The electronic version is available to download from the GA WEBSITE, and the hard copy should be arriving though your letter box shortly - mine just arrived !
It's another packed issue which includes:
- A first President's spot from President for 2010-11 John Hopkin
- A key article on Why School Geography matters
- Details of our new CafePress merchandise store
- Information on how to lobby your MP about why school geography matters
- A booking form for GA Conference 2011, and details of other CPD events
- A report on the 2010 Worldwise Challenge
- News on the purchase of 160 Solly St
- A briefing on the GA's Special Interest Groups
- The printed introduction to the NQT Survival Kit
- Usual features including GA Online, Webwatch and Meanderings
- 3 pictures of me :)
Monday, 6 September 2010
NQT Survival Kit now 'live' on the GA website
Welcome back to the new academic year !
I hope the first day is going well. My daughter started secondary school today, and my son a new primary school, so my educational adventure continues over 40 years since I first passed through the doors of my own first school: Northfield Lane Infants School, Wickersley.
For those starting school as a teacher for the first time, the GA has produced a new resource: an NQT SURVIVAL KIT.
If you know an NQT, please direct them to this resource: a lot of it is not 100% geography specific: it's just solid advice...
This is not a 'completed resource'. We would really appreciate any updates for the resource - send us your experiences, thoughts, ideas and tips for fellow colleagues who are starting out on their professional journey.
I hope the first day is going well. My daughter started secondary school today, and my son a new primary school, so my educational adventure continues over 40 years since I first passed through the doors of my own first school: Northfield Lane Infants School, Wickersley.
For those starting school as a teacher for the first time, the GA has produced a new resource: an NQT SURVIVAL KIT.
If you know an NQT, please direct them to this resource: a lot of it is not 100% geography specific: it's just solid advice...
This is not a 'completed resource'. We would really appreciate any updates for the resource - send us your experiences, thoughts, ideas and tips for fellow colleagues who are starting out on their professional journey.
Labels:
Geographical Association,
NQT Survival Kit
Sunday, 5 September 2010
Major earthquake in New Zealand
Image by Flickr user Ann (Helen) Deveraux and kindly made available under Creative Commons
A summer of natural disasters in various locations was further added to by events in Christchurch, New Zealand in the early hours of September the 4th.
A 7.1 magnitude quake struck a few miles outside the city at 4.35am
A great deal of damage was done to buildings in the area, and disruption is set to continue for some time, as people's lives have been shaken, and turned upside down. Services are disrupted, roads are shattered, and
There was the usual surge of 'citizen journalism' to add to the official media. I learnt more about the earthquake (and sooner) using the former than the latter.
The advent of Twitter also created another opportunity for immediate access to personal stories. Hashtags such as #christchurch and #nzquake offered a glimpse into people's lives, and some of my Twitter followers provided useful links and updates.
A useful article in the New Zealand Herald provided some background information and a few images. There are also links to some very useful videos.
As with the Boscastle floods, this could become a really useful case study for impact and regeneration, with the added bonus that there were no fatalities, something that was picked up in this excellent Telegraph article by Geoffrey Lean.
The SCI NEW ZEALAND blog has some great mapping resources for the area which were produced by Chris McDowall - this is also a good tip off to some other visualisation resources. The maps provide a great introduction to the science of visualisation.
Update: Over 100 000 homes were apparently damaged by the quake, and many are beyond repair.
A summer of natural disasters in various locations was further added to by events in Christchurch, New Zealand in the early hours of September the 4th.
A 7.1 magnitude quake struck a few miles outside the city at 4.35am
A great deal of damage was done to buildings in the area, and disruption is set to continue for some time, as people's lives have been shaken, and turned upside down. Services are disrupted, roads are shattered, and
There was the usual surge of 'citizen journalism' to add to the official media. I learnt more about the earthquake (and sooner) using the former than the latter.
The advent of Twitter also created another opportunity for immediate access to personal stories. Hashtags such as #christchurch and #nzquake offered a glimpse into people's lives, and some of my Twitter followers provided useful links and updates.
