Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Merry Christmas to all my readers... How far will your turkey travel ?

This will be the last post for a week or so.
Just finishing off the last Pilot lesson before the Christmas break by doing some Simpsons related follow up, and also uploading presentations to my Slideshare page from the lesson on "10 Images of the UK" task.

Also been reading about the new PERSONAL RAPID TRANSIT system which is going to be installed at Heathrow airport for the opening of the new terminal. The route is shown on the map below - they look and sound excellent, and I look forward to seeing these in lots of places over the next decade (maybe...)Source: Advanced Transport Systems Ltd

As part of this last post, I need to draw your attention to a few interesting stories on the BBC News page related to PEOPLE AS CONSUMERS unit.

The CARBON COST of Christmas Food looks at FOOD MILES.
Try the SUSTAINABLE FOOD quiz.

The Soil Association takes up this theme, and also has some materials looking ahead to the OLYMPICS and the food that is produced for the competitors and spectators. You can download a report on this theme with a nice olympic ring themed logo...

BBC NEWS 24 is having about a MAD ABOUT FOOD season where they are featuring reports about food issues.
One very useful resource is a Nielsen report on ETHICAL SHOPPING.
Also worth reading a fascinating photo story on how JAPAN is having problems feeding itself owing to its reliance on exports and the growing cost of food production, partly related to the biofuels issue.

So, have a very happy holiday and see you in 2008 !
Image under Creative Commons License from FLICKR user riptheskull

Monday, December 17, 2007

A Multicultural Christmas

Think of a 'typical' Christmas scene...
Family gathered around the table. Presents have been unwrapped, a decorated tree in the corner, a fire in the grate, the Queen's speech has just been on, and the turkey is about to be carved. There are christmas cards hanging on strings, and everyone is wearing a paper crown.

Does that describe your Christmas ?
Where did these customs come from that have combined to produce this cultural phenomenon ?
How English / British is Christmas ?

A useful Daily Telegraph article on how to escape the BRITISH CHRISTMAS.

Remember that there are actually a whole host of alternative Christmases. It is, after all, just another day, and in 9 days time, it'll be a year until Christmas.

Some people will be homeless.

CRISIS at Christmas supports people who find themselves homeless at Christmas.

In the 6th form each year, there is a collection of sugar: SILVER SPOON is best as any donations are then matched by British Sugar, for Crisis at Christmas and to help their work in the centres that they open in a number of cities over Christmas.

Upside down Christmas Tree: save space in your house this Christmas (available from B&Q and other retailers) This is a new designer idea which was featured in the paper this year, although I don't actually know anyone who has one. It seems to have originated in the USA.

Presents: largely manufactured in Chinese factories
What are this year's MUST HAVE toys ?

This site has been set up by a group of Americans who are wanting to 'keep their Children safe'...presumably following a range of toy recalls by Mattel. What do you think about the politics of such a site ? What alternatives are being suggested ? How do we know that these are any 'safer' ?

Food
We're all familiar with the ideas of FOOD MILES. How far did your Christmas dinner travel ? (this is a seminal BBC article, which suggests a total distance of 30 000 miles)[;9

Why not carry out the BBCs SUSTAINABLE SHOPPING quiz. How many will you score ? I didn't do very well...

Music / Films / TV

A diet of Disney and Hollywood...

The Christmas Story - didn't happen in Slough did it..

Think about how many people actually have something completely unlike your Christmas: the billions in India and China, or on the beaches of Australia, or in the rural areas of Africa.
So your Christmas is atypical....

Merry Winterval !

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Publication date is arriving soon...

You need to be getting your Transport magazines ready for publication if you are in Year 11.
We need to have them ready for Christmas so that we can spend some time marking them and suggesting what additional things need adding before we then spend the next 3 months or so on our final piece of work on CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY (check out the Culture Blog which is already up and running...)

Friday, December 14, 2007

Simpsons in the UK

Today, we explored the cultural references that were included in the episode of the Simpsons where they visited the UK
We spotted about 40 or more cultural references to people, films, food, daily life, language (spelling color with a 'u')

We also discussed why it was called the Regina Monologues, but we won't go into that here, it's a family blog....
Don't forget WIKIPEDIA for more information too on this episode...

Also looked at the BBC NEWSROUND story from the time that the episode was first shown, where it was suggested that David Beckham was not famous enough. Would that change now that he plays for LA Galaxy ?

And if you want to make your own SIMPSONS AVATAR or CHARACTER, you can visit the SIMPSONS MOVIE site. Here is an image of me as a Simpsons character:
Why not make you ?
The SIMPSONS CRAZY site features a large selection of Screenshots (as they do for each Simpsons episode), which is a great resource for teachers who want to produce worksheets related to particular episodes that they might use.

