Key Stage 3 Key Stage 4 Fantastic Places In The News Revision Homework Staff

 

 

 

 

Swavesey Village College Cambridgeshire 
UK

KS4 - GCSE

TopicsAgricultureCoastsDevelopmentGlaciersIndustryPopulationResourcesRiversRocksSettlementTectonicsTourism

Coursework

GCSE Forum

Welcome to the Year 11 Geography Home Page. This page is designed to help you navigate your way through the Geography GCSE syllabus. There are plenty of things to look at so start be choosing a topic from the left. For each topic you will find links to the left to support your learning.

Have a look at the GCSE Geography Forum. If you have any questions, queries or concerns about Geography, why not use the message board to share them with your peers?

Syllabus - AQA-A

Geography GCSE Overview
IGTF - KS4 Year 11
Here is a breakdown of how your GCSE grade will be calculated:

Paper 2 - Human

Paper 1 - Physical

Topic 1 - River Landscapes

IGTF News

 

Homework

YacaPaca

 

 


Waterfalls
Levees & Terraces

Storm Hydrographs


Flooding

Ox-Bow Lakes

Deposition

Transportation

Industrialisation

Glossary

Introduction

C/S Overview
Flowers in Kenya C/S

Glossary
Shifting Cultivation

CAP
The Green Revolution
Types of Farming
Developing World

Dartmoor Factsheet


Kent Downs

Dartmoor Granite C/S


Virtual Quarry

Happisburgh C/S

Volcano Advantages

San Francisco EQ 1989 C/S


Seismic Waves

Types of Earthquake

Volcanic Hazards

Types of Volcano

Mount St Helens Anim.

Convection Currents

Collision Boundary

Destructive Boundary

Continental Drift

Constructive Boundary


Glossary


Types of Aid


Types of Trade


Free Trade


Fairtrade

Food Shortage in Africa


Development

Development Indicators

Depositional Landforms

Glacial Landforms


Glossary

Human Activity

Problems in Glacial Areas

Land Use in Glacial Areas


Corries

U-Shaped Valleys

Glacial Processes


Glossary

UK Greying Population C/S

Birth Control in India C/S

Migration Consequences


Migration

Population Pyramid


DTM

Population Density

Population Distribution


Glossary

Sea Defence Costs

Lyme Regis C/S

Climate Change

Coastal Processes


Sea Defences

Spits & Salt Marshes


Longshore Drift

Cons & Dest Beaches


Wave Motion

London Docklands C/S


Glossary


Glossary Quiz


Green Belt C/S

Counter-urbanisation


Agritourism


Urban Zoning

Land Use Models

Sphere of Influence


Hierarchy


Function


Site & Situation


Agritourism

Community Tourism


Ecotourism

Pennine Way C/S

Phuket Tourism C/S

Pros & Cons of Tourism


Tourism

Sustainable Resource Use

Consequences of GW

Greenhouse Effect

Biomass Energy


Wind Energy


Tidal Energy

Renewable Energy


Glossary

Limestone Features

Metamorphic Rocks


Igneous Rocks

Sedimentary Rocks

UK Case Studies

Location of Industry
Tertiary & Quaternary
Secondary Industry
Primary Industry
Steel Industry in South Wales
Classification of Industry
Farming as a System

Erosion

Tectonics
Resources

Development
Resources

Glaciers
Resources

Population
Resources

Coursework

Coasts
Resources

Settlement
Resources

Tourism
Resources

Managing
Resources

Rocks
Resources

Industry
Resources

Agriculture
Resources

Rivers
Resources



Data Collection Booklet

Guidelines Sheet
Coursework Timetable

Analysis Flowchart

 

Paper 1 - Physical

Paper 2 - Human

Paper 1 - Physical

Paper 2 - Human

Paper 1 - Physical

Paper 2 - Human

Paper 2 - Human

Paper 2 - Human

Paper 1 - Physical

Paper 2 - Human

Topic 12 - Tectonics

Topic 11 - Development

Topic 10 - Glaciers

Topic 9 - Population

Topic 8 - Coastal Landscapes

Topic 7 - Settlement

Topic 6 - Tourism

Topic 5 - Managing Resources

Topic 4 - Rocks & Landscapes

Topic 3 - Industry

Topic 2 - Agriculture

Your GCSE Geography Coursework will be started in the Summer Term of Yr10. In order to complete the coursework you will need to:


After collecting your data you will have time in lessons to complete your report. You will need to work on your project over the last few weeks of term and finish it when you return in Autumn Term Yr11.

You can use the links on the left to download support materials and guidelines for your project.

Case Studies:
Four case studies accompany this topic looking at LEDC & MEDC comparisons for volcanoes (Montserrat vs Mt. St. Helens) and earthquakes (Kashmir vs San Francisco).