A useful article in the New Zealand Herald provided some background information and a few images. There are also links to some very useful videos.
As with the Boscastle floods, this could become a really useful case study for impact and regeneration, with the added bonus that there were no fatalities, something that was picked up in this excellent Telegraph article by Geoffrey Lean.
The SCI NEW ZEALAND blog has some great mapping resources for the area which were produced by Chris McDowall - this is also a good tip off to some other visualisation resources. The maps provide a great introduction to the science of visualisation.
Update: Over 100 000 homes were apparently damaged by the quake, and many are beyond repair.
Reef
The rock reefs at Sea Palling were something I visited the other day on my trip to Happisburgh.
There is a great image here by Andrew Stacey taken from the top of the church tower in the village.
This article in the Eastern Daily Press recently reported on the apparent success of these structures over the
Happisburgh has also been in the local news thanks to a visit by Richard Benyon: the Environment Minister.
The website now has almost 5000 signatures in a petition asking for protection from the sea.
Residents should hear next week (or soon after) whether they have been granted some compensation of a percentage of the market value of their homes in recompense for the effect that the erosion has had in blighting the value of their properties...
Happisburgh has also been in the local news thanks to a visit by Richard Benyon: the Environment Minister.
The website now has almost 5000 signatures in a petition asking for protection from the sea.
Residents should hear next week (or soon after) whether they have been granted some compensation of a percentage of the market value of their homes in recompense for the effect that the erosion has had in blighting the value of their properties...
Labels:
Coastal Erosion,
Happisburgh
Stephen Fry on Norfolk
In the EDP's "Norfolk" magazine, September 2010
"...I grew up there so it has that special hold that home always will have.... but the coastline, people, atmosphere and Norfolkness of Norfolk is something that gets into your blood..."
On Norwich: "It has a fantastic and historic urban fabric, a glorious rural hinterland and an unparalleled coastline..."
"...I grew up there so it has that special hold that home always will have.... but the coastline, people, atmosphere and Norfolkness of Norfolk is something that gets into your blood..."
On Norwich: "It has a fantastic and historic urban fabric, a glorious rural hinterland and an unparalleled coastline..."
Labels:
Norfolk,
Stephen Fry
The Power of GIS
A useful video for showing the benefits of GIS for industry and giving a detailed look at some of the technologies that could give the UK an advantage in the world economy, and also provide lots of potential jobs for today's school leavers at a time when there is a lot of competition for employment.
It provides some good examples of industries which are currently using GIS...
"What GIS does is, it translates the whole technological revolution that's just happening before our very eyes to something that we can touch and feel: that's around us every day - familiarity is the key word."
Digby Lord Jones
Booking is now open for our 10, 2 day GIS courses being run in association with ESRI UK, using their DIGITAL WORLDS software. Visit the GA website for more details, and to make a booking.
It provides some good examples of industries which are currently using GIS...
"What GIS does is, it translates the whole technological revolution that's just happening before our very eyes to something that we can touch and feel: that's around us every day - familiarity is the key word."
Digby Lord Jones
Booking is now open for our 10, 2 day GIS courses being run in association with ESRI UK, using their DIGITAL WORLDS software. Visit the GA website for more details, and to make a booking.
Labels:
ESRI GIS Courses,
ESRI UK
David Lambert in the TES
Just caught up with the publication of a piece by Professor David Lambert in the TES, published on the 27th of August, while I was away on holiday. I saw the original piece, and haven't checked yet for any possible editing of the piece for publication. It was titled "Crack curriculum's core and open a world of opportunity"
If politicians want more focus on knowledge, subject teachers should decide what is crucial
The Government appears determined to reform the school curriculum again. This is something that some teachers may resist - it will appear as yet more change, when not enough time has been allowed for the last alterations to settle. And because of the return to "knowledge" as opposed to "skills", changes could be accompanied by much Gradgrind-sounding rhetoric about facts and old-fashioned subjects.