Don't forget the Simpsons page of GEOGRAPHYPAGES too.

What if the SIMPSONS were to visit King's Lynn ? Where would we take them ? What could they take part in ?

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Are you British ?

Thanks to Tony Cassidy for passing on his BRITISHNESS resources, which we used some of today.
First of all was the introduction which has a series of images in a quiz similar to the 10 images powerpoint that we sourced for the UK in our powerpoints. There were then 10 questions from the Citizenship test which is set to people wishing to become British citizens (or is it subjects ?)

Next lesson we will be looking at the Simpsons visit to the UK...

Mrs. Clarke's group's work


Mrs. Clarke is away today.
Here is the work that you need to do today.
Read the post below...

It's about King's Lynn.
You need to start to research information about YOUR PLACE, which is King's Lynn

You are going to be making a presentation about your town.

This assumes that you have already researched your 10 IMAGES OF ENGLAND work.

If not, read this:

What we are going to do is collate the images that you come up with to provide 10 images which best represent ENGLAND or the UK...

What about my own Top 10 ? Well, it would have to include Fish and Chips (Wikipedia image below was taken in Hunstanton - spooky!)I'd also want to include something from Yorkshire, a pint of ale - Tim Taylor's Landlord for preference, sitting on Scarborough beach in a deckchair on a cold Bank Holiday perhaps...
What are your images of 'My Place' ? Why not add a comment below and explore the ICONS site for more.
Remember that the images don't have to be pictures. They could be:
  • the first lines of poems
  • the titles of books
  • songs
  • films
  • plants or flowers
  • sounds: leather on willow anyone ?
  • smells: freshly cut grass ?
  • items of clothing
  • seasonal events in the calendar
  • festivals or annual activities e.g. cheese rolling...
Make a powerpoint, which shows each image for 10 seconds and then fades to the next image. You need to find 10 suitable images of England or the UK. Use the various IMAGE SEARCH sites.

Monday, December 10, 2007

30 000 and counting

My visitor map tells me that we've had over 30 000 visitors now to the blog in the last 13 months. Thanks to all the visitors. If you're visiting us from somewhere exotic i.e. outside Norfolk, please leave a comment on a post to say hello....

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Stuff....

We inhabit a material culture. We are surrounded by 'stuff'...
This stuff adds up to a huge cost. Every year, there is the latest 'must have' gadget

Thanks to Helen Nurton from SLN Forum for telling me about the STORY OF STUFF, which is the latest product of Free Range Studios (you may know them from such interactive web based resources as 'The Meatrix' and 'Store Wars'...)

The resource is immediately engaging (it was to me anyway, but then I'm easily pleased...) and follows the cycle from EXTRACTION to DISPOSAL before suggesting an alternative way.
Download the ANNOTATED script for loads of weblinks.
An excellent piece of work.

Watch it !

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Into the Dragon's Den

Image: Copyright BBC

Dragon's Den is a BBC2 series which gives entrepreneurs the chance to pitch for some new finance from 5 'dragons', who are all successful business people.

This week, one of the business was a company called JPM ECO LOGISTICS, which was pitching itself as an eco-friendly haulage firm, using 100% biofuels and recycled vehicles.
The pitch can be seen again on THIS PAGE.

And the result of the pitch ?
Visit the website to find out !!

Thanks to virtual colleague Pete Flaxman from Essex for the tip-off....

Monday, December 03, 2007

Christmas Connections

Christmas Trees
Every year, for the last 61 years, a tree has been donated to London by the city of Oslo, Norway as a thankyou for the assistance given during the 2nd World War.
THIS SITE gives the details. Bergen gives a tree to Newcastle, and Stavanger gives one to Sunderland.

Recycling the tree

The tree will stay in Trafalgar Square until 4 January, just before the Twelfth Night of Christmas, when it will be taken down for recycling. The tree is chipped and composted, to make mulch.

Turkeys

We will eat over 10 million turkeys this Christmas

A fun site has been launched at UK TURKEYS. Some colouring in pictures for you to pass the time, and also some great jokes..

Q. Why was the turkey sent to the headmaster ?

A. Because he used some fowl language...

The site has a map for you to find your nearest turkey producer to cut down on the food miles. Gobble Gobble....


Sunday, December 02, 2007

Cyclone Sidr Resources


BANGLADESH - Cyclone Sidr Resources

Tony Cassidy spent the October half term of this year in Bangladesh.
As part of his travels, he was asked to create a resource.
The week after he arrived back in England, CYCLONE SIDR hit Bangladesh: the worst cyclone since 1991.

