I'm a Head of Geography at a 11-16 secondary school in Leicestershire, UK. I enjoy creating lessons that students enjoy - so you will not find reams of text on the board for them to read or for you to transmit. I believe in a range of engaging activities per lesson.
I'm a Head of Geography at a 11-16 secondary school in Leicestershire, UK. I enjoy creating lessons that students enjoy - so you will not find reams of text on the board for them to read or for you to transmit. I believe in a range of engaging activities per lesson.
Cover work for Geography, either KS3 or KS4. You will need to supply atlases (or a map on a PPT to be projected) and then pupils simply work through the tasks. Could not be easier - no more complaints from supply teachers or cover supervisors and no mores scratching around at 7am when you are i ll - just set the worksheet and forget about it.
The final lesson of the Y9 Africa unit supports pupils to understand how Africa’s youthful population, increasing life expectancy and health levels and education standards put Africa in a prime position to work with MNCs to achieve export-led development. It includes a significant guided DME (increasing development in Tanzania) to introduce pupils to Paper 2 at GCSE.
Intended for Y8 but suitable for Y9, this lesson is part of a fully-resourced synoptic unit about Asia designed to draw together pupils’ learning from the past two years in Geography. The unit includes elements of coasts, rivers, climate change, development, urbanisation and looks at more challenging and contemporary issues such as the roots of the development gap between North and South Korea and also the abuse of Uighers in China.
This is a two-lesson (possibly three if you wish) group task. In teams, pupils complete maps to show biomes/climate zones and precipitation in Asia. They are given maps to show average temperatures Jan and July and a series of photographs of biomes. There is also a jigsaw-based activity where they need to link up the climatic factors affecting biome distribution - best for more able members of the team. They then use this to create a poster to display in your classroom.
This is a fun starter or plenary activity based upon the Blockbusters TV show. Two teams (usually boys vs girls) complete to win hexagons by answering questions. The winning team makes a complete chain of hexagons across the board. This is a very dynamic version of this classic activity and can be edited to change all questions. The questions animate in with the intro theme and this has proven to encourage pupils to work on recall before they have even answered the questions.
This is ideal for an observed lesson.
This is a triple-lesson introducing students to Mumbai before using a variety of graphicacy techniques to understand how Mumbai has grown over time. Students will complete a pictograph, a choropleth map and located bar charts and will then examine a scatter graph, choropleth map, flow-line map, bar chart and compound line graph. They will consider the role of natural increase in Mumbai’s growth together with the impact of rural-to-urban migration. These lessons are fully resourced and students are provided with a worksheet to help them to develop their conclusions. Includes a homework (living graph) and a selection of graphs electronically for students to complete Lesson 3 if required.
Intended forY9, this is a fully-resourced synoptic unit about international relations designed to support pupils as they move towards GCSE Geography. The unit examines international relations and the factors that affect these, superpowers, alliances, trade, hard- and soft-power, Belt and Road Initiative/debt-trap diplomacy, the causes, consequences and solutions of war and the role and efficacy of the UN. There is an optional final series of lessons to allow pupils to watch Hotel Rwanda to support their learning and provide a but of light relief at the very end of the year - the film is not provided and you should be sure to examine the accompanying PowerPoint that explains the premise to pupils and also states the exact time where the “N” word is used in the film so you can mute it.
A bundle of lessons that introduce a range of cold environments (taiga, tundra, steppe, temperate forest, polar, mountain biome), adaptations and climate, etc. A good look at glacial processes and landforms but in an accessible way - this unit does not have lesson after lesson on landform diagrams, deliberately. Pupils look at how humans use cold environments and the impacts of this, ending with a natural hazard (avalanche). Some lessons have elements that require the Progress in KS3 textbook (Hodder) but not all. Otherwise all fully resourced lessons with a range of engaging activities.
Intended for Y8 but suitable for Y9, this is a fully-resourced synoptic unit about Asia designed to draw together pupils’ learning from the past two years in Geography. The unit includes elements of coasts, rivers, climate change, development, urbanisation and looks at more challenging and contemporary issues such as the roots of the development gap between North and South Korea and also the abuse of Uighers in China.
Includes a cover lesson in the event of absence.
A 13-lesson KS3 unit on endangered species. This unit introduces the concept of extinction and the related categories, mass extinction events, the historical precedents, the overview of human causes of extinction then individual lessons to fully explore these causes. Each lesson is fully resourced and has a range of engaging activities, research, active learning, etc. The unit includes a revision lesson and an exam-style assessment with mark scheme and resource booklet. I created this because I could find no other decent unit about endangered species - I hope you are find it really useful.
A bundle of 13 lessons designed for end -of-Y9 KS3 Geography pupils. The unit reinforces learning from the KS3 course, including skills, locational knowledge and key concepts, as well as introducing pupils to some of the content of the KS4 courses and skills (especially Paper 2 DME/problem solving). The unit introduces the location and physical geography of Africa, biomes and climate, its development (historical and current), patterns of population change, urbanisation, land use (focusing on agriculture and desertification) and future opportunities for the continent.
This is a set of 15 lessons designed for the Eduqas GCSE Geography B 9-1 specification easily adapted for all other specification. Students are introduced to Sydney as a global/world city and take an enquiry-based approach to each lesson. The unit covers the growth of Sydney, the aboriginal population, socioeconomics (Sydney vs. the rest of Australia, also divergence within Sydney), the transport issues and solutions, the water supply issues and solutions, an environmental issue and solutions, the housing issues and outcomes (increased density) and finally the proposed 3-Cities plan to divide Sydney into three seperate cities, each with a “30-minute lifestyle”.
My lessons are ready to teach and fully resources, including video links. There is a range of teaching and learning activities so students will not get bored.
This bundle has been designed for teaching at the end of Year 9. It brings together much of their learning from KS3 and also prepares them well for skills and knowledge at GCSE. The bundle includes a range of maps and graphs and core areas.
Core areas:
Ecosystems
Weather & Climate
Climate Change
Rivers
Coasts
Conflict
Resources (oil, water)
Sustainability
Urbanisation
Population and migration
Skills:
Map skills
Flow-line maps (desire line maps)
Compound bar charts
Line graphs
Bar charts
Pie charts
Climate graphs
Egan’s Wheel