It could sound like a rush to restore a golden age of subjects past, and undo the curriculum reforms of the last government. However, if we can just stop dodging the imagined swinging pendulum for one minute, perhaps we can see a more progressive future, which is in teachers' hands. Teachers should seize this chance to get stuck into the knowledge question rather than collectively avoid it, which has in some ways been the story of recent times.
The professional language invented over the past 10 years is the language of pedagogy. This is no bad thing in itself, of course, but pedagogy has become so dominant that it is now confused with its apparently weaker cousin: curriculum. But it is the curriculum that teachers need to engage with.
At present, the subject curriculum is often referred to as the vehicle to "deliver" transferrable skills. This is wrong. It is pedagogy - the skills of doing and thinking - that is the vehicle. The curriculum is about the destination, the aims and goals, and is therefore a matter of serious moral deliberation.
Skills, on the other hand, are said to be value-free. But what shall we teach and how do we justify this? These are the important questions and they ought to be informed by what we think young people need to know.
The curriculum, like pedagogy, is about choices. It is, therefore, a part of what we have come to know as "professional judgment".
In the case of curriculum, the choices concern the selections of knowledge we try to teach. We make these selections according to principles we value, governed by our sense of educational purpose.
A curriculum shaped by whim, the topics in the news and contemporary themes of "relevance" - or, worse still, policy imperatives laid down by the Government - is likely to be incoherent, shallow and like junk food: deeply unsatisfying after the initial fat and sugar rush.
So this is why the subject disciplines matter. Geography is a good case in point. It is an ancient human fascination: its big idea is to try to make sense of ourselves at home on planet Earth. Mapping the world was, and is, fundamental. Today the project is augmented by all kinds of technologies including geographical information systems. But it is useful to consider for one moment what it means to know a bit of geography.
This is particularly important because these days, thanks to the internet and Google Earth, sat-nav and mobile phones, everyone knows some geography. Furthermore, we all have a geographical existence: we live somewhere, shop somewhere and have relatives and friends dotted around the globe.
This realisation has encouraged a lot of interest in "everyday geographies" - but again, let us pause for thought. Is our interest in everyday geographies curriculum-based or is it more a matter of pedagogy? Every teacher knows the strengths of working from the known and what is familiar to children - this is sound pedagogy. But in curriculum terms it is a betrayal not to move to the unknown and unfamiliar. Curriculum goals must be in the driving seat.
Part of the unknown for most young people consists of what is sometimes called "core knowledge", a component of our cultural literacy. This includes locational knowledge - also known as geographical facts, or what the Geographical Association's manifesto refers to as the subject's "vocabulary".
It is important to embrace this in school because this knowledge is not easily developed in everyday life. And yet, it is knowledge that helps make sense of information encountered in everyday life. It helps us function in society. If there is a move to identify subject essentials, or core knowledge, let us engage with it at face value. Instead of shrinking from the curriculum debate, it is time for teachers to take back intellectual responsibility for their work.
- The Geographical Association manifesto is at: www.geography.org.uk/adifferentview
HOW DOES 'CORE KNOWLEDGE' FIT IN GEOGRAPHY?
The good news is that absolutely necessary core knowledge is not a large component of the geography curriculum. It can be taught via the regular use of atlases, occasional quizzes and other enjoyable and simple devices that form part of the repertoire of careful teaching.
It can be thought of as the extensive knowledge base upon which more intensive geographical case studies and inquiries can acquire deeper contextual meaning. To illustrate: can we really expect to be able to engage with global climate change meaningfully, without a mental framework that would include naming the oceans and some of the world's ocean currents? Without such knowledge, we are literally disabled to some degree.
We can incorporate it, as many careful geography teachers already do, into the broader geography curriculum. Geographical vocabulary is powerful, but so, too, is its grammar or syntax captured by its key ideas such as place, space and environment.