Details of the CYCLONE can be seen on the BBC NEWS site, and there is a very detailed article from the DAILY TELEGRAPH here.


Lesson Ideas Resources
1 Rationale- why study this event?Formation of the Cyclone Sidr.

Cyclone protection in Bangladesh.

PowerPoint with linked video and embedded animation.Student worksheet about the formation of the cyclone.
2 Causes, Impacts & Responses. PowerPoint introducing classification task.Student worksheet-classification task.
3 How quickly will Bangladesh cover? PowerPoint comparing development statistics of the U.K. and Bangladesh.Student response worksheet.
4,5,6 Levelled assessment. Students to produce a PowerPoint storyboard about the cyclone for B.B.C. news 24.Task worksheet.

Assessment criteria.

Outline PowerPoint.


The resources are a hefty 26Mb download.

If you use the resources, please make a donation to the OXFAM DISASTER RELIEF FUND. Click the link below, or the logo at the top of this post.

OXFAM DISASTER RELIEF FUND

Saturday, December 01, 2007

Arctic Sea Ice

If you have Google Earth, you can now see an animation of the melting ice in the Arctic.

Visit GOOGLE EARTH BLOG to get the KML file.

Traffic and Shopping

Two of our topics combined this weekend in London People as Consumers and Sustainable Transport.
As an attempt to overcome the usual depression associated with BLACK SATURDAY, the first Saturday in December, when people generally worry about how much Christmas is going to cost.
BBC NEWS article for detail

This year, Regent St., Oxford St. and Bond St. were all closed to traffic for the day.

It was expected that over 1 million shoppers would visit the area today.

Should the area be permanently pedestrianised ?

Friday, November 30, 2007

King's Lynn

Image above from Norfolk Coast.co.uk

We're sat in King's Lynn in Norfolk at the moment.
What is this place like ?
Have you ever been to King's Lynn ? What were your experiences of the place - positive / negative / ambiguous ?
What sort of images would you have of the place ? Here are some of mine:

  • the view down King Street from Tuesday Market Place towards the Customs House
  • the Mart - annual fair which arrives in February
  • the Samphire man - the horse and cart may be gone, but he's still to be found
  • a pint of ale in the wood panelled front bar of the Tudor Rose Hotel
  • the markings in the entrance to St. Margaret's church showing the levels of previous floods.
Websites give an impression of the place perhaps. What images are featured ?

Borough Council of King's Lynn and West Norfolk : 3 smiley faces, the Great Ouse and a cottage by a village pond
About Britain: Customs House, King John Cup, Greyfriars Tower, Morris Dancing, the Mart
The Lynn News: the twice weekly local paper - plenty on the forthcoming FA Cup tie of 'The Linnets' against Oldham
Bryan Howling's Tour of the town. Useful images.
Can your recommend any other sites on the town ? (Don't forget FLICKR if looking at home)
Joe Bridge: nice images.
And don't forget the award-winning multi-storey car park.

My Place Introduction for Year 10s

OK, today we thought about some images of the UK / England.

What are the differences between the United Kingdom, Great Britain and the British Isles.

OK, so today we were exploring the images that represent 'My Place': starting off with "Images of England (or Britain), then Images of East Anglia (or Norfolk) then Images of King's Lynn.
MY PLACE involves 4 of the 5 themes (FUGIS above)

There were some good ideas coming through, and we produced a Top 10 for the group of the images we thought best represent our place to people from other places, times or planets...

What about my own Top 10 ? Well, it would have to include Fish and Chips (Wikipedia image below was taken in Hunstanton - spooky!) - is this my pla(i)ce ? no., it's a cod....I'd also want to include something from Yorkshire, a pint of ale - Tim Taylor's Landlord for preference, sitting on Scarborough beach in a deckchair on a cold Bank Holiday perhaps...
What are your images of 'My Place' ? Why not add a comment below and explore the ICONS site for more.
Remember that the images don't have to be pictures. They could be:

  • the first lines of poems
  • the titles of books
  • songs
  • films
  • plants or flowers
  • sounds: leather on willow anyone ?
  • smells: freshly cut grass ?
  • items of clothing
  • seasonal events in the calendar
  • festivals or annual activities e.g. cheese rolling...
Think perhaps about what you would most miss if you went to live abroad ?
Then narrow the focus to your particular county, and then your particular town...

I recommend you visit the ICONS site. This site has been around for over a year and attempts to collate a list of the key icons of England.

