Settlement and Land-Use Unit for KS2 Geography.
Suitable for Y3, Y4, Y5 or Y6
Needs some adapting to focus on your local area but a good starting point.
Work on 6 Figure Grid References.
Collecting and interpreting geographical survey data.
Sustainable architecture.
Considering the viewpoint of different user groups.
Vocabulary associated with the topic.
For each geography topic, from Pre-school to Y6, I have defined 10 words. These were chosen with the topic’s key knowledge and the year group in which it is studied (related to the pupils’ developmental stage) in mind.
These should be given to each pupil at the start of the unit, briefly discussed as a class and ‘RAGged’ by the pupil, providing an AfL snapshot of their prior knowledge.
This information can be used by the teacher to adapt the coming lessons to embed the words (and their meanings) into pupils’ memories. The process will be completed again at the end of the unit, which will give a clear, visual measure of progress
Geography Glossaries for each of the topics in the Primary Geography Curriculum.
I have chosen ten essential key words that all children should know, use and remember for each geography topic.
These could form the basis of fun and engaging tasks to support children’s geography vocabulary building.
KS1 and KS2 geographical question prompts.
Very useful for planning any unit.
Sparks guided discussion.
Encourages use of technical geographic language.
Talk for writing.
Economic activity.
Trade links.
Human and physical.
The UK (Geography, Weather and Climate Overview):
LO: I understand how the UK’s location affects its geography.
What is the UK’s place in the wider world?
Recap on prior locational/positional knowledge from previous years.
Understand what is meant by the UK’s Temperate Maritime Climate.
Latitude and Longitude in relation to the UK.
UK weather and its influences.
Countries in the UK.
A six-week unit of painting, suitable for Y3 - Y6.
Covers colour mixing, wash, composition, layering, warm and cool colours;
Focus artist - Hokusai (the Great Wave off Kagawa);
Links with geography (earthquakes and volcanoes).
Be ready for an Ofsted Deep Dive with this whole-school plan for Geography!
What you get:
A curriculum map, which shows a clear progression in place knowledge, process/feature knowledge, map work skills and fieldwork skills;
A progression in location map, which details specific case studies for each topic;
Planning/Assessment sheets for every Geography topic, from EYFS to Y6;
A leadership portfolio document to show to your HMI, before or during an inspection;
An action plan template.
All of these are editable, to make them easy to adapt for your school and for different case-study locations if you wish.
**A fully planned and resourced 6 or 7 week unit on the Tudor Age of Exploration. Suitable for upper KS2 but easily adaptable for lower KS2. **
The unit follows a historical enquiry cycle, with key questions throughout.
Teaching strategies focus on visual tools and active learning, so that children have a constant frame of reference for this historical period.
There are links to current issues around colonialism with an exploration of whether Columbus was a hero or a villain.
Each lesson can be kept ‘short and sweet’ or you have the option to ‘explore deeper’ with discussion about all the key concepts.
Covers the National Curriculum objective: ’ A study of an aspect or theme in British history that extends pupils’ chronological knowledge beyond 1066’.
Also covers the following Geography from the KS2 curriculum: ‘Identify the position and significance of latitude, longitude, Equator, Northern Hemisphere, Southern Hemisphere, the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, Arctic and Antarctic Circle, the Prime/Greenwich Meridian’.
**Your one-stop, earthquakes and volcanoes shop!
A fully planned and resourced 7 week unit on ‘Earthquakes and Volcanoes’. Suitable for upper KS2 (Y5 and Y6) but easily adaptable for lower KS2. **
The unit follows a geographical enquiry cycle, with key questions throughout.
Teaching strategies focus on visual tools and active learning, so that children ‘do geography’ rather than learning facts. Extensive video links make the learning highly visual.
Up to date case studies include: Mount Etna 2020 eruptions, Volcan de Fuego 2018 eruption, Christchurch earthquake of 2011, Japanese Tsunami of 2011.
Each lesson can be kept ‘short and sweet’ or you have the option to ‘explore deeper’ with discussion about all the key concepts.
Covers the National Curriculum objective: ’ Describe and understand key aspects of: physical geography, including: volcanoes and earthquakes’.
**A fully planned and resourced 6 week unit on ‘A Region in South America’, comparing it with a region in the UK (The Solent). Suitable for upper KS2 (Y5 and Y6) but easily adaptable for lower KS2. **
The unit follows a geographical enquiry cycle, with key questions throughout.
Teaching strategies focus on visual tools and active learning, so that children ‘do geography’ rather than learning facts.
Each lesson can be kept ‘short and sweet’ or you have the option to ‘explore deeper’ with discussion about all the key concepts.
Covers the National Curriculum objective: ’ Understand geographical similarities and differences through the study of human and physical geography of a region of the United Kingdom, a region in a European country,
and a region within North or South America’.