Hero image

Graham's Resource Shop

Average Rating2.53
(based on 20 reviews)

Welcome to my selection of Geography resources for KS3 and KS4. Please feel free to suggest topics that you would like covered by email to gsenior1968@gmail.com

113Uploads

40k+Views

7k+Downloads

Welcome to my selection of Geography resources for KS3 and KS4. Please feel free to suggest topics that you would like covered by email to gsenior1968@gmail.com
Hydrographs: An Introduction
gesbcsgesbcs

Hydrographs: An Introduction

(0)
This lesson introduces students to river hydrographs. It covers all the key ideas such as peak discharge, lag time, storm flow, rising and falling limbs etc. It includes some questions on an example hydrograph and a check list to allow students to identify exactly what they have and have not understood.
KS3 Geography - Whole Year Seven Scheme of Work
gesbcsgesbcs

KS3 Geography - Whole Year Seven Scheme of Work

(0)
This Scheme of Work was written as the Geography department's contribution to the Combined Humanities course that the school saw fit to run at the time. The themes imposed on us were Difference, Movement, Authority, Rights and Environment which, for us, gave the topics Brazil, Settlement, Map Studies, Football and the Leisure Industry and Water Supply. There are ideas here for over sixty lessons, some spelled out in more detail than others. All lessons have stated aims, resources, activities, outcomes and possible homework.
The Global Circulation Part 2/2: AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

The Global Circulation Part 2/2: AQA GCSE

(0)
This resource starts where the previous lesson left off, by getting students to recall what they learned about the global circulation. It then goes into detail about the Hadley, Ferrel and Polar cells with some cultural references that will appeal to teachers born in the 1970s who listened to Spandau Ballet ("Tony Hadley was not a meteorologist") and watched 'Victoria Wood as Seen on TV'. Go on, you know you want to buy it and inject a bit of humour into your lesson.
River Management: Soft Engineering
gesbcsgesbcs

River Management: Soft Engineering

(0)
This presentation covers the different types of soft engineering that are used to minimise the impact of flooding in the UK. It covers washlands and river monitoring, education and floodplain zoning. There is a group work/GIS exercise in this presentation and a feature that I have called ‘Fieldwork Focus’ in which students are encouraged to consider why Uttoxeter might be vulnerable to flooding and what they recommend is done about it. The presentation features some striking images and straightforward tasks and questions, too.
River Management: The River Lune
gesbcsgesbcs

River Management: The River Lune

(0)
This presentation looks at the different strategies that are used to manage the flood risk that is posed by the River Lune in Lancashire. It looks at why the Lune needs to be managed and the details of the Lune Catchment Flood Management Plan, which include building a limited amount of hard engineering structures, flood plain zoning, flood risk mapping, Operation Floodline and ways of raising public awareness. There are some images, including clear mapping of the Lune’s drainage basin and a series of tasks for students to complete.
Migration - My Experience: KS3
gesbcsgesbcs

Migration - My Experience: KS3

(0)
KS3 BMI (Key Stage 3 But More Interesting) is a new series in Pocket Point Resources based on the material that I wrote for a textbook that Hodder Education was going to publish until the government moved the curriculum goalposts in 2011. This lesson gets a nine-lesson unit called Migration and Identity started. Students are encouraged to think about their own perceptions of migration and the physical and mental baggage that people carry around as they travel from place to place, often against their will. There's a personal migration journey mapping exercise as part of this lesson.
River Landscapes in the UK (Bundle): AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

River Landscapes in the UK (Bundle): AQA GCSE

10 Resources
This bundle includes all the presentations you need to cover River Landscapes in the UK for the AQA 9-1 Geography GCSE. Lessons include The Long Profile of a River, River Processes, In the Upper Course, The Middle Course, Flood Plains and Estuaries, Flood Risk, Introducing Hydrographs, Soft Engineering, Hard Engineering and Managing the River Lune.
Images of Brazil: KS3
gesbcsgesbcs

Images of Brazil: KS3

(0)
This resource is the first lesson in a unit on Brazil that I am reworking for the department. There is a series of images to consider and an activity that involves looking data up in an atlas and watching an engaging video. The tasks are linked with Geog.2 (Goldfish Edition).
Migration and Identity  - Greeks in London: KS3
gesbcsgesbcs

Migration and Identity - Greeks in London: KS3

(0)
This presentation explores the reasons why there is a large Greek community in North London. Specifically, it looks at how the goods and services provided in the area have changed to reflect the large number of people who have moved there from Greece in the recent past. It includes a number of different tasks and activities including some general questions on cultural influence. Students are also asked to practice describing patterns of distribution as shown on a map.
The Global Circulation Part 1/2: AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