Monday, November 26, 2007

Coursework Improvement - Year 11

Remember the deal: you improve the coursework marks substantially and we will pay to re-enter your coursework.
Check the past posts - when I get a moment, I'll add a direct link to them from the top of the blog...

Also, about 2 weeks left on your magazines....

The chocolate lorry expedition I showed you (remember that it's fuelled by chocolate not made from chocolate - remember they're going to Africa so it would melt anyway) has a WEBSITE.

Also for people as consumers, worth checking out CHRIS JORDAN's massive photos of American consumption.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Explorer Research

You will hopefully be bringing something that you have discovered about a Polar explorer. Here are some of the names that you could perhaps have selected:

ARCTIC

Fridtjof Nansen - a favourite of mine...

Robert Edwin Peary

Sir John Franklin

Roald Amundsen

Henry Hudson

Sir James Clark Ross


ANTARCTICA

Sir Ernest Shackleton - "the Boss"

Robert Falcon Scott

Douglas Mawson

Roald Amundsen

Captain James Cook

You need to compare THEN and NOW.

There are still some current polar explorers who are worth mentioning:

Sir Ranulph Fiennes

Pen Hadow

Ben Saunders

Don't forget the RGS Discovering Antarctica website.

Here are some headings that you can use to compare the past and current visitors to Polar regions:

TRANSPORT
CLOTHING
NAVIGATION
EQUIPMENT
FOOD
MEDICINES
COMMUNICATION
SHELTER

M / S EXPLORER

This story has been in the news for the last few days.
The M/S Explorer was a tourist vessel operated by a company called GAP Adventures.

The ship was holed by ice. There are some dramatic pictures of the ship listing, surrounded by thick sea ice.

This article in the Daily Telegraph has some good links and videos to look at.
Several articles give the exact position of the ship when it sank, and this can then be viewed in Google Earth so that you can see the remoteness of the location.

This is a reminder of the risks involved, although we said last time that there was a lot of difference between the early explorers and the explorers of today.
A series of photos on the BBC website.

This is a very useful BBC article which attempts to explain:

WHY DO PEOPLE GO TO THE POLES ON HOLIDAY ?

This website provides statistics for the number of people who visit Antarctica on their holidays.

Friday, November 23, 2007

Chocolate fuelled lorry

ChocolateImage from Green and Black's website.

We eat 148 bars of chocolate a year each on average...

Now there is a lorry travelling through Africa powered by chocolate, heading for Timbuktu.
According to an article:
They are taking 2,000 litres (454 gallons) of bio-diesel made from 4,000kg (8,818lb) of chocolate misshapes, the equivalent of 80,000 chocolate bars, to fuel their adventure.

The BBC NEWS article looks at the journey of the lorry.

Wonder what the exhaust smells like ?

Another tourist incident near the Poles.

Another incident in Antarctica today which featured a cruise ship. There has been a huge growth in this more 'extreme' tourism.
After the incident in Svalbard earlier in the year, where ice blocks fell on the deck, the focus has now switched to the other hemisphere.
The ship involved was the M/S Explorer.
Image below from BBC News
Earlier today, it struck something and the passengers were put in the life boats as the crew tried to pump out the water which was pouring into the ship, but had to abandon when the power failed.

The BBC NEWS article is useful.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Final week on Svalbard

OK. Here's the work for today (and some bits for next classroom lesson)

So we are going to be moving on to My Place before too long.

Remember to read back through previous postings on the blog from October and November to 'flesh out' or add additional material to the information that you already have, and get some sneak preview of the work that is coming up.

We will also have a little CHRISTMAS diversion in the last week of term.

The plan for today is to get hold of the 500 word piece from everybody who hasn't already let me have Task B
I then need to have your portfolio slides finished off (scroll down a little for a reminder of the enquiry questions.

Final task:

Why would being a student on Svalbard be 'extreme' ?


We are going to use the site of the University of Norway in Svalbard (UNIS)

Click the link for UNIS STUDENT SURVIVAL KIT.

Try to suggest some differences between being a student at somewhere like COWA compared to UNIS.
Also worth checking out the blog of someone who spent time at UNIS: Laurel McFadden, who last year's Year 10 pupils followed on her COLD PHOTO blog.
You can read the postings from January through to April, which was the time she spent on Svalbard. There are some fantastic images here too....

Image copyright: Laurel McFadden

Check out the SVALBARD COMPANIES page too to see what's on offer for students.

You will need to produce a powerpoint slide or two based on this enquiry question.