A person growing up in the 21st century as a global citizen (and all that implies) is at a disadvantage without geographical knowledge - economically, culturally and politically. How can we make any of the personal decisions that already confront us every day about energy, food and water security without geographical knowledge?
Understanding geographical perspectives contributes to our capabilities as educated individuals and members of society.
Professor David Lambert, Chief executive of the Geographical Association
Juxio
Many thanks to @Ianinsheffield for the tip-off to JUXIO
This is an iPhone app which offers " a new way to communicate ".
There are some video TUTORIALS to explain how to create your "Jux"... plus an FAQ section.
Will follow this up in the next few weeks when I get a moment...
This is an iPhone app which offers " a new way to communicate ".
There are some video TUTORIALS to explain how to create your "Jux"... plus an FAQ section.
Will follow this up in the next few weeks when I get a moment...
Labels:
iPhone Apps,
Juxio
Some holiday reading...
A selection of blog posts and other things I've read in the last few weeks of summer... placed here so that I can remember them and clear out a few e-mails... I suppose I should add them to delicious too...
- Goodbye Dubai - article from New York Times on the decline of the "rise of Dubai" and what comes next ?
- Bill Boyd on whether school is dying...
- Some ideas for DIGITAL STORYTELLING on the iPad.
- Mythogeoography's PHOTOS with added Doreen Massey
- Videos from Trek Australia - hundreds of videos
Also read Travis Elborough's "Wish you were Here", and parts of the Rough Guide to Iceland...
Labels:
Digital storytelling,
Dubai,
iPad in Education
Hipstamatic
I've been a bit "obsessed" with the Hipstamatic iPhone app at the moment...
Sorry for clogging up my Flickr stream with these processed images, but often it adds a bit of "magic" to what might otherwise be a fairly bland image (not that I take many of those of course...)
Here are some from my recent trip to the Yorkshire Coast...
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Sorry for clogging up my Flickr stream with these processed images, but often it adds a bit of "magic" to what might otherwise be a fairly bland image (not that I take many of those of course...)
Here are some from my recent trip to the Yorkshire Coast...
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Labels:
Hipstamatic,
Images
Happy new year !
So it's back to school time...
For twenty years, right about now I was beginning to get that feeling that I used to get when I was younger and we were going to go on holiday the day after... a sort of anxious but excited feeling. I seldom had a very good night's sleep the day before the start of term, but as soon as I was in (and I was always in school very early every day to get things sorted)
My 3rd year working for the Geographical Association (where have the previous two gone ?) is about to begin...
A few things are making me particularly happy this new year.
The first is the nature of my job, which continues to throw up new challenges and opportunities. Culturally, there are a couple of new things too..
The first is the arrival of new RUSH music: the single CARAVAN and BU2B have some great instrumental sections and bode well for the forthcoming album. Caravan has some good lyrics, notably:
In a world where I feel so small
I can’t stop thinking big
The second cultural thing in my life is the return of MAD MEN: on BBC4 on Wednesday... the best thing on the telly by far...
For twenty years, right about now I was beginning to get that feeling that I used to get when I was younger and we were going to go on holiday the day after... a sort of anxious but excited feeling. I seldom had a very good night's sleep the day before the start of term, but as soon as I was in (and I was always in school very early every day to get things sorted)
My 3rd year working for the Geographical Association (where have the previous two gone ?) is about to begin...
A few things are making me particularly happy this new year.
The first is the nature of my job, which continues to throw up new challenges and opportunities. Culturally, there are a couple of new things too..
The first is the arrival of new RUSH music: the single CARAVAN and BU2B have some great instrumental sections and bode well for the forthcoming album. Caravan has some good lyrics, notably:
In a world where I feel so small
I can’t stop thinking big
The second cultural thing in my life is the return of MAD MEN: on BBC4 on Wednesday... the best thing on the telly by far...
Labels:
Cultural Geography
SAGT Flickr Group
Have blogged about this resource before, but worth flagging up again as there have been lots of new additions...
