 page workbook to compliment the second place lesson in the AQA Changing Places unit. The booklet is focused on perceptions of place with exogenous and endogenous factors dominating the activities. All activities are student lead with extension tasks for HA learners.
Massey's 'Kilburn' (as recommended by Redfern's A-Level textbook as key text) features along with all the relevant exam questions and mark schemes from the AS and A2 specimen papers.
Feedback would be greatly appreciated.
A lesson from my scheme of work for the new Geography ALevel: Changing Places.
This lesson focuses on perceptions of place and the factors which influence this (endogenous and exogenous factors).
The lesson focuses on key definitions of endo/exo factors along with the distinct differentiation between the two. Practical examples are then given to concrete this difference with tasks focusing on our local area (Sheffield-but can be easily adapted to your local area) and exam practice from the AQA specimen papers.
A lesson taken from my 'Into Africa' Scheme of Work focusing on Blood Diamonds and the Revolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone. Undoubtedly, my favourite lesson from this unit and one which was graded outstanding as part of a performance management observation.
There are a number of student lead activities throughout this lesson with the main task taking the form of an extended writing task. Pupils are asked to write a letter (using the writing frame as provided) to a local jewellers urging them to sign up to the Kimberley Process - an agreement to ensure that the diamonds sold have been mined ethically and fairly.
This lesson is a real eye opener for students and the atrocities of the RUF engage and excite students and generate in-depth ethical discussions. This lesson was designed for KS3 but can be easily adapted to be taught at KS4 and beyond.
A work booklet to compliment the introductory lessons to the new AQA A-Level Changing Places unit. This is a 12 page booklet full of activities which encourage students to change their mindset from GCSE concepts of place to A-Level (and beyond) concepts and theories of place.
Pupils are required to consider definitions of place, their own sense of place through their favourite places, media and experienced places along with insider and outsider perspectives on place.
As any geographer will know, this is a challenging unit, but this booklet proved very successful with my year 12 class in laying the foundations for the unit.
See my shop for lesson 2 (powerpoint and workbook included!)
This is the first lesson for the new AQA A-Level Changing Places Unit. It focuses on place theory with key players such as Massey, Creswell, Jackson and Gregory's definitions of place featuring. Pupils are also introduced to a 'sense of place' through Tuan and are considered to think about their experiences and perceptions of near and far places along with the factors which influence their thoughts. A simple, clear and concise introduction to place theory with a range of activities which are student lead and generate ample class discussion to unlock deeper thinking.
Complimenting work booklet also available in my shop.
This lesson is the first in my 'Into Africa' Scheme of Work. It challenges pupils' perceptions and often misconceptions of Africa. This lesson generates so much class discussion and is a real eye opener for pupils. There are clear and obvious progress checks throughout this lesson and extension tasks to stretch and challenge the most able.
This is one of my favourite lessons to teach and generates such a buzz in the classroom whereby pupils are still talking about it in their next geography lesson.
Another lesson taken from my 'Around the World' scheme of work. This particular lesson focuses on the physical features of the British Isles (countries, rivers, mountains and cities). The main skill focus is map work and please note that pupils will require an atlas to complete the main task. Alternatively, a basic GIS could be used (google earth etc) and the skill focus could become GIS.
We currently have British Isles whiteboards (whiteboards with an outline of the British Isles on them) and one of the progress checkers uses these- your particular school may not have access to these but the progress check can be adapted for use with just blank mini whiteboards.
Lesson was used as part of a whole school learning walk and received very positive feedback on how student-lead and skill focused the activities were.
Plenty of discussion opportunities feature along with extension tasks to stretch and challenge.