Students will start by conducting a formative assessment on their previous learning of Russia and key geographical concepts. Then students will recap their previous learning in 6 quick questions on whiteboards. Students will be given guided reading homelearning (included) to cement their knowledge. Students then will recap previous terms of rivers, and the courses of the river. Students will then be tested on their knowledge retention on learning about meanders and then asked to complete a field sketch and annotation .
Starter: Formative Assessment and then 6 quick starter questions
Task 1:Recap the key geographical terms for rivers
Task 2: Describe the definition of meander and how they form
Task 3: Tested on key components of rivers such as slip off slope and river cliff
Task 4: Main Task: Write instructions on how the create an meander (Lower ability) oxbow lake (higher ability)
Task 5: Plenary: Recap of key questions from today
Lesson contains one powerpoint and one worksheet and home learning guided reading.
For KS3 geography, this bundle is great for Year 9 in their first term back at school. This helps to get students familiar again with physical geographical concepts of rivers, coasts, climate, sand dunes and plate tectonics. This bundle also contains a tutorial on GIS mapping for students to have a go mapping Africa to see its physical features.
This bundle contains 7 lessons that are fully resourced, with powerpoints and worksheets.
Throughout the series of lessons, students will firstly begin by using GIS to map the physical features of Africa and identify its location globally as well as its individual countries. Then students will go through the climate and misconceptions of Africa along with creating a climate graph and manipulating and using data. Next students will recap the water cycle, transportation and erosion to learn about Delta formation, specifically in the context of the Niger Delta. Then switching the plate tectonics students recap the theory and structure of the Earth before investigating shield and composite volcanoes as well as the African Rift Valley. Finally students learn about the formation of sand dunes and how they bring tourist opportunities as well as headlands, bays and spit formation along the African coastline.
Lesson 1: Mapping Africa using GIS
Lesson 2: Physical Features of Africa
Lesson 3: The Climate of Africa
Lesson 4: The Niger Delta
Lesson 5: The East African Rift Valley
Lesson 6: Sand Dunes at Sossusvlei
Lesson 7: Coasts of Africa
Students will gain a variety of skills such as data collection and manipulation along with creation of graphs and reading OS maps.
This bundle contains fully resourced lessons along with worksheets.
Students will firstly begin to glue in their knowledge organisers and the learning journey to start their term off. Then they will using their A3 sheet begin to make notes throughout the lesson on the differences between the Arctic and Antarctic. This will cover, location, climate, plants and animals and people, and development. Finally they will watch a video of what it is like to live in an Antarctic research station.
Task 1: Glue in knowledge organiser and learning journey
Task 2: Identify the difference in climate and other categories of arctic and antarctic living
Task 3: Make notes on the extreme living at Antarctic research stations.
This download contains and up to date powerpoint and learning journey and knowledge organiser as well as a worksheet.
Students will on whiteboards firstly explain why people may want to visit other places, and then split their whiteboards in half and give reasons to what is good about tourism and what is bad about tourism.
Students will then read through their worksheet and highlight areas that are social, economic or environmental effects of tourism and evaluate which is the most important and why. FInally students will evaluate if the economic benefits of tourism in the Middle East are worth the environmental costs
Task 1: Identify why people visit other places
Task 2: Identify what is good and bad about tourism
Task 3: Categorise effects into social, economic or environmental
Task 4: Evaluate if the economic benefits of tourism in the Middle East are worth the environmental costs
This download contains a powerpoint and worksheet.
Student will start by recapping information that they have previously learnt in the topic and then will begin to learn about what conflict is, giving examples of large scale and small scale conflicts. Students will then read through the different reasons that conflicts happen and summarise the reason for conflict in the Middle East. After reading through their information students will then give a report on conflict in the Middle East using the example of the War on Terror.
Task 1: Knowledge Retention
Task 2: Categorise types of conflict
Task 3: Reasons for conflict in the Middle East
Task 4: Give a report on conflict in the Middle East using the example of the War on Terror.
This download contains a fully up to date lesson and worksheet.
Students will firstly start by taking a low stakes quiz about the information they have learnt during the last 2 lessons to ensure they have cemented their knowledge. Then they will write down on their whiteboards all the characteristics they can remember of cold environment. Students then are told about polar bear adaptations and are told to link them to the climate of the area and explain how they link. Students show their learning by describing how animals have adapted to survive in the cold environments (4 marks) Then students are told about cold environment plants and are told to show their adaptations and link it to climate. This is tested again by a four mark question “Describe how plants have adapted to survive in the cold environments (4 marks)” Finally to test what students have learnt they they answer the 4 mark question “Describe and explain the features of animal adaptations shown in Figure 8. (4 marks)”
Task 1: Formative assessment of previous learning
Task 2: Recap on knowledge of cold environments
Task 3: Link polar bear adaptations to climate and answer exam q
Task 4: Link plant adaptations to climate and answer exam q
Task 5: Exam question Describe and explain the features of animal adaptations shown in Figure 8. (4 marks)
This powerpoint contains an up to date powerpoint, worksheet and formative assessment sheet.
