Monday, June 29, 2020

KS3 knowledge enhancing work


A few of our KS3 students have excelled with home learning and kept up to date with lessons and tasks supplied to them. Therefore I came up with a list of tasks that enrich the topics that they've been learning about, or won't have the opportunity to learn as it's no longer in their curriculum.

Task 1: Using longitude, latitude and maps to track hurricane paths - supplied by the American Hurricane Center. This gives an insight into the impacts of data modelling, albeit manual, but the idea is the same. There's also further activities relating to protection and preparation.


https://aamboceanservice.blob.core.windows.net/oceanservice-prod/education/for_fun/FollowthatHurricane.pdf

Task 2:Tours of USA national parks. These include 2 of my favourites: Yellowstone and Crater lake. All you have to do is go to the website and explore the virtual webcams, watch videos of the tours etc. They can then pick their favourite national park and create a poster to advertise it in school (e.g. why is their chosen park special, what does it offer visitors, what features does it have (human and physical geography). An additional activity is they can send a postcard from one of the national parks, to explain what they are doing and what they can see.

https://earth.google.com/web/@2.45133915,-98.61144059,-5192.98031784a,27413757.13498593d,35y,-0h,0t,0r/data=Ci0SKxIgMzVhNjc1YmQ0NjVjMTFlOTg0Yjg1NTMyNWRjMDk2MzQiB3ZveV90b2M

https://www.nationalparks.org/connect/blog/take-virtual-visit-national-park?gclid=Cj0KCQjwirz3BRD_ARIsAImf7LNHnPYLHtZMnPk5Px2AhUm3aTP-jlWkktDYDsocAgzfWPj0jEthq7oaAjiwEALw_wcB

I also have colouring pages of the national parks official posters, if you'd like these as a mindfulness activity afterwards. 

Task 3: Make a model volcano (template below) and find out additional information about the stratovolcano (also known as composite volcano). Add the information, including any examples of active composite volcanoes around the world and any other interesting facts for students to learn from. 


Task 4: Gapminder card game (link at end of point). Students can research any countries they don't know about first and write the info on the back of the cards (life expectancy and GDP). They can then use the cards and the information to make a live graph (where you make the graph using the cards in front of them) to show how GDP impacts life expectancy. An example of the graph is on the last page of the pdf, but it's always interesting to see what the pupils come out with first. This is also a slight maths lesson about correlation. Here

Task 5: Create a comic strip about the weather during lockdown. Those that can, link the weather to high or low pressure. How it's changed, what we have/haven't been able to do in the weather. They may need to see past forecasts (bbc weather) and they can use the following websites/apps to create comic strips:


The website below creates characters and strips:

I will add more to this as i go along, but for now, have fun!
Kind Regards,
Miss Cox


Monday, June 15, 2020

Refugee week 2020

Human rights is something I feel very passionate about promoting in schools, since I started teaching A level geography and realised how little students actually knew.

This means that every year, i make a special effort to include lessons for Refugee week, in order to dispel any negative connotations to migration or persecution of anyone that is different. I also want students to know what repression is like around the world, for different religions, sexes, children and adults. It's important to know what a refugee is and not to react negative to a stigma that may have been presented in the papers.

This years theme is a good one. 'Imagine'. There's a lot you can do with this, so I've put together some tasks for our vulnerable group in school to complete throughout the week, along with a live lesson, and I'm making this available here for other students to access if they would like to learn more.

Find the lesson: here and let me know how you are promoting refugee week in school!

Kind Regards,

Miss Cox

Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Developing critical literacy in Geography


Paper 3 - Developing critical literacy in Geography

Enquiry based geography is something that all of us are aiming for, I hope, as this means that investigation and analysis is involved at every stage of teaching. It's also included in our exams at GCSE and A level, so it's an important still to hone. 

For paper 3 (EDEXCEL B), also known as the decision making paper, students are given a resource booklet of information, which they must use to answer questions. The final question is a decision that they must make, choosing from the available options, justifying their choice using evidence from the booklet. 

I really like this paper as it looks at modern real life decisions that people and countries have to make everyday, and gets students to think critically about why their choice is the best, taking into account economic development, impact on people and the environment.  

The issue with this paper is that sometimes the use of the resources is missed as their critical literacy is not good enough. Therefore, students aren't assessing the following points correctly:


  1. What is the source of information? (photo, article, opinion, infographic, graph - all used to show information in a different way, or manipulate data).
  2. What is the purpose of that information?
  3. What is the motivation behind the information?
  4. Who and who isn't represented in the source?
  5. How does the source persuade us? (relies on students being able to infer subtle language)
  6. Are there alternative views to this one?


This is a huge skill that they will need in the workplace after school. I definitely needed this in my career prior to teaching and it has led me well into teaching, as I have a need to read a piece of evidence 3 times to believe that it will work - it allows me to analyse everything before i commit. I don't know about you, but i have to answer questions about fake news articles, fake trends of knowledge etc.... all the time.


Critical literacy fits with a constructivist understanding of learning. Learners build on ideas they already have in order to question, understand and internalise new information (Ferretti, 2013, p. 105), interrelating, reinterpreting and trying to understand new experiences and ideas. But what if your students don't have this prior construction? Or can only complete this on certain sources and not others (focus a lot on data in geography, so graphs and maps are easier than text and opinions for most students).

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