1) GCSE Geography teaches essential life skills like teamwork, problem solving, and communication while covering important topics about the environment, globalization, and urban/rural changes.
2) The course involves two written exams and a controlled assessment project involving fieldwork. Exams cover both physical and human geography.
3) Studying geography leads to a variety of career paths and has one of the best employment rates of university subjects. Geography graduates gain skills valued by employers.
[2024]Digital Global Overview Report 2024 Meltwater.pdf
Geog Options 09
1. Could GCSE Geography be the right direction for you ?
2. The world in which we live is likely to change more in the next 50 years than it has ever done before. Geography explains why, and helps to prepare you for those changes. Geography tackles the big issues: • environmental responsibility • our global interdependence • cultural understanding and tolerance • commerce, trade and industry. Geographical study fosters these qualities and provides a firm basis for life-long learning. The transferable skills which geography fosters are an asset in the complex world of employment today. Geography is about the future and encourages flexible thinking.
4. Unit 1 Physical geography Water on the Land: River valleys Flooding and flood management Water supply issues The coastal zone: Distinctive landforms Consequences of rising sea level Coastal management Coastal habitat and conflicts Ice on the Land: Glacial budget Distinctive glacial landforms Tourism in glaciated areas The Restless Earth: Earth’s structure, plate margins Volcanic hazards Supervolcanoes Earthquake hazards Tsunamis Challenge of weather and climate: UK characteristics Depressions and anticyclones Global climate change Tropical storms
5. Unit 2 human geography Population change: Population structures Consequences of rapid growth Impact of an ageing population Migration – causes and consequences Changing urban environments: Functions and land uses Need for planning Rapid urbanisation and industrialisation effects Characteristics of a sustainable city The Development Gap: Contrasts in development Physical and human factors that influence development Ways to reduce global inequalities Inequalities within the E.U Pressures on rural urban fringe: Social and economic changes in Lake District Sustainability Human influences on commercial farming in East Anglia Change and conflict in tropical and subtropical rural areas
6. Globalisation: The development of manufacturing and services across the globe The demand for energy Sustainable development Global demands for food Tourism: Global growth of tourism – reasons, economic significance, impacts Effective management in UK Consequences of mass tourism Sustainable tourism – ecotourism
11. . Geography brings together all other subjects combines a knowledge of science and an understanding of the arts.. geography will give you an oversight that no other subject can give. It therefore combines well with any GCSE subject. • make a concise report • handle data • ask questions and find answers • make decisions about an issue • analyse material • organise themselves • think creatively and independently • good communicators • spatially aware • socially, economically and environmentally aware • problem solvers • good team players • computer literate • well rounded, flexible thinkers Will geography be useful?
12. Nationally, Geography has one of the best graduate employment records in the country! Compared to other subjects, geography graduates are among the most employable. They possess the skills that employers look for. Is geography a good choice in terms of getting a job? The answer is a resounding YES!
13. Care about the planet? Estate Manager Forestry Ranger Environmental Consultant Pollution Analyst Conservation Officer Discover new places! Travel Agent Tourism Officer Eco-Tourism Advisor Tour Guide Media Researcher Enjoy being in the landscape? Hydrologist Coastal Manager Geologist Civil Engineer Soil Conservationist Interested in Weather? Weather Presenter Disaster Manager Flood Prevention Officer Risk Assessor Water Supply Coordinator
14. Fascinated by maps? GIS Specialist Cartographer Utilities Manager Remote Sensing Analyst Interested in human behaviour? Planner Social Worker Market Researcher Housing Officer Estate Agent Want to know why people work where they do? Economic Developer Location Analyst Retailer Regional Developer Transport Manager Interested in world events? Aid Worker Diplomat Refugee Advisor Charity Coordinator
15. Interested in Further Education? - PGCE (teaching qualification). -MSc (e.g. environmental assessment, land management, pollution and environmental control, information systems engineering, oceanography, meteorology, rural resource management). - MA (e.g. cultural geography, society space, international business, town planning). - PhD (e.g. glaciology, geography of finance, quaternary environmental change, geography of health care).
17. ‘ Geography is the subject that holds the key to our planet’ (Michael Palin) A girl cycles through floodwaters in Stratford Upon-Avon, central England. (Reuters: Darren Staples) source Without GEOGRAPHY … you’re nowhere!
Geography – what’s it all about? Is it right for you? Geography is It’s a dynamic subject, constantly changing and is about the world around you Geography Investigates the earth and its people - provides you with snapshots of different landscapes and communities.