Students will firstly recap what they have learnt in previous lessons by answering 5 quick questions. Then they will be asked to locate Svalbard using latitude and longitude. Next they will read through their worksheet and highlight opportunities that are either, social, economic or environmental. Finally students will create a tourist brochure about the opportunities there are in Svalbard for people to experience.
Task 1: Knowledge Retention
Task 2: Locate Svalbard using geographical terminology
Task 3: Using fishing, tourism, energy and science, identify the social, economic and environmental opportunities.
Task 4: Using the opportunities you have learnt about today, create a tourist brochure to make people want to go to both Antarctica and Svalbard (Arctic).
This download contains an up to date powerpoint and a worksheet.
Students will begin by recapping physical features in the Middle East that they have previously learnt about. Students are then asked to describe what sand dunes are and then to identify where the Rub’ Al Khali is using latitude and longitude. Students are then given a video to watch about sand dune formation and given more information about their formation. For their final task they are asked to complete a comic strip to show the formation of sand dunes in their books.
Task 1: Knowledge retention
Task 2: Identify Rub’ Al Khali using geographical terms
Task 3: Identify the steps in the formation of sand dunes.
Task 4: Explain the formation of sand dunes in a comic strip.
This contains a powerpoint and worksheet.
An introductory topic for KS3 Year 8 about the Physical features of Middle East, specifically focusing on the climate, plant and animal adaptations to the desert, sand dune formation and coasts along the Middle East, specifically with the formation of spits.
This bundle contains 5 lessons that are fully resourced.
Lesson 1: Mapping the Middle East
Lesson 2: Middle East Desert Climate
Lesson 3: Desert Plant and Animal Adaptations
Lesson 4: Sand Dune Formation in the Middle East
Lesson 5: Coasts of the Middle East
Students will gain a variety of skills such as data manipulation, graph reading, Choropleth map interpretation
This bundles contains fully resourced lessons along with worksheet
Students will begin by setting up their books for the new term with a learning journey and knowledge retention sheet (included). Then they will be informed of any misconceptions with the Middle East and given facts about it. Then will be asked to identify the Middle East globally then with Latitude and Longitude. Students will then be asked to fill in an A3 sheet with the countries of the Middle East, the seas, rivers and other physical features.
Task 1: Sticking knowledge organiser and learning journey in
Task 2: Identify the location of the Middle East globally
Task 3: Using latitude and longitude describe the location of several middle eastern countries.
Task 4: Identify the countries and physical features of the Middle East using Atlases.
This lesson has a completed powerpoint and worksheet
For KS3 geography, this bundle is great for Year 8 to follow on with the first topic “Physical Features of the Middle East”, and is designed to flow with that. This bundle allows students to investigate the human side of the Middle East with specific looks at development of the Middle East, from ancient civilisations, to the silk road and the Islamic Golden Age, all the way to modern day developments due to resources and geo-politics and modern day conflicts such as the War on Terror. Finally students will investigate the positives and negatives of tourism in the Middle East.
Lesson 1: Development in the Middle East
Lesson 2: Resources in the Middle East
Lesson 3: Geo-politics of the Middle East
Lesson 4: Conflict in the Middle East
Lesson 5:Tourism in the Middle East
Students will gain a variety of skills such as data collection and manipulation along with creation of graphs and reading OS maps.
This bundle contains fully resourced lessons along with worksheets, learning journeys and knowledge organisers.
Students will begin the lesson with a formative assessment of the last 3 lessons on the Middle East. Then they will identify the characteristics of the desert and explain how this relates to biodiversity. Students will then learn about how camels are adapted to live in the desert and identify its features and how they related to the climate. This process is repeated again with cacti and how they are adapted to the desert. Each time students will attempt a 4 mark exam question about these features.
Task 1: Formative Assessment
Task 2: Recap features and biodiversity
Task 3: Introduction of camel adaptations and how they link to the climate
Task 4: Introduction of cacti adaptations and how they link to the climate
Task 5: 4 mark exam style question.
This lesson contains a powerpoint and worksheet.
Students will firstly glue in their knowledge organiser and learning journey for the new topic (included in download) then students will recap the physical features of the Middle East from the previous topic. Students will be given a quick introduction to the history of the middle east and how early cultures and the silk road allowed the Middle East to flourish and how this helped bring about the Islamic Golden Age. Students will then evaluate which was the most important development in the history of the Middle East.
Task 1: Glue in learning journey and knowledge organiser
Task 2: Recap previous learning
Task 3: Describe why the early civilisations settled in these areas.