Print off a hard copy of the portfolio slides for your blue exercise books - File, Print, Select printer (not that annoying default Primo PDF), Print What ? Handouts, then choose 3, 4 or 6 handouts per page. May also want to INSERT, Slides from Files and add some of the slides from the Boardworks presentation which look at the effect of GLACIATION on the landscape. Remember that there are glaciers on Svalbard.
CAN YOU NAME ONE (or more) OF THE GLACIERS ON SVALBARD ?

The presentation is in the Pilot GCSE folder on Pupils on Curriculum.

Final things to add: (little extras)
PERMAFROST.
The cold temperatures experienced in Svalbard and other cold non-glacial climates result in the ground freezing solid. The top few centimetres thaw out in the summer and then freeze again in the winter - this particular part of the soil is called the ACTIVE LAYER. The reason for the name is that as the ground thaws out, large quantities of water are released, and the ground starts to move (it's a process called SOLIFLUCTION) - it results in a very hummocky landscape with lots of surface water called THAW LAKES (I have a 'thaw' finger from all this typing....)

CICERO is the Centre for International Climate and Environmental Research in Oslo. There is an excellent illustrated page HERE. This is a great place to start for explorations into the impact of this thawing of the permafrost on Svalbard (and in other parts of Norway and the Arctic too...)

I suggest you also take a look at the WIKIPEDIA page on Permafrost, and take a look at some of the weird and wonderful things that happen to the surface when it is constantly being frozen and thawed out. This produces a whole range of new Geographical vocabulary: Palsas, Thufurs, Ice Wedges, Stone Polygons, Stone Garlands, Stone Stripes, Felsenmeer, Pro-Talus ramparts, Naleds and Pingos...

Thursday, November 15, 2007

2 transport stories in the news....

1. St. Pancras re-opening: hundreds of millions of pounds spent on station and track to create the new international station. On Monday noticed the change in the tube train to mention "International services" from King's Cross St Pancras.

You MUST start to explore and research other people's views.
This is not difficult to do now that most newspapers have an online presence...

Here is an extract from a letter to the Independent from someone who lives in King's Lynn (not me)

"Most car journeys are under five miles and a large proportion under two miles. The best solution to our addiction to cars was invented more than 150 years ago: it's called a bicycle. The other part of the solution has been around even longer: walking. Perhaps the heart of the problem is that we've just become lazy. The solutions are not expensive: a reduction of the urban speed limit to 20mph or less, a reduction of town-centre car parking and perhaps a campaign of public ridicule for the idiot who drives two miles down the road in a toy lorry to collect his Independent"

What do you think of this person's comments ? Do you agree with their views ?

2. Differential payments

The basic idea here is that if you drive a larger car you should pay more for your car tax, but also any time where the size of the vehicle makes a difference, such as parking. This is an idea to be used in Norwich.
Do you think it will work ?
Is it fair ?

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

E-Portfolio Year 10s

If you feel that you have done your 500 word piece.
The first thing is to make sure that it is spell and grammar checked. Read it through... Does it make sense ?
Remember that this is NOT a cut and paste job.
Credit your sources.
Now compare it to the mark scheme in the earlier posting below...

Still certain that you have finished ?
Start up your Powerpoint and go back to the e-portfolio, and continue producing the slides which answer the following questions (which are likely to be the focus for questions on the exam...)

Monday, November 12, 2007

Dispatches

The DISPATCHES website: Bottleneck Britain has now gone live...

Dispatches Channel 4 tonight

"Bottleneck Britain" - Dispatches.

Looks at the pay-as-you-drive proposal, also called the "TOLL TAX".

Remember earlier postings about the M6 TOLL road.

How successful are toll roads in the UK ?

Traditionally traffic bottlenecks have been solved by building new roads but this doesn't actually reduce congestion. A little like being fat and solving the problem of having no trousers that fit by going out and buying a bigger pair of trousers....
We discussed some of your ideas today - remember to develop these, and refer to a place which has already tried them out. How successful were they in this place ? Why do you think they would work in King's Lynn ?



Saturday, November 10, 2007

More Velib pics...

Thanks to my Flickr contact austinevan for a few more pictures which explain how the VELIB system of bike hire in Paris works (see earlier posts...)
I recommend that you take a look at these pics at home (FLICKR is one of those 'evil' sites which has to be blocked at school of course...)Evan has what he calls a VELIB OBSESSION (and even has a blog with that name - check it out)

Another city where cycling is very popular is Amsterdam.
In the city centre, the cars have to give more priority to other vehicles. Of course that does mean that pedestrians have to be very careful. I had a few near misses when I went there.

How about bicycle taxis as one way of reducing traffic ?

