With links to "Wuthering Heights"...
"Who so list to hount I knowe where is a hydne" by Sir Thomas Wyatt
"Sonnet 116" by William Shakespeare
"The Garden of Love" by William Blake
"Song (Ae fond kiss)" by Robert Burns
"Remember" by Christina Rossetti
"At an Inn" by Thomas Hardy
"La Belle Dame sans Merci. A Ballad" by John Keats
"Non Sum Qualis Eram Bonae sub Regno Cynarae" by Ernest Dowson
"A Song (Absent from thee)" by John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester
"She Walks in Beauty" by Lord Byron
"The Flea" by John Donne
"To His Coy Mistress" by Andrew Marvell
"The Scrutiny" by Richard Lovelace
"The Ruined Maid" by Thomas Hardy
Colour coded: yellow for definitions
Elements in the physical environment
Role of development processes
Food production and consumption
Polar and tropical monsoon climates
Climate change and agriculture
Soils
Food security
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Health impacts of global environmental change
Prospects for global population change
Population revised estimates
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Population ecology + growth dynamics
Population ecology applied to the human population
The balance between population + resources
Carrying capacity + ecological footprint
Positive + negative feedback mechanisms
Challenges driven by human population growth
Malthus and Boserup
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Environment, health and well-being
Economic and social development
Environmental variables + their links to disease
Malaria
Heart disease
The role of the World Health Organisation
The role of other international organisations
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Population change
Models of natural population change- the demographic transition model
Britain’s demographic transition
Demographic transition model applied to countries with contrasting physical + human settings
Population structure
Migration
European migrant crisis 2015
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Case study of a country experiencing specific patterns of overall population change: Japan- decline + ageing
Case study of a specified local area: place, health and well-being- Hook, Hart, Hampshire
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
England’s relations with foreign powers
Factions at court and the succession
Position of the church by 1547
Assessment of Henry VIII’s reign
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Powerpoint looking at the effect of glaciers on the UK's landscapes
Starter: Ben Nevis as a modern day example of a cold British landscape. Differentiated questions about the formation of u-shaped valleys
Main activities: step-by-step annotated sketch of Malham's limestone landscape. Powerpoint slides explain how the pavement, dry valleys and the Cove were formed
Plenary: looks at how the limestone of Malham became temporarily impervious due to rainwater saturation (and the subsequent short-lived waterfall)
Stalin’s record as a revolutionary before 1924
The power struggle within the Communist Party
‘Permanent revolution’ versus ‘socialism in one country’
Stalin’s defeat of Trotsky and the Left
Stalin’s defeat of the Right
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Fragile environments
Human activity and sustainability
Causes of climate change- natural vs human
Recent + prospective impact of climate change in cold environments
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Glacial budgets
Ablation and accumulation
Warm- and cold-based glaciers
Glacial erosion, transportation and deposition
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Introduction and the nature and distribution of cold environments
The climate of cold environments
The vegetation of the tundra
Global distribution of past + present cold environments
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
A glaciated environment at a local scale- The Helvellyn area of the English Lake District
A contrasting glaciated landscape from beyond the UK- The Athabasca Glacier
A contrasting glaciated landscape from beyond the UK- The Sápmi region of tundra, northern Europe
Colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
The Reformation Parliament and the establishment of Royal Supremacy
The extent of religious change in the 1530s
Opposition to religious change
Royal authority and government in the 1530s
colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Henry VIII: The start of a new era
Wolsey as Chief Minister- Church and State
England's relations with foreign powers, 1509-1529
Henry's quest for a divorce
colour coded: green statistics; yellow definitions; blue dates
Powerpoint and worksheets looking at the relief and geology of the UK's landscapes
Starter: video and dice-rolling activity about the rock cycle
main activities: 'Classifying rocks' worksheet (comparing formation, Moh's hardness and human uses) filled in as the pupils read and discuss the Powerpoint slides. Discussions to analyse a variety of linked physical maps. Mapwork to colour areas of granite and chalk, then to add the Tees-Exe Line (including the pattern of the age of rocks from the Grampians to the South Coast).
Differentiated questions about the links between geology/UK landscapes and how the Tees-Exe Line can help describe landscape distribution.
Plenary: further locational knowledge of UK upland landscapes
Powerpoint and worksheets introducing the concept of distinctive landscapes
Two main activities: assessment of five landscape photos using description (looking for evidence of physical, human and transitory features) followed by bilpolar evaluations of two further landscapes
Differentiated question:
1-3: Describe the main features of the landscape where you live
4-6: Explain the differences between urban and rural landscapes in the UK
7-9: Explain how human and physical features interact to form a named UK landscape
Plenary gets pupils to discuss the most beautiful landscapes they have seen locally, nationally and internationally
Includes video link ('Beautiful Britain')