Case Studies:
For this topic you will need to study how aid is used in Ghana (LEDC) and how multinational companies can be considered to be exploiting these countries.

Case Studies:
You case study will focus on tourism in Snowdonia looking at the ways the post glacial environment is used by the National Park Authority.

Case Studies:
For this topic you will look at the reasons behind mass migration in Darfur, Africa and how it compares to migration within the UK.

Case Studies:
Your case studies will include Lyme Regis (South Coast UK), Happisburgh (North Norfolk Coast) and any other case information gathered whilst on your coursework fieldtrip.

Case Studies:
Your two case studies for this topic look at comparing an MEDC example with an LEDC. You will look at the problems and solutions of two settlements in London (MEDC) and Sao Paulo (LEDC).

Case Studies:
You will look at the impact of tourism in a UK National Park (The Pennine Way) and compare it to a tourism development in Phuket, Thailand.

Case Studies:
You will study the issues surrounding increasing coal use in China (LEDC). The debate surrounding wind power in the UK (MEDC) will also be looked at considering different interest groups.

Case Studies:
The case studies to look at involve human use of different landscapes. You will look at the use of a granite landscape in Dartmoor and Ingleton Quarry in Yorkshire.

Case Studies:
Your first case study will be heavy industry in South Wales where you will see how government intervention has revived the region following decline. You will also look at the Ruhr Valley (Germany).

Case Studies:
The case studies for this topic look at different scales from local (UK), European (Netherlands) & global (Brazil & The Philippines). This gives a total of four case studies to look at.

Case Studies:
For this topic you will need to compare an LEDC example with an MEDC. The LEDC Case Study will be the Bangladesh Floods and the MEDC Case Study will be the Netherlands Floods.

- Plate Tectonics
- Plate Boundaries
- Types of Volcano
- Effects of Volcanoes

For this topic you will need to study tectonic plate dynamics and the relationship people have with natural disasters. Why is it that people live so close to volcanoes and known earthquake zones? The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 


In this interesting topic you will look at the responses made by governments to natural disasters. You should by the end of the topic be able to compare the different types of response made by countries and how their Mitigation systems vary. The main difference identified relates to economics where the richer (MEDC) countries usually respond quicker therefore reducing life loss. Availability of medical support also impacts on life loss from the secondary effects of a natural disaster such as typhoid and infection. In general the following applies:



The classification of different types of Earthquake and Volcano directly links to the damage caused and the death toll. It is important for you to understand the more dangerous natural hazards and the reasons behind why they are worse.

In LEDCs
Life Loss = High
Damage Costs =
Low

In MEDCs
Life Loss = Low
Damage Costs = High

- Living on Plate Boundaries
- Responses to EQs & Volcs
- Fold Mountain Formation
- Case Studies
- Seismic Waves
- Types of Earthquake
- Measuring Earthquakes
- Effects of Earthquakes

- Development Indicators
- Comparing Development
- The Development Gap
-
Physical Factors Affecting Dev.

For this topic you will need to study the relationship between LEDC and MEDC countries. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 


It is often considered difficult to compare the development of different countries due to the fact that they have many different factors such as population, money earned and land size. There are however a system of development indicators that make it easier to compare different countries. These include things like Birth & Death Rates, Infant Mortality Rates, GDP per capita and the Human Development Index (HDI). In studying these figures a clear distinction between countries can be identified called the Development Gap. It is interesting to see reasons for such a large gap including environment, history and trade.

There are many links between countries by Trade and Aid. It is considered that many LEDC countries (particularly in Africa) are 'controlled' by MEDC trade. This is due to LEDCs selling raw materials for a low price to MEDCs who sell manufactured goods back to LEDCs for a high price. Unique arrangements between countries also exist in the form of Bilateral and Multilateral Aid. This again raises many questions as to how MEDCs try to control LEDC development.

- Free Trade
- Fairtrade
- Aid & Development
- Case Studies
- Food Shortage
- Development & Trade
- Global Trading Patterns
- The Trade Balance
- Glacier Types
- Glacial Processes
- Erosional Features
- Erosional Landscapes

For this topic you will need to study physical processes of glaciers and understand how humans can use these environments. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 


The power of ice can only be see in certain places in the world today but much of the landscape of the UK has been created by the movement of large frozen water masses across the surface. For Valley Glaciers the power of the ice comes from the gravitational pull forcing glaciers to travel downhill. Continental Glaciers are again affected by gravity but more by the expansion of the mass of ice.

