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Our Geography Curriculum Book

by Clare Walsh

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Mount Carmel
Catholic School
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Our Geography Curriculum
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The Power of Learning through Geography
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'I have come so that they may have life and have it to the full.'
Mark 10:10
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Mount Carmel Values

Our aim is for every child to leave here an Ambassador of Christ.
Our values are deeply rooted in the high expectations that we have of each child in the school. Our Values permeate across the school through children's learning, friendships, behaviour and leadership.
Our values come from the Church.

C - consideration
H - helpfulness
U - unity
R - respect
C - commitment
H - honesty
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Our British Values

Our children learn about our British Values through 5 areas. These are discussed at whole school liturgies and during lunch times. We are committed to serving our community, with the strong belief that we are one school for all.
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Our Power Values

Our aim is for every child to leave with the power to make a positive change in the world. Through our subjects there are five themes that we believe are integral with teaching children how to become powerful adults.

We ensure that these themes run through our subjects. Children learn about 5 areas of power - Education, Religion, Resources, People and Legacy.
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Our aim for your child by the time they leave Mount Carmel.
By the time your child leaves Mount Carmel, in Geography they will

 develop contextual knowledge of the location of globally significant places – both terrestrial and marine – including their defining physical and human characteristics and how these provide a geographical context for understanding the actions of processes
 understand the processes that give rise to key physical and human geographical features of the world, how these are interdependent and how they bring about spatial variation and change over time
 are competent in the geographical skills
 be able to collect, analyse and communicate with a range of data gathered through experiences of fieldwork that deepen their understanding of geographical processes
 interpret a range of sources of geographical information, including maps, diagrams, globes, aerial photographs and Geographical Information Systems (GIS)
 communicate geographical information in a variety of ways, including through maps, numerical and quantitative skills and writing at length.
The Power of Learning
EYFS
Y1
Y2
Children will learn about the immediate environment, introducing and
modelling new vocabulary where appropriate.
Familiarise children with the name of the road, and or village/town/city the
school is located in.
Look at aerial views of the school setting, encouraging children to comment
on what they notice, recognising buildings, open space, roads and other
simple features.
Offer opportunities for children to choose to draw simple maps of their
immediate environment, or maps from imaginary story settings they are
familiar with.
Children will focus on Ealing. The children will develop
locational knowledge based on the view from the school and local walks. They
will build place vocabulary to define where they live, which is deepened
through fieldwork experiences and using maps.
Children will draw maps of Northfields.

The children will also use and add to a
classroom plan and practise sequencing events on a journey.
Look up children’s addresses, mark them on a map and use parents’ local
expertise and community insight. Reinforce their vocabulary through looking at photos and sketches.
Children will revise the different
continent and ocean names, and should also know where they live, as well as the
‘layers’ and ‘areas’ of the world that lie between any teaching of ‘here’
(local) and ‘there’ (beyond). They will be developing an increasing ability to recognise, visualise and locate themselves in the world at
different ‘scales’ as they refine their ideas of the world as a whole. Children
will think
of choosing alternative ‘wonders’: are they in any way representative of a
country or continent? Most aren’t especially, and may lead to stereotyping,
therefore using a range of images of one place or environment is always
important to give children a rounded view.
How Locational Knowledge is taught across the school
Y3
Y4
Y5
Y6
Children will begin to understand the
Earth better as a sphere, learning to rotate it mentally in 3-D. They will
explore its representation in 2-D maps, and learn about the imaginary lines
used (Equator, latitude, longitude, tropics and the International Date Line) to
pinpoint global locations.
The children, inspired by Johnny Cash singing ‘I’ve been everywhere’, travel the North and South American continents, and distinguish between the terms ‘continent’, ‘region’, ‘country’, ‘state’ and ‘city’ along the journey. Children will make notes on cities and record their countries and/or states. They will compare the built environments and settings of the cities and, through them, identify some key regions of the American continents.
Children will find out about the regions
of the UK, discovering how some of these areas have changed over time. The
children will research how specific areas of the UK have been affected by
change, before conducting a fieldwork activity in Ealing.
Children will be able to look at developments over time to predict what changes may happen in Ealing in the future.
As the children move towards the end of
their primary school careers and prepare to move to secondary schools, they
will consider the past, present and future of their local area. They will learn
to see change as positive and to feel optimistic about the changes that lie
ahead. They will work on the vision of Ealing
and what it will look like in 25 years time.
The Power of Learning
EYFS
Y1
Y2
Children will learn about places in the world that contrast with locations they
know well.
Use relevant, specific vocabulary to describe contrasting locations.
Use images, video clips, shared texts and other resources to bring the wider
world into the classroom. Listen to what children say about what they see.
Avoid stereotyping and explain how children’s lives in other countries may be
similar or different in terms of how they travel to school, what they eat, where they live, and so on.
Children will take four different world
journeys. Starting with their local area, they then look at coastal,
rainforest, dry (desert) and world city locations. Virtual and imagined
journeys are important for children to
look for similarities and contrasts? Children will learn to balance images and specific case study
examples, even within a lesson, allows children for challenges against
stereotypes and misconceptions.
Children will be able to link the
everyday experience of buying and eating food within the UK with the children’s
growing geographical understanding of the world. Children will visit local
shops. This will begin to show the connections between what we
buy, where it comes from locally and how it might be able to be sourced from
the UK (and beyond).
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