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Geography
What are rocks and how do we use them as a natural resource?
This lesson is looking at rock and the different types. We then look at how they are a natural resource.
This lesson is following the British Geography Curriculum. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
Lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
How can we describe the structure of a population. Population Pyramids and Demography Transition
This lesson is looking at population pyramids and the demographic transition model.
This lesson is following the British Geography Curriculum. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
Lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
Geography GCSE Edexcel B Exam Prep! – An exam question for every lesson you have completed.
Geography GCSE Edexcel B – An exam question for every lesson you have completed.
This pack has an exam question on every lesson you have studied throughout your GCSE. Work your way through them. The more you complete, the more you have to revise from. Statistics show that the best way to revise is through exam practice questions. So make every question count.
Your course/exam info…
Your course consists of three units, called components. Each component is assessed by and exam paper, numbered Paper 1, 2 etc. Each component has three topics within it, as follows:
Component One (Paper 1) Component Two – (Paper 2) Component Three – (Paper 3)
Topic 1: Hazardous Earth
Topic 2: Development dynamics
Topic 3: Challenges of an urbanising world.
Paper 1 = 94 marks.
37.5% of you GCSE.
1hr 30 mins. Topic 4: The UK’s evolving physical landscape – which includes subtopics: Coastal change and conflict, Rover processes and pressures.
Topic 5: The UK’s evolving human landscapes – which includes a case study of a major UK city.
Topic 6: Geographical investigations – which includes one physical fieldwork investigation and one human fieldwork investigation linked to Topics 4 and 5.
Paper 2 = 94 marks
37.5% of your GCSE.
1hr 30 mins. Topic 7: People and the biosphere.
Topic 8: Forests under threat.
Topic 9: Consuming energy resources.
Paper 3 = 64 marks
25% of your GCSE.
1hr 30 mins.
What is Asia's climate like? Climate graphs Geography
This lesson is looking at Asia’s climate, using the data and creating a climate graph.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
What is Asia like in comparison to where you live? Geography
This lesson is looking at the different places within Asia and comparing it to where we live.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
What is a Tsunami? Geography - Natural Hazards
This lesson is looking at what a tsunami is and its devastating impacts. Student will learn, how it can be caused and look into a case study.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - Natural Climate Change. Why does the climate naturally change overtime?
This GCSE lesson is looking at how the climate changes naturally without human input.
Each GCSE lesson has an exam question as a title - and will then need to be answered at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum - Edexcel B. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - Climate change - what was our previous climate like?
This GCSE lesson is looking at what our climate was like in the past and how the climate has fluctuated naturally over time.
Each GCSE lesson has an exam question as a title - and will then need to be answered at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum - Edexcel B. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - Cyclone Aila Case Study
This GCSE lesson is looking at case study of a cyclone and the different types of damage it causes.
Each GCSE lesson has an exam question as a title - and will then need to be answered at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum - Edexcel B. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - How do Cyclones/Hurricanes form?
This GCSE lesson is looking at cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons form?
Each GCSE lesson has an exam question as a title - and will then need to be answered at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum - Edexcel B. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - Earthquakes Developing vs developed world case studies. Haiti vs Japan
This GCSE lesson is looking at two different case studies on Earthquakes in the developing world vs the developed. We look into the different impacts as well as response rates.
Each GCSE lesson has an exam question as a title - and will then need to be answered at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum - Edexcel B. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - What are the indirect threats to tropical rainforests.
This GCSE lesson is looking at the indirect threats to tropical rainforests.
Each GCSE lesson has an exam question as a title - and will then need to be answered at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum - Edexcel B. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - What local factors affect the type of biomes present? Altitude affecting ecosystems.
This is GCSE lesson is local factors such as altitude and how it affects the biome present in a particular area.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
Within each lesson the title is a GCSE exam question which students must answer at the end of the lesson or throughout.
The unit and lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - Geographical Skills Climate Graphs.
This is GCSE lesson is looking at geographical skills with a focus on two differing biome climate and creating climate graphs to then compare the differences.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
Within each lesson the title is a GCSE exam question which students must answer at the end of the lesson or throughout.
The unit and lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - Biomes - How do biomes provide a life support system?
This is GCSE lesson is looking at how biomes provide services that benefit the us and the natural world.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
Within each lesson the title is a GCSE exam question which students must answer at the end of the lesson or throughout.
The unit and lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - Biomes - more people more resources. Industrialisation = increase demand for resources.
This is GCSE lesson is looking at how more people means more demand for resources and therefore the services the biomes provide.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
Within each lesson the title is a GCSE exam question which students must answer at the end of the lesson or throughout.
The unit and lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - What are the direct threats to the Taiga?
This GCSE lesson is looking at the Tiaga and its direct threats whilst comparing to the rainforest.
Each GCSE lesson has an exam question as a title - and will then need to be answered at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum - Edexcel B. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - What is the Taiga and how are the species adapted to suit the environment?
This GCSE lesson is looking at where the taiga is? What the conditions are like (climate) as well as how the species are adapted to suit the environment.
Each GCSE lesson has an exam question as a title - and will then need to be answered at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is following the British Curriculum - Edexcel B. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
This lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG What holds a country back from developing. Malawi
This GCSE lesson is within the topic Development Dynamics. The lesson focuses on Malawi and how a country can be held back from developing in comparison to the rest of the world.
This lesson is following the British Geography Curriculum. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
Lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.
GCSE GEOG - How does Rostow Model and Francks dependancy model explain development of a country?
This GCSE lesson is within the topic Development Dynamics. The lesson focuses on how a country develops through Rostow and Frank’s models.
This lesson is following the British Geography Curriculum. Within the 1 hour lesson (which can easily be adapted to be longer) caters for differing learning styles with a range of differing activities to target specific skills.
All students seemed to enjoy the lesson and the activities within. The lesson is created with differing students in mind to allow all students to succeed and develop their geographical and wider knowledge.
Lesson is easy to follow even for non-specialist teachers and can easily be adapted to increase challenge or to suit a nurture curriculum. All hand-outs are attached or within the PowerPoint.
Enjoy.