Two processes of erosion dominate within glaciers, Plucking and Abrasion. These processes leave distinctive marks on the landscape including U-Shaped Valleys, Hanging Waterfalls, Truncated Spurs and Corries. When a glacier retreats, the material it is carrying is deposited in many different ways. These create moraine deposits that can be Lateral, Medial, Recessional or Terminal.

The way in which people have adapted to live in these post glacial environments includes activities such as Tourism, Mining, Farming and Forestry. You will also develop your map work skills that you will need for your Paper 1 looking at grid references and interpreting contour lines.

- Human Use of Glacial Areas
- Problems in Glacial Areas
- Interpreting Glacial Features
- Case Studies
- Depositional Features
- Depositional Landscapes
- Glacial Features & Maps
- Glacial Map Work Skills
- Population Distribution
- Population Density
- Population Dynamics
-
Demographic Transition Model

For this topic you will need to study population dynamics and the way population influences the decisions made by governments. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

To begin with you will look at how the population is spread over the world and identify how population density differs from distribution.

One of the more challenging aspects of this topic is the Demographic Transition Model (DTM). This looks at the way in which the population of a country changes over time and identifies five clear stages which a country will pass through. The total population is resultant of the difference between birth rate and death rate. This means that if BR>DR = Natural Increase whereas when DR>BR = Natural Decrease. As a country develops, improvements in health care, contraception and lifestyle directly affect the population as shown in the DTM.

 

Source: Wikipedia

Image:Stage5.jpg

- Causes of Population Change
- UK Greying Population
- Birth Control Measures
- Case Studies
- Population Pyramids
- Migration
- Consequences of Migration
- Problems of Pop. Change
- Waves
- Erosional Processes
- Transportational Processes
- Longshore Drift

For this topic you will need to study physical processes of coasts and understand how humans can influence these processes. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 


This topic leads into your coursework project that you will start before the Summer Holidays. Before you can collect your data you will need to have an understanding of the processes found at the coast. To start with you will look at Erosional Processes and how they create individual landscapes. Following this you will need to understand the Transportational Processes and Longshore Drift. Lastly you will need to know how Depositional Landforms are created and how they differ to others. Below is an overview of landforms found at the coast:
 

Erosional Feature

Depositional Feature

Crack, Cave, Arch, Stack, Stump

Spit

Wave-Cut Notch

Bar

Wave-Cut Platform

Beach

Headland

Tombolo

- Constructive Beaches
- Destructive Beaches
-
Climate Change & Sea Levels
- Case Studies
- Erosional Landforms
- Depositional Landforms
- Coastal Defences

- Coastal Land Use
- Site & Situation
- Settlement Function
- Settlement Hierarchy
- Sphere of Influence

For this topic you will need to study the many different uses and classifications of a settlement. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 

Many terms and definitions are included in this topic covering a wide range on content. You will need to understand the reason for a settlement (Function), how far people travel to use services (Sphere of Influence) and different parts of a city (Urban Zoning). One way of classifying a settlement is according to its importance. This will order a settlement according to the services it provides.

The settlement hierarchy looks like this:

- Urbanisation
- Counter-Urbanisation
- Urban Sprawl
- Case Studies
- Burgess & Hoyt Model
- Urban Zoning
- MEDC Problems & Solutions
- LEDC Problems & Solutions
- Tourism
- Impacts of Tourism
- Sustainable Tourism
- Advantages of Tourism

For this topic you will need to study identify the implications of mass tourism and what can be offered as an alternative. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 


There are many reasons for travelling abroad but quite often people do so to relax and take a break from their day-to-day life. Without realising, many people have massive impacts when they travel abroad, on the environment & the local community. Many tourist resorts in countries set out to make as much money as possible. Unfortunately this is often at the expense of the Environment or local Society. Water pollution, noise pollution and air pollution are often by-products of mass tourism. Often little is done to solve these problems due to the Economic and Political advantages of receiving large tourist numbers. Some countries are developing legislation to deal with foreign tourist companies although any changes made will inevitably deter companies as they would reduce profit margins. A company will simply look 'elsewhere'.

One solution offered is sustainable tourism that is more socially and environmentally sensitive. These holidays offer opportunities to learn local cultures and more about the plants and animals in the area surrounding your area. They are called; Ecotourism, Community Tourism and Agritoursim.

- Disadvantages of Tourism
- National Parks
- Tourism Legislation
- Case Studies
- Resources
- Renewable Energy
- Non-Renewable Energy
- Consequences of Usage

For this topic you will need to study how humans manage resources effectively and ineffectively. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 


This small topic looks at the way in which people use resources and ways in which we can do so more sustainably. Renewable and Non-Renewable energy is another key area for this topic looking at the many different ways of producing energy and the circumstances they create. For two case studies you will look at how the energy types affect the people who live near them and the conflicts that arise from using them.