Some useful information by Dara Colwell from SUITE 101

In Holland, cycling is one of the most popular forms of transportation. Nowhere is this more apparent than Amsterdam, where bikes get the green light.

In Holland, bikes are like bread and butter. Practical, efficient, economic (especially when it comes to parking) and often the quickest option getting from A to B, Dutch bikes are valued for function over form—which explains why the average Dutch bike is a battered, rust-laden creature. Cycling is by far the country’s most popular form of transportation. Its16.4 million inhabitants own 17 million bikes (in Amsterdam, that’s 800,000 bikes for 750,000 people) and an estimated 3.4 million people hop on daily for the commute.

Learn to bike like a resident

For bike aficionados or those who’ve always wanted to give urban cycling a spin, Amsterdam, a.k.a. bike capital of the world, is the place to do it. It’s fun, a great way to get around and definitively Dutch. Luckily, in Holland bikes are legally entitled to the right of way—in other words, bikes go first—so all forms of traffic are extra vigilant. But also, a disclaimer: the Dutch ride aggressively and will clank their bells while trying to avoid trams, cars, fellow cyclists, buses, roller-bladers, and probably the most dangerous thing on the road: oblivious, map-reading tourists. The best way to stay upright is to use the designated cycle lanes, observe traffic signals and take it slow. Of course banging your bell loudly, warning others of your imminent approach, doesn’t hurt either. But master the basics, and the city is easy to explore.

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Admin Procedures: one for the teachers...

GCSE Geography Pilot 1949

Procedural guidelines for Centres

UNIT 2389

OPTIONAL UNITS 4957 – 4965

(excluding Units 4958 and 4963)

  • Centres should receive an MS1 form and sufficient copies of the Coursework Assessment Grid (GCW742) for each candidate.
  • Should Centres not be in receipt of these items please contact Customer Contact Centre 01223 553998.
  • Centres should receive an MS1 form for each Unit entered and a single copy of the Band Descriptors for each of the Optional Units.
  • A copy of each relevant Band Descriptor grid should be completed for each candidate and used to record the marks awarded for each assessment piece. The Centre number, candidate name and candidate number should also be completed. This acts as a ‘Cover Sheet’ for each of the Optional Units that the candidate has been entered for.
  • Should Centres not be in receipt of these items please contact Customer Contact Centre 01223 553998.
  • Send top copy of MS1 to Cambridge, and second copy to moderator by May 15th 2008. The third copy should be retained by the Centre.
  • Please check very carefully for any arithmetic or transcription errors and note the penalties for incomplete portfolios (Specification page 82).
  • Please note that zero means that work has been submitted but has no geographical value, whereas absent means that the candidate has submitted no work.


  • Send top copy of MS1 to Cambridge, and second copy to moderator by May 15th. The third copy should be retained by the Centre.
  • Please check very carefully for any arithmetic or transcription errors.
  • Please note that zero means that work has been submitted but has no geographical value, whereas absent means that the candidate has submitted no work.

If there are 10 or less candidates entered, then the complete work of all candidates should be sent to the moderator. In all other cases await sample request from moderator on form CW/L1. Send sample to moderator, within three working days. Please include:

· One copy of coursework task / instructions provided for candidates

· TOP TWO copies of Assessment Grid (GCW742) for each sampled candidate. Please annotate this grid to indicate how the marks have been awarded. Centres are advised to complete these grids for each candidate when assessing the portfolio. Should a further sample be required, an annotated grid will once again be requested with each candidate’s portfolio of work

· Completed and signed Centre Authentication Form for Coursework (CCS 160) – one per Centre.

Please ensure that each piece of work within the portfolio is clearly labelled with the

· Centre number

· candidate number

· candidate name.

If there are 10 or less candidates entered, then the complete work of all candidates should be sent to the moderator. In all other cases await sample request from moderator on form CW/L1. Send sample to moderator, within three working days. Please include:

  • An annotated copy of the Band Descriptor grid for each candidate. Please also show the Centre number, candidate name and candidate number.
  • Completed and signed Centre Authentication Form for Coursework (CCS 160) – please note that one is required for each unit entered.
  • THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO THE TEACHER ASSESSED UNITS (4958 AND 4963) ALTHOUGH PLEASE NOTE THAT SAMPLES OF WORK AND COMPLETED ‘COVER SHEETS’ MAY BE REQUESTED TO ASSIST IN THE AWARDING PROCESS.

Just in case you didn't get the e-mail from earlier this week...