The Global Circulation Part 1/2: AQA GCSE

(0)
This resource is a re-working of the one that was here before and which went by the same name. This time it's done in the 'house style' which was only just emerging when I devised these lessons. This presentation goes right back to basics about the Global Circulation and gets as far as identifying the three cells that comprise the global circulation. There is a diagram included on the last slide which teachers will need to print off and photocopy for their classes. There is also a short video presented by an American with a nauseous accent!
Tropical Storms - The Where and the Why: AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

Tropical Storms - The Where and the Why: AQA GCSE

(0)
This presentation covers the distribution, formation and structure of tropical storms. It begins with a mock examination question about the distribution of these storms around the world and goes on to describe how they develop over the oceans in tropical latitudes. Students are encouraged to draw and label a diagram of a cross-section of a storm.
River Management - Hard Engineering: AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

River Management - Hard Engineering: AQA GCSE

(0)
This presentation looks at hard engineering strategies for managing rivers. It uses Digley and Bilberry Dams in Yorkshire as examples of dams, the River Cuckmere as an example of channel straightening, the Thames Embankment as an example of an embankment and the Exeter Flood Relief Channel as an example of a flood relief channel. There are large colourful photographs, clear text and a number of questions linked to the text. There is an element of OS 1:50 000 map work in this resource.
Extreme Weather in the UK
gesbcsgesbcs

Extreme Weather in the UK

(1)
This resource looks at how extreme the weather has become in the UK. It examines the reasons for droughts and floods and looks at some of the causes of heatwaves. It encourages students to work independently, ideally on a PC, to research some of the impacts of water shortages. It also touches on the increased likelihood of storms in years ahead.
Extreme Weather in the UK - Case Studies: AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

Extreme Weather in the UK - Case Studies: AQA GCSE

(0)
This presentation deals with extreme weather in the UK. It outlines some recent extreme weather events (1987 Great Storm, 1976 Drought, 1963 Cold Winter) before looking at the 2010 Big Freeze. Students are asked to explain the causes of the Big Freeze and analyse its social, economic and environmental impact. There are activities including a plenary activity in which the class is invited to respond to a number of imaginary 'complaints' by members of the public during the Big Freeze.
Climate Change: The Evidence
gesbcsgesbcs

Climate Change: The Evidence

(0)
This lesson begins with a graphic that sets out what US citizens perceive to be the greatest threat to the USA and its interests. It then considers the evidence for climate change, citing both physical and human causes and impacts. The plenary activity is all about ‘sharing out’ the blame for global warming, i.e. who or what is responsible for these changes?
Climate Change - The Response: AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

Climate Change - The Response: AQA GCSE

(0)
This lesson explores how managing climate change involves both mitigation (slowing it down) and adaptation (coping with the change). Students look at carbon capture as a mitigation strategy, at international agreements and at attempts to combat rising sea levels. There are a number of striking images in this presentation that prompt discussion and various tasks for students to attempt, including discussions in groups.
Wild Weather and Climate Change Bundle: AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

Wild Weather and Climate Change Bundle: AQA GCSE

4 Resources
This bundle of four lessons - possibly more as there is a lot of content here - covers four small chunks of the AQA 9-1 Geography syllabus: '1: The UK is affected by a number of weather hazards, ‘2:Extreme weather events in the UK have impacts on human activity’, ‘3: Climate change is the result of natural and human factors …’ and ‘4: Managing climate change involves both mitigation and adaptation’
Atmospheric Hazards Bundle
gesbcsgesbcs

Atmospheric Hazards Bundle

8 Resources
This bundle contains all the lessons needed to teach the atmospheric hazards element of the AQA 9-1 Geography GCSE. That’s complete coverage of the global circulation, tropical storms and their management with a case study about Typhoon Haiyan, lessons on climate change and how it is being managed and examples of extreme weather in the UK.
Describing Economic Development: AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

Describing Economic Development: AQA GCSE

(0)
This presentation looks at global variations in economic development and quality of life. It explores the Brandt Line (1981), the work of Alfred Sauvy ('First World, Second World ....', 1952), the Happiness Index and the Human Development Index as ways of measuring human development. Students are encouraged to think critically about the strengths and weaknesses of each model and to attempt to draw a Brandt Line for the 21st Century - yes, we know it's impossible; that's the point! This matches up with the bit in the syllabus where it says there are "Different ways of classifying parts of the world according to their level of economic development and quality of life."
Development Indicators: AQA GCSE
gesbcsgesbcs

Development Indicators: AQA GCSE

(0)
This presentation looks at the different ways in which development can be measured. It discusses how single measures of economic development can hide inequality and, therefore, not show us the whole pictures. It considers the circumstances in which development can be held back (e.g. Syrian conflict) and looks at the example of global patterns of literacy. There are a number of engaging tasks and thought-provoking images throughout the presentation, which is aimed at the AQA 9-1 Geography syllabus.