The SAGT FLICKR group page contains a huge range of images that would be particularly useful for those teaching physical geography, collated by Val Vannet.
Image by Val Vannet
Recently added are a lot of images on Rocinha and Northumberland, and also the landscape close to the Eyjafjallajokull volcano in Iceland.
Go and pay a visit, you'll be like a kid in a sweet-shop :)
The SAGT FLICKR group page contains a huge range of images that would be particularly useful for those teaching physical geography, collated by Val Vannet.
Image by Val Vannet
Recently added are a lot of images on Rocinha and Northumberland, and also the landscape close to the Eyjafjallajokull volcano in Iceland.
Go and pay a visit, you'll be like a kid in a sweet-shop :)
Labels:
SAGT Flickr,
Val Vannet
Qilroy is here...
A new service launched last week called Qilroy.
According to Mike Bailey from Qilroy:
According to Mike Bailey from Qilroy:
It is a reference to the graffiti expression "Kilroy Was Here"
The Qilroy service let’s you discover people around you or at any interesting place in the world…and then interact with them. Qilroy harnesses the phenomenon of people who now publicize their location and then figures out a way to connect with them. You can type in any place in the world into the LOCATION box and see who is there now…and then send them a message.
For example, I could type in Shanghai or London (both listed on our hot spots), and then see who is there NOW and what they are saying and start a conversation if I choose.
If you have time, please check it out. You can explore without logging in and when you want to POST or REPLY you can login with Facebook or Twitter or set up your own Qilroy account.
Labels:
Geolocation,
Qilroy
Eco art
A friend of mine has a solo exhibition at a gallery in Amsterdam later this month.
Linda's art is made from recycled materials and inspired by nature and the environment.
If you happen to be in Amsterdam, the show details are:
23rd September 2010
Amsterdamse Medische Centrum
Update: Show has been on, but there is now a new WEBSITE to visit
Linda's art is made from recycled materials and inspired by nature and the environment.
If you happen to be in Amsterdam, the show details are:
23rd September 2010
Amsterdamse Medische Centrum
Update: Show has been on, but there is now a new WEBSITE to visit
Labels:
Recycling
Helium - a problem we shouldn't be making light of ?
Most GCSE specifications include a section on RESOURCES, and the social, economic and environmental impacts of their extraction.
An article in the Daily Mail recently revealed a possible new resource case study focus....
Party balloons are filled with helium, and cannisters can be bought from many high street card shops.
Apparently there is a relatively small amount of the gas left, and because it's inert, it's difficult to make any more of it. This wouldn't be a problem if the only thing we'd lose were those helium balloons which it seems to have become the fashion to bring into school and have waving around in classrooms when it's someone's birthday (or maybe that was just the school where I taught ?)
However, helium is also apparently required for MRI SCANS and other more important uses.
This might be an interesting area to research further as a possible new case study.
What other 'alternative' resource case studies are there that might replace the open cast coal mine or the Trans-Alaskan oil pipeline...
However, helium is also apparently required for MRI SCANS and other more important uses.
This might be an interesting area to research further as a possible new case study.
What other 'alternative' resource case studies are there that might replace the open cast coal mine or the Trans-Alaskan oil pipeline...
Labels:
Curriculum Making,
GCSE,
Resources
Saturday, 4 September 2010
Keeping a city provisioned...
A great post at the URBAN OMNIBUS blog on the issue of keeping cities "fed"... and various food "footprints" along with some intriguing maps.
There are some nice graphics, and a good quote by George Dodd:
“The supply of food to a great city is among the most remarkable of social phenomena, full of instruction on all sides.”
There are some nice graphics, and a good quote by George Dodd:
“The supply of food to a great city is among the most remarkable of social phenomena, full of instruction on all sides.”
Labels:
Food,
Geography of Food
As seen on Google Street View
Coming along the A17 near Sutton Bridge yesterday I saw the Google Street View car...
Will be checking the next update to see if I spot myself...