Task 4: Describe the route of the Silk Road
Task 5: Evaluate the inventions of the Islamic Golden Age
Task 6: Evaluate which was the most important development in the history of the Middle East.
Students will begin by recapping what they have previously learnt in the other lessons on physical features of the Middle East.
Then they will recap what they know about climate and biomes. Then will be asked to describe the location of deserts globally using latitude and longitude. Then they will identify the features of the hot desert and will be asked to describe the climate of Egypt by identifying features of a climate graph. Higher ability students will be asked to complete their own climate graph in lesson. All students will be able to compare two climate graphs of differing areas.
Task 1: Knowledge Retention
Task 2: Identify location of hot deserts
Task 3: Identify the features of hot deserts
Task 4: Describe the climate of Egypt using a climate graph
Task 5: Creation of own climate graph
Task 6: Compare climate graphs of Egypt and Brazil.
This lesson has a completed powerpoint and worksheet
Students will first complete a knowledge retnetion on previous learning from physical features of the Middle East. Then they will describe the seas and oceans that surround the Middle East along with the Headlands and Bays. Students will then learn about deposition and transportation to begin to identify depositional landforms such as spits. Then students will locate the Bardawil spit and begin to learn about longshore drift. To summarise learning students will be asked to explain the formation of a spit in 4 marks.
Task 1: Knowledge Retention
Task 2: Identify the coasts surrounding the Middle East#
Task 3: Recap deposition and transportation.
Task 4: Identify the Bardawil spit
Task 5: Explain the formation of a spit (4 marks)
This download contains a fully up-to-date powerpoint and worksheet
Students will begin by recapping what they have previously learnt in the other lessons on physical features in North America.
Students will then be introduced to what a hurricane/ tropical storm is, they will be asked to describe the distribution of tropical storms globally and then identify features of a tropical storm. Students are then asked to put in order the formation of hurricanes using a card sort and then label how hurricanes form and describe it in their books.
Task 1: Knowledge Retention
Task 2: Identify distribution of tropical storms globally
Task 3: Identify features of a hurricane
Task 4: Put in order the formation of a hurricane
Task 5: Describe in books how hurricanes form
This lesson has a completed powerpoint and worksheet
Students will begin by recapping what they have previously learnt in the other lessons on human development in South America.
Students will then be introduced to what development is and then to describe where the richest place with GNI is in South America, students then categorise the simple indicators of development into social, economic and environmental then they learn about the limitations to using money as a single measure of development, this transitions onto HDI and its properties. Finally students learn about the UN Sustainable Development goals and are to evaluate which is the most needed and why.
Task 1: Knowledge Retention
Task 2: Identify countries in South America with high GNI
Task 3: Categories the simple indicators of development into social, economic or environmental
Task 4: Identify countries with high HDi
Task 5: Recap core knowledge
Task 6: Evaluate which sustainable development goal each country should choose and why.
This lesson has a completed powerpoint and worksheet
Students will begin by setting up their books for the human topic of South America/ Brazil and then answer 5 quick questions about their previous learning.
Then using longitude and latitude students will identify the location of Brazil, then Rio in their books. Then they will be given some background to the country of Brazil and then they will explain using their information sheet the importance of Rio both locally, nationally and internationally. Students are then tested on what they have just learnt and then given the task of creating a tourist brochure
about visiting Rio.
Task 1: Knowledge Retention
Task 2: Locate Rio within Brazil using longitude and latitude
Task 3: Read through information and highlight its local, national or international importance
Task 4: Quick Quiz
Task 5: Create a tourist brochure on Rio
This lesson contains a fully completed lesson, powerpoint, worksheet and learning journey for the topic.
Students will start with 5 quick questions from their previous lessons on the human issues in South America. Then they will learn what transnational crime is and what the drug trade is. Students are then to describe in their books the drug trade globally and its pathways into other continents. Using a flow map to describe the production of drugs in South America and its distribution into central and North America. Then they are tested with a zipper task about the content they have learnt and then will write a newspaper article about the drug trade in South America.
Task 1: Knowledge Retention
Task 2: Describe the areas globally that produce the most cocaine
Task 3: Describe the flow lines of drug production and distribution in South America
Task 4: Purposeful Retrieval of previous core learning
Task 5: Create a newspaper article about the drug trade in South America.
Students will start with 5 quick questions from their previous lessons on the human features of South America. Then students will be recapping what they have learnt so far about inequality and slums. Then they will investigate the Favela Bairo Project and where it is located and the effectiveness of it. Students will then have a decision making exercise of choosing where they would allocate funding to help reduce the inequality in favelas.
Task 1: Knowledge Retention
Task 2: Identification of slums and their inequalities
Task 3: Categorise the project outcomes into social, economic and environmental effects.
Task 4: Decision making exercise of choosing where they would allocate funding to help reduce the inequality in favelas.
This lesson contains a fully completed powerpoint and worksheet