Geography is the study of where places are found, what they are like and the relationships between people and their environments.
Our Geography Curriculum
Children in Early Years will be given opportunities to make sense of their world, through exploring, observing and finding out about people, places and the environment.
Geography is planned sequentially and cumulatively from Years 1-6. Geography is currently taught across three blocks throughout the year, every other half-term and is taught using the CUSP curriculum. As well as delivering the subject content of geography, the curriculum also makes links with other subjects, helping our children to acquire and develop the skills and confidence to undertake geographical enquiry, problem-solving and decision-making in context.
Our Geography curriculum ensures that pupils will:
- Have a thorough understanding of their local area and its place in the world.
- Show understanding of other cultures and demonstrate respect for their global environment.
- Have great locational knowledge.
- Develop great geographical skills, including how to use, draw and interpret maps.
- Describe key aspects of human and physical geography.
CUSP Geography fulfils and goes well beyond the expectations of the National Curriculum as we believe there is no ceiling to what pupils can learn.
A guiding principle of CUSP Geography is that each study draws upon prior learning High volume and deliberate practice are essential for pupils to remember and retrieve substantive knowledge and use their disciplinary knowledge to explain and articulate what they know. This means pupils make conscious connections and think hard, using what they know.
CUSP Geography is built around the principles of cumulative knowledge focusing on spaces, places, scale, human and physical processes with an emphasis on how content is connected, and relational knowledge acquired. An example of this is the identification of continents, such as Europe, and its relationship to the location of the UK.