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Podcasts

This finally arrived in the department today...
Took a bit longer than I'd hoped to get it working tonight, but seems to work fine and good quality. Did my first bit of mixing and fading and adding music to voice podcast with some multi-track stuff....
Watch out for some new Pilot GCSE podcasts when I get a moment...

Year 10 Coursework Mark Scheme

This is what I will use to mark your poster and written work....
Does your work match these requirements ?
If not, you need to adapt it / add / remove anything that is needed....


How to make your coursework into an A*

Try to make your work match the descriptions below. This is what teachers will be looking for to award an A*!

Tick them as you achieve them. We will give you a printed copy of the sheet...

AO 1: KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING

  • Show good knowledge and understanding of Svalbard.
  • Show you understand the concept of ‘possible futures’.
  • Give arguments to support your view of a possible future.
  • Present interconnected / linked ideas.
AO 2: APPLICATION, INTERPRETATION AND VALUES
  • Make your interpretation of the future detailed.
  • Develop and show the complexity of your personal view, including how it will affect you
  • Justify your personal view.

AO 3: SKILLS AND ANALYSIS

  • Develop an appropriate technique to present your ideas.
  • Use particular skills to communicate your findings
  • Focus on clear communication to your intended audience.
  • Make sure that you communicate appropriate information

Remember that there are marks for the quality of your written communication. These are obtained by:


  • Presenting relevant information in a form that suits its purpose
  • Ensuring text is legible
  • Using a suitable structure and style of writing appropriate to the task


And here is the cover sheet which we shall put onto the work...

PILOT GCSE GEOGRAPHY (1949) : COURSEWORK COVER SHEET

NAME: FORM: CAND NO:

TOPIC: EXTREME ENVIRONMENTS

TASK A: Concept map of Environmental Change on Svalbard

TASK B: Global Warming on Svalbard

Futures: possible ideas in the context of Svalbard

Applying understanding to particular context of Svalbard

Expressing personal views of the issue which is being explored

Basic – one option

1 mark

Lacks confidence in applying what they know to Svalbard

1 mark

Limited personal comment

1 mark

Sound – at least two options

2 marks

Can apply what they know to Svalbard

2 marks

Expresses

own views

2 marks

Detailed – more than 2 options, and options compared

3 marks

Shows the way in which Svalbard is linked to other places

3 marks

Complex and linked views

3 marks

Total (12)

Comment


There is also an ICT section to add:

Using ICT for clarity in presentation and to aid analysis

ICT used for presentation only

1 mark

ICT to support analysis and presentation

2 marks

ICT used appropriately and sources quoted

3 marks



Here are some possible websites to get you started on the Global Warming task:

http://www.svalbard-images.com/spitzbergen/climate-change-a.php - some images from Greenpeace showing coastal retreat - note that these are copyright images. You should always check whether you have permission to use images and ideas...

In August 2002, Greenpeace Rainbow Warrior travelled to Svalbard to study glacier's decline.

Greenpeace took photos of Blomstrandbreen, a glacier in the King's Bay area (Kongsfjorden) to illustrate a retreat of the glacier of approximately 2 km in the past 80 years.

The glacier was connected to the peninsula Blomstrandhalvøya (halvøya means peninsula) until 1992 but now there is a passage of nearly 1km between Blomstrandhalvøya, which is now an island, and the glacier's front

Since 1960, the average retreat of that glacier has been about 35 m a year, accelerating in the last ten years. Greenpeace says other glaciers in the area are showing an overall retreat.

British Aisles

A nice headline for an article in G2 today.
The article is about British food being exported to other places. Useful for "My Place" and the Cultural aspects of the UK. It looks at products such as tea, beer, breakfast cereal (including my favourite Dorset cereals), and chocolate.
For example, we export Indian food to India...
One particular success story here is the firm Patak's.They also have a very useful website which would be a useful stop off for those studying India.
It has a section looking at the INTERNATIONAL nature of the company: it now exports to over 40 countries around the world.
There is a website aimed at KS2 called JOURNEY THROUGH INDIA.
This might also be appropriate for KS3 students.

Patak's products include Indian cooking sauces, curry pastes, chutney, pickles, ready meals, snacks and breads. It uses distributors to sell in more than 40 countries worldwide, from Australia to Canada. As well as selling through major retailers, it also manufactures own-brand products for supermarkets including Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury's, Waitrose and Morrisons. Patak's employs some 650 staff, just over half at its factory near Wigan.

The company was started in 1957 by Kirit Pathak's father Laxmishanker shortly after arriving in England from Kenya with just five pounds in his pocket - he dropped the "h" from the company name to make it easier to pronounce. Spotting the need for Indian food in London, he started producing samosas in a tiny kitchen in north London. Kirit began making deliveries aged just six and joined the business full-time when he was 17.

