Scaffolding Case Study: Teaching Synopticity in A Level Geography

Contribution to a book chapter on scaffolding with Alex Fairlamb & Rachel Ball

In most specifications, the opportunities for extended essay writing are not really present in GCSE Geography for most students. As a former examiner, whilst a few really talented Geographers might wring something unusual and different from a 9 mark question, the majority are fairly predictable. They may not have a single common structure to all questions (pro/con/conclusion) or to all paragraphs (PEE, WHW), or have consistent use of examples or case study materials, but students can often confidently build on the thinking they have done at KS3 to generate success in these essay questions. Success in a GCSE Geography paper does not rely on mastery of essay technique; but rather the consistent delivery of effective question response against the clock, on a diverse range of topics, skills and question types.

But as the Assessment Objectives shift dramatically at A Level, to achieve the highest grades, the variety of knowledge is taken for granted. Candidates are expected to show mastery of their knowledge, and write for a professional Geographer audience. Simple structures like defining terms and key terminology, are far less relevant to the answer and marking unless it’s important to your essay (e.g. “weather” versus “climate” as part of the exam question). Describing and narrating the “geography” of what happens (process, explanation, description of a case study) will get you to the top of Level 2.

Far more important is the role of ‘evaluation’ and assessment, and the ability to recognise and construct a viable thesis argument in response to a stimulus (photograph, source, data) or essay question. This needs careful thought and scaffolding, both in terms of teaching, and in terms of getting student practice to write the essays effectively. There are two key skills that need to be considered and taught separately.

Essay Plans, not Writing Essays

For both, I think one of the key scaffolding strategies for student success is practicing essay planning rather than writing essays. In terms of cost-benefit of time and motivation, it is a quicker and higher-leverage strategy for students to get a sense of what they need to be doing. There is – of course – valid reason to practice writing a long-form essay, and to constructing paragraphs and flow, particularly against the clock, and to get feedback on it. In the early stages of an A Level course, however, I believe that writing solid and detailed essay plans (and building up a bank of them, to use as revision) is a far more valuable way to spend time.

Scaffold One: Know the Box

Modelling this planning and decision making process, and offering insight in to expert thinking is the first key scaffolding technique that teachers need to explore. Essay questions are often framed in the sense of “this statement” – do you agree?, or “to what extent is X important for Y”. At GCSE, this was usually an explicit comparison, and early Year 12 students will often just write an essay on the pros and cons of the stimulus only. But at A Level, it’s important that students recognise this for what it is – an implicit opportunity to compare this thing against others in a similar area of the specification, and come up with a discussion. It’s important that we teach ways to identify “what else could it be?”, as part of the synoptic journey of learning.  

In my A level teaching, we called this “knowing the box” – the area of the specification that the question was drawn from, and being confident that we could pivot between each of the lines of it, depending on which factor was named in the question. Here’s an example from my A Level booklet on rivers, looking at causes of flooding:

Normally asked as a “to what extent”, they tend to pick one factor, and ask you to assess it compared to others.

  1. Flash floods (pluvial) are caused when there’s simply too much water – these can overwhelm any conditions. Focus on physical volume of rain or antecedent conditions.
  2. For most fluvial events we should look at the scale of human vs physical
  3. Human factors – same as hydrograph, drainage basin: modifications, stores, land use changes, urbanisation AND the extent to which it’s managed well
  4. Physical factors – same as hydrograph, drainage basin: size, shape, soil/permeability, rock type, slopes, vegetation, land use and antecedent moisture (already full?)

e.g. Assess the extent to which floods are caused by human activity.

We can see that there are two key themes – human causes and physical causes. Each has a number of factors that must have been taught first, and we will have discussed ways that case studies and examples can be used to illustrate each of these points. The aim of this is a prompt to scaffold “box thinking” rather than to give all the answers. I could ask students to write three essays: one on “to what extent is it human?”, one on “to what extent is it physical?” and “to what extent are pluvial and fluvial floods similar?”. Instead, we’re supporting them to learn and know the box. Their job is to respond to the question prompt first, and then talk about the rest of the box. If they were asked about physical instead, they write that block first, and then say “but it could also be, and might be linked to…”. 

As part of the teaching, each “box” on the specification would have an essay plan template like this in our booklet. For the first one, I will model it first on the board, or on a visualiser. By the second or third, I’m handing over that box thinking to the students to lead, and then discuss together. By the end of the unit of work, we’d have completed and marked all of the essay plans and shared them together. In lockdown teaching, we also co-constructed these via Teams – and all could then share in the document we’d constructed as part of our A Level course.

Scaffold Two: Scaffolds for Evaluation

In the first example, the scaffold gets the student one step further – they are able to acknowledge the multiple implicit dimensions of the question, and talk about them. But they have not addressed the ‘evaluative’ element, yet. “To what extent” is an implicit evaluation. Sometimes, the question might be more explicit “Evaluate X in the process of Y”, but students needed to know how to make judgements and critically reflect on the different parts of the box.

It’s important to identify what could it depend on. As part of the teaching and discussion, A Level students need to be shown the factors, and accept and recognise the complexity of the subject: it isn’t the case that there are universal “right answers”. Everything has a context. Often, it’s about development – high-income vs low-income and the relative impact of money on what can be done for management approaches and who chooses to spend the money. Sometimes the factors are physical – it might work one way for fluvial floods but very differently for pluvial; or for hard rock versus soft, or constructive versus destructive boundaries etc. In teaching the material, these factors need to be explicitly drawn out for the relative novice learners: while they are obvious to expert graduate teachers, they need to be signposted.

Then, the second part of scaffolding is to help students to come to some judgement structure. They have identified “the box”, and recognised that there are three aspects to talk about – how do they judge which is most important, or evaluate the extent to which one is more critical than another? Let’s look at two comparative scaffolds that might help, with an example from the Hot Arid Environments booklet:

Evaluate the importance of the role of Pleistocene pluvials in the development of