Other ways to use resources more sustainably is resource substitution where an alternative, less environmentally damaging alternatives are offered. This not only looks at energy replacements but also replacements for materials such as plastics (made from oil). A revival in traditional methods has been made using renewable resources such as wood, hemp and cotton.

From looking closely at different energy types you will see that there are many problems with using specific energies and you will need to consider Social, Economic, Environmental and Political (SEEP) problems.

- SEEP Consequences
- Bio Fuels
- Resource Conflicts
- Case Studies
- Global Warming
- Consequences of GW
- Sustainable Resource Use
- Resource Substitution
- Sedimentary Rocks
- Igneous Rocks
- Metamorphic Rock
- Classification of Rocks

For this topic you will need to study processes of the rock cycle and understand the landscapes created by different types of rock. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 


To begin with you need to look at the three rock types and be able to identify the unique differences between them. This helps you to understand the processes involved in creating these rocks. You will further study these processes in other topics such as rivers & glaciation (Sedimentary) and tectonics (Igneous and Metamorphic). Identifying the three rock types can be made using the following information:

Sedimentary: Grains of sediment should be visible often with a granular feel.
Igneous: Contains a range of crystal sizes depending on the environment it forms in. Dark igneous rock (basalt) tend to have small crystals whereas lighter rock often have larger crystals (granite).
Metamorphic: Looks very similar to igneous rocks with definite crystals present. Often forms around igneous intrusions (contact metamorphism) of in sedimentary rocks (pressure metamorphism).





Different rock types produce unique environments from which specific characteristics can be seen. Humans use these landscapes in different ways from Farming to Quarrying and Tourism. Case study examples will focus on these uses to support your understanding.

- Human Use of Landscapes
- Quarrying
- Landscapes & OS Maps
- Case Studies
- Limestone Landscapes
- Chalk Landscapes
- Granite Landscapes
- Clay Landscapes
- Primary Sector
- Secondary Sector
- Tertiary Sector
- Quaternary Sector

For this topic you will need to study the four main sectors of industry and identify the different types of employment within each. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 


The starting point for this topic is determining the four types of industry and what they involve. They can be simplified to Primary, Secondary, Tertiary and Quaternary sectors, as shown below:

 

You will look closely at Heavy Industry and Footloose Industry understanding the physical and human factors that affect their development and growth. You will see how industry is located within the UK and start to think about why patterns are as they appear and how they have changed.

The Newly Industrialised Countries (NICs) have a unique relationship with Transnational Corporations (TNCs) which you will look at through a series of Case Studies in India (Ford) and South East Asia (S.Korea, Thailand & China).

- Location of Industry
-
TNCs (MNCs)
- NICs of South East Asia
- Case Studies
- Heavy Industry
- Footloose Industry
- Industrialisation

- Industrial Decline
To classify a system by input, a farm will be either Intensive or Extensive. Classification by process looks at what happens on the farm, for example Dairy, Arable, Mixed, Market Gardening or Hill Sheep Farming. Classification by output considers the purpose of the farm, for example Commercial or Subsistence.
There are many different ways to classify farms. The most common ways are to classify a farm by either its input, process or output. Before you can understand classification, you will need to look at farming as a system. This can be simplified by the diagram below:
- Farming Systems
- Types of Farming
- Classification of Farming
- Physical Factors

For this topic you will need to study farming as a system and know how appropriate technology is different for individual countries. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 








 

- EU Legislation
- Agribusiness
- Shifting Cultivation
- Case Studies
- Human Factors
- European Legislation
- The Green Revolution
-
Common Agricultural Policy
- The Rivers Long Profile
- Erosional Processes
- Transportational Processes
- Depositional Processes

For this topic you will need to study physical processes of rivers and understand how humans can influence these processes. The range of information you will cover with this topic includes:

 

 


Rivers are dynamic systems that often travel some distance from altitude to sea level. As water travels down the river, the force of the liquid impacts the rock surrounding the river. The force of the water will erode the rock in one of four ways; Hydraulic Action, Abrasion, Corrasion and Attrition.

Once the rock has been broken away from the bed and banks, it will be transported down the river towards the sea. Sediment is transported either by Traction, Saltation, Suspension or Solution depending on the size of the particles.

When a river reaches a standing body of water such as a lake or the sea, the velocity of the river is slowed down. As velocity drops, the larger particles being transported are deposited first followed by smaller particles. The further from the river mouth you travel, the finer the particles that are present. As the river travels to the sea, it will create many different landforms depending on the type of erosion present (either Vertical or Lateral).

- Storm Hydrographs
- Causes of Flooding
- Flood Management Strategies
- Case Studies
- The Water Cycle
- Upper Course Features
- Middle Course Features
- Lower Course Features

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