Geography

At Olive Blackburn, our children will develop a deep knowledge of both the physical and human geography of the local environment, the UK and the wider world.  It is essential that our pupils develop a meaningful understanding of place, including the positioning of Blackburn, Lancashire in the wider world.  We will deliver a curriculum that:

  • Inspires a curiosity and fascination about the world and its people;
  • Equips children with an understanding of diverse places, people, resources and environments around them and the wider world;
  • Allows children to build on prior learning about physical and human processes and the formation and use of landscapes and environments;
  • Develops an understanding that the Earth’s physical features are interconnected and change over time;
  • Encourages exploration of their own environment and supports children to make connections between their local surroundings and that of contrasting settlements;
  • Systematically develops essential map skills on a variety of scales;

Learning begins in Reception and Year 1, where children learn the component knowledge of Blackburn and the UK, such as the names of the countries, capital cities and key human features.   In Year 6, this culminates in the development of rich geography schema, encompassing, for example, a deep understanding of South America, biomes and world trade.

Our children use a range of maps and atlases so that geography map and fieldwork skills are systematically developed.  Our geography progression map details the careful long-term curriculum sequencing of these essential skills.  For example, in Key Stage 1, our children learn to locate and compare the position of major cities and seas on a UK map using the four basic compass directions.  This culminates in Upper Key Stage 2 with children using the eight points of a compass and six-figure grid references to locate a range of human and physical features studied, such as settlement locations and river features.

Essential geographical concepts such as the features of rivers, volcano formation and factors effecting settlement location are taught by focussing on specific locations and regions.  This allows invaluable comparisons to be made between the UK and other areas of the world.

The four main strands in the National Curriculum for geography are skills and fieldwork, locational knowledge, human and physical geography, and place knowledge.  These are carefully mapped out in our geography progression map, accessible below.

Our children are given motivating and inspiring out-of-class opportunities and special experiences to embed essential learning.  This enrichment is an essential element of our geography curriculum offer.  For example:

  • Year 1 children enjoy a ‘Continents’ themed Super Learning Day;
  • Year 2 children study the human and physical features of Blackburn;
  • Year 3 children enjoy an orienteering session working on map reading skills at Brockholes.
  • Year 4 children visit Manchester Museum and learn about climate control.
  • Year 5 children enjoy a Canal and River Trust activity session/trip.
  • Year 6 children enjoy a ‘North and South America’ themed Super Learning Day.

Documents

The Olive School, Blackburn

Latest News

Olive Blackburn’s titanic trip to museum

Year 6 pupils at The Olive School, Blackburn relived an enthralling journey through the little-known aspects of the Titanic disaster to help them with their English studies.

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