Could be a good industry start-up case study too...

Friday, November 02, 2007

Crumbs of comfort..

Below is a picture taken of Captain Scott's Antarctic Party. Between November 1911 and March 1912 the sledging party made its way to the South Pole, and then tragically failed to make it back to a supply cache of food.Those doing Antarctica as their extreme environment will probably have referred to the extreme nature of the climate in that year, and the preparations that Scott made. They will also have compared the equipment and support available to today's visitors to the Polar regions which can make things easier (but not completely remove the risk). The book "The Coldest March" by Susan Solomon has an interesting (I believe the term is 'revisionist') approach which suggests that the temperatures were unseasonably low, which meant that the weight of the sledges was unable to melt the ice beneath the blades, and the men had to drag the sledges expending more energy and slowing their progress.

Scott's diaries were recently put on display in the British library.

The other day in my friendly local supermarket, I came across Huntley and Palmer's Captain Scott's Expedition Biscuits.
These are a replica of the biscuits that Captain Scott used, but the recipe has been changed to replace lard with vegetable oil.
I can report that they are delicious with a crumbly manchego and some grapes...

Year 11 A chance to improve...

Starting in a week or so will be a chance to improve Year 10 coursework, and we will then re-enter the portfolio.
This will be up to you to do the work and take the initiative here...

THIS POST is a reminder of the coursework.
More to come...

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Year 11 Coursework Aims

Specially for Michael, here's a link to the COURSEWORK AIMS for Sustainable Transport.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Peterborough trials personal transport

This is one that you should definitely mention in your coursework !
Peterborough is trialling personal transport plans.
This BBC article, which you need to read suggests that:

A nationwide brigade of personal transport advisers who call at the homes of drivers thinking of switching to greener forms of travel could help break Britain's dependency on the car.

In Peterborough £750,000 has been spent on giving 20,000 people personal advice to help them use public transport or cycle.

Check the TRANSPORT OFFICE website for more details in this area.

Tom Symonds is the BBCs Transport Correspondent so a search on his name on the BBC site brings up loads of articles which could be relevant. A useful search tip there...

Douglas Mawson documentary on C4

Last night, those doing Antarctica may have been interested in a programme which recreated a journey made by the noted Polar explorer Douglas Mawson in 1912.
Here's a mixed review of the programme from the Telegraph which gives a flavour for the programme, which is repeated on the 3rd of November at 8.35 on Channel 4 Plus 1

Mawson was a Yorkshire-born Australian, who, in the same year that Scott and Amundsen raced each other to the South Pole, led a geological expedition in Antarctica. Having established base camp on the windiest place on Earth, he then took two colleagues on the toughest of the field trips: a 900-mile journey in search of minerals. All went well until one of the party, Belgrave Ninnis, fell into a crevasse and was never seen again. Neither was his sledge, which had been carrying most of the food.

From then on, all thoughts of mineral-discovery were abandoned – and during the long slog back to base, his other companion Xavier Mertz died too, probably from the toxins in the livers of the huskies the two men were forced to eat. Carrying on alone with little food, no dogs and the soles of his feet falling off, Mawson eventually made it home. In Europe, his achievement was overshadowed by the tragedy of Captain Scott. In Australia, he became a national hero.

As far as I could see, all of this was perfectly clear last night – not least because the programme drew heavily on Mawson’s own account. So, why did When Hell Freezes claim that it was “shrouded in mystery”? The answer, naturally, was that some grizzled adventurer of our own time had decided to don some 1912 polar clothes and have a go too. “For one man,” said the narrator supportively, “the terrible fate of Mawson’s party has become an obsession.”

The man in question was Tim Jarvis, who was soon faced with another of the problems with programmes like this: they don’t actually follow the footsteps that closely. Not only did Jarvis take a different route from Mawson, but in these enlightened times, he neither used nor ate dogs. Fairly crucially as well, he had no chance of dying, what with a film crew in attendance and regular check-ups from the team doctor. Of course, I’m not suggesting that Jarvis should have risked his life for our edification – just that his knowing he’d survive meant the whole experience couldn’t possibly be the same as Mawson’s.

No wonder then that, instead of illuminating Mawson’s story, Jarvis’s merely ran in uneasy parallel with it. His toughness was admittedly impressive in itself – but in the context of the documentary it simply got in the way. By the end, Jarvis had certainly proved that dragging a sledge across hundreds of miles of ice on starvation rations is very hard. Needless to say, though, we could probably have worked this out for ourselves.