Have you seen the car ? Where were you ? Are you on Street View ?
Will be checking the next update to see if I spot myself...
Have you seen the car ? Where were you ? Are you on Street View ?
Labels:
Google Streetview
...and we're back in the room....
Image by Alan Parkinson
Back at my desk this evening after a week away and have spent most of the day going through e-mails to get back "up to speed". A nice pottering day tomorrow of uploading photos to my FLICKR account and setting out some reminders for the coming couple of months.
Between now and the end of October I have the following things to look forward to (in addition to the usual stuff that I have to do as well):
Back at my desk this evening after a week away and have spent most of the day going through e-mails to get back "up to speed". A nice pottering day tomorrow of uploading photos to my FLICKR account and setting out some reminders for the coming couple of months.
Between now and the end of October I have the following things to look forward to (in addition to the usual stuff that I have to do as well):
- Starting out on a major writing task creating teacher guides for a new KS3 textbook series
- Entering details of hundreds of teachers into database as part of Action Plan for Geography
- Creating new content and refreshing the Young People's Geographies website (and catching up with teachers from Phase 4)
- Meeting with the rest of the Geography Collective following the launch of our Mission:Explore iPhone app to discuss the next few editions of the Mission:Explore book
- Guest blogging at the W3G Conference in Stratford upon Avon
- Writing project bids for a few possible future projects
- Working with teachers in Bristol, Sheffield, Sussex, London, Gloucestershire and Brighton
- Kick-starting the new GA Wimbledon branch programme, and lecturing at Cambridge University
- Attending the Engaging Geographies session in Manchester, organised by Kye Askins and colleagues
- Leading 2 seminars at the Scottish Association of Geography Teachers' conference at Hutcheson's School, Glasgow
- Kicking off the first of 20 proposed ESRI / GA GIS sessions around the country
- Planning NQT conferences for 2011
- Going to Iceland !!
Better get a good night's sleep tonight then...
All of the above will be blogged here of course....
Also, while I was away it was the 11th birthday of the SLN Geography Forum, without which I wouldn't be the geographer I am today... Happy Birthday to the forum and all members old and new...
Also, while I was away it was the 11th birthday of the SLN Geography Forum, without which I wouldn't be the geographer I am today... Happy Birthday to the forum and all members old and new...
Labels:
Geographical Association
Climate Week 2011
This is going to take place in March 2011.
The website will be launching shortly.
Keep an eye out for some related resources on a website near you !!
A few more details that I have been given so far...
Climate Week will be a new national occasion involving thousands of events profiling solutions that help to prevent climate change. It will include the largest ever live environmental competition (designed especially for schools and colleges) and the Climate Week Awards for exemplary action on climate change.
Climate Week is endorsed by the former UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, former US Vice President, Al Gore and the Prime Minister, David Cameron, amongst others. It will run from 21-27 March 2011 with a UK focus and internationally in future years.
We are not a campaign that informs people what to do, but instead are the body that will shine a spotlight on those already doing amazing things.Therefore, Climate Week will consist of thousands of events happening across the UK to showcase solutions to prevent climate change, and in turn inspire others to do the same.
Labels:
Climate Change,
Climate Week
Dunwich
Dunwich used to be a very important port on the Suffolk coast.
A useful looking website...
A useful looking website...
Labels:
Coastal Erosion
I just planted a tree...
..thanks to the a real tree app....
Buying the app means that a tree is planted in one of the areas supported the originators of the app....
Plastiki at the RGS-IBG
October is shaping up to be a very busy month and have already been pulled in various directions by events that I am going to be attending, sometimes having days when I have more than one possible event to go to.
One of those days is October 13th, when there are other events that I would like to have attended in addition to the one that I'm actually attending (in Manchester)
At the RGS-IBG in the evening, David de Rothschild will talk about his PLASTIKI expedition, which we followed here on Living Geography (and via the Twitter feed and website of the expedition)
Order your ticket soon...
Order your ticket soon...
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