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Graham's Resource Shop

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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

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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
The Changing Economic World Bundle - AQA GCSE
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The Changing Economic World Bundle - AQA GCSE

13 Resources
This set of fifteen presentations covers all of the unit known as The Changing Economic World in AQA’s 9-1 GCSE Geography Syllabus. This is a part of Challenges in the Human Environment. There is enough material here for 15-20 hours teaching, all linked directly to the requirements of the specification.
Glaciation: An Introduction - AQA GCSE
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Glaciation: An Introduction - AQA GCSE

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This presentation covers the formation of glaciers and the location of the ice sheets in the UK at the time of the most recent glacial event. It then goes on to look at glacial processes, covering erosion, transportation and deposition. Students get the opportunity to draw a sketch from a photograph of a glaciated region on the Isle of Skye.
A Glaciated UK Landscape - The Cuillin Hills - AQA GCSE
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A Glaciated UK Landscape - The Cuillin Hills - AQA GCSE

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This presentation allows students to become familiar with some real features of both glacial landforms of erosion and deposition in a UK case study. It locates the study area and includes photographs of five specific features, enabling candidates to refer to them by name and, potentially, draw photo sketches in an examination. There is a mapwork exercise as part of this presentation. The 1:25 000 map extract is provided on a slide, which would best be supported by a paper copy.
Glacial Landforms of Deposition - AQA GCSE
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Glacial Landforms of Deposition - AQA GCSE

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This presentation covers all the common glacial landforms of deposition including drumlins and erratics. It contains some interesting pictures of examples of these features and gets students to consider how these features came to be formed. There is a practical activity included in this lesson which involves making a model of a glaciated valley in a shoe box -not for the faint-hearted!
Glacial Landforms of Erosion: AQA GCSE
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Glacial Landforms of Erosion: AQA GCSE

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This presentation examines the formation of aretes, pyramidal peaks, hanging valleys, truncated spurs, ribbon lakes and so on. There are plenty of photographs to help explain the formation of these features and several questions based on a map extract of the area around Helvellyn to help students to identify these features on a 1:25 000 map.
Glaciation and Economic Activity Part One
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Glaciation and Economic Activity Part One

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This presentation gets students thinking about how hard it might be to make a living in an environment such as Snowdonia or the Lake District National Park. It looks at the challenges of two activities in particular: sheep farming in the Welsh Hills, where the physical landscape is the main issue and forestry in Cumbria where conflict between ramblers, mountain bikers and horse riders has to be managed. There are, as ever, a number of tasks for groups and individuals and a review from a rather angry walker who let rip on Trip Adviser to which students must respond as if they were a warden at Winlatter Forest.
The Geography of Conflict: Drawing a Photo-Sketch
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The Geography of Conflict: Drawing a Photo-Sketch

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This lesson uses an image of a bombed-out street in Afghanistan to teach observation and photo-sketching skills. It includes guidance on how to go about drawing a sketch methodically - i.e. draw the horizon, outline key features, add meaningful labels and other details. The lesson was part of a skills unit designed to bridge the gap between KS3 and GCSE level study,
Tourism in Snowdonia Part One
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Tourism in Snowdonia Part One

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This presentation explores the kinds of activities that are on offer in Snowdonia National Park. It considers the advantages and disadvantages of having many thousands of people on the mountains at once, many of whom are unprepared. It focuses particularly on the issue of second home ownership and there is a map showing the distribution of second homes in the National Park. There are a number of engaging tasks and pictures to focus students of all abilities.
Glaciation and Economic Activity 2
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Glaciation and Economic Activity 2

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This presentation explores the pros and cons of the massive quarry at Glensanda. It looks at the damage done to the landscape by the quarrying and how local people respond to the threat. Tasks require students to undertake SWOT analysis, describe locations and explore the challenge of working in a remote location. There are a variety of questions to challenge students of differing abilities and some useful images.
Tourism in Snowdonia Part Two
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Tourism in Snowdonia Part Two

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This presentation looks at the management of National Parks on a large and small scale. It considers the aims of National Parks and looks specifically at what the Snowdonia NPA is doing. It also includes a case study of a small eco-friendly guest house in North Wales where sustainability is taken to the limit. Students are asked to consider whether it is necessary to go to such extremes!
Plants in Cold Environments
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Plants in Cold Environments

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This presentation starts by inviting students to consider how they would design a flower if they wanted it to have a chance of surviving in the tundra. It then explores the qualities that plants need to cope with this kind of environment, whether tiny flowers or huge pine trees. It examines why the tundra is threatened by climate change and asks what harm is being done to human settlements by changes to the tundra biome. The presentation has a number of tasks for individual and group work, some engaging pictures and begins with an unusual starter activity.
World Cup Russia 2018: Do Big Countries Always Win?
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World Cup Russia 2018: Do Big Countries Always Win?

