Ofsted publishes research review on geography

Ofsted has published the fifth in a series of reviews into different subjects across the curriculum, with the latest looking at geography education.

The review discusses the context of geography teaching and uptake in English schools. The subject has had a relatively low status in primary schools and over time there has been a gradual decline in the amount of time spent studying geography in the classroom. This contrasts with secondary schools, where the number of pupils entering geography exams has increased significantly in the past decade, according to the review. Now, almost half of key stage 4 pupils study the subject.

Like other subjects, the review notes that knowledge in geography can be organised into two forms – ‘substantive’ and ‘disciplinary’.

Disciplinary knowledge is used when pupils consider where geographical knowledge originates, and how they can learn the practices of geographers. Substantive knowledge sets out the content that pupils will learn. In geography, this has followed the split seen in the national curriculum:
locational knowledge; place knowledge; environmental, physical and human geography; geography skills and fieldwork.

A successful geography curriculum reflects teachers’ careful thinking and rationale behind what is taught, the sequencing of learning and the relationships between the forms of knowledge.

While Ofsted recognises that there is no single way of achieving a good geography education, the report identifies some common features of a high-quality curriculum. For example:, good practice is for teachers to break down curriculum content into component parts and draw from the breadth of concepts to give pupils the knowledge they need to appreciate the wider subject. When choosing curriculum content, teachers consider pupils’ prior knowledge and experiences.

Building pupils’ knowledge of locations, or ‘where’s where’, helps them build their own identity and sense of place, the review finds. Good practice also includes when pupils gain the knowledge they need to develop an increasingly complex understanding of place. This helps them make a connection between location and geographical processes and personal experience. For example, looking at their own route to school, town or city may lead to more conceptual understanding that they can draw on when looking at regional, national and global scales.

Fieldwork that includes data collection, analysis and presentation should be practiced regularly. The experience of fieldwork draws together pupils’ locational knowledge and that of human and physical processes.

In 2022, Ofsted will be publishing a report on the quality of geography curriculums taught in schools which will gather the evidence for this through subject ‘deep dives’ during inspections under the EIF.

Read the full review here.

Read more