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This resource is an opportunity to introduce basic correlation techniques in Key Stage 3. It looks at all the countries that made the final of the World Cup since 1950 along with their current population and HDI. It challenges students to explain anomalies in data (e.g. how come Uruguay did so well when its still a small, less economically developed country) and shows them how to draw their own scatter diagram to explore whether more socio-economically developed countries have more success (as measured by HDI).
Glaciation in the UK
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Glaciation in the UK

8 Resources
This bundle is a collection of eight lessons that satisfies the requirements of the optional unit on glaciation in the UK for AQA’s 9-1 GCSE Geography syllabus. Case studies include Snowdonia and the Isle of Skye.
Migrating to Australia: Ten Pound Poms
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Migrating to Australia: Ten Pound Poms

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This is a different way to approach the topic of migration. The lesson presents students with several sources of information about the ‘Ten Pound Poms’ who left the UK for Australia in the 1950s. Students are challenged to devise a piece of drama that shows that they (i) understand what migration is; (ii) understand what push and pull factors are (iii) can apply their understanding to the example of UK citizens who left for Australia in the 1950s and (iv) appreciate the role that propoganda played in persuading people to leave the UK for Australia.
Russia: Hosting the World Cup
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Russia: Hosting the World Cup

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This resource examines the location of the FIFA World Cup in Russia. It looks at where Russia is, generally, then at the locations chosen for the England training camp and the matches in the group stages. It explores the practicality of getting around the place, coping with five different time zones etc. The challenge is to devise Gary Lineker’s travel schedule for him!
World Cup Russia 2018: Blessing or Curse?
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World Cup Russia 2018: Blessing or Curse?

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This resource looks at some of the social, environmental and economic consequences of hosting the World Cup. It looks specifically at the economic and social benefits and problems associated with running the event. It considers whether it is a safe place to travel to and whether supporters will be looked after. One activity challenges students to imagine they had an older brother who had decided to go to Kaliningrad for the match - would they advice against it or tell him to go? Why?
Geography of Sport: Building a Stadium
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Geography of Sport: Building a Stadium

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This resource looks at the pros and cons of building huge stadiums for global sporting events. It examines what is good and bad about stadiums, looks at some health and safety problems with the stadium at Ekaterinberg. It challenges students to write to the organisers of the World Cup expressing concerns about health and safety at the venues and to think about legacy issues. After showing them what happened to the Olympic stadiums in Athens and Montreal it asks students to examine the proposal that the 2030 World Cup might be stages in Argentina and that several new stadiums should be built. Hopefully, they won’t fall for it!
Plate Tectonics for A Level
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Plate Tectonics for A Level

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This is a small collection of presentations that was originally designed to support the teaching of the A2 Plate Tectonics unit for the AQA course. It covers revising the structure of the earth from a GCSE-level understanding, detailed notes about different types of plate boundaries and types of volcanic activity. It includes work on Hawaii as an example of a hot spot and introduces some minor extrusive volcanic features.
Wimbledon Geography: Balls and Sustainability
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Wimbledon Geography: Balls and Sustainability

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This lesson takes a look at issues of globalisation and sustainability by considering the 50,000 mile supply chain of the Slazenger tennis balls used for The Championships in Wimbledon. Students have to , first, identify the raw materials (rubber, glue, felt etc.) before going on to look at where they are found and why Slazenger makes balls for a tournament in London 10,000km in Bataan in the Phillippines. The lesson concludes with a variety of differentiated written tasks.
Wimbledon Geography: We're in the money
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Wimbledon Geography: We're in the money

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This lesson is an introduction to economic geography that uses the Wimbledon Championships as a case study. Students get to consider the costs and benefits of running the tournament and draw up a simple balance sheet. The lesson covers different types of work (seasonal, temporary, paid, voluntary etc.) and gets students thinking about who the producers and consumers of the services are at the tournament. There is a role play exercise in which two people argue about the cost of going to the tournament and some longer essay questions to extend more able learners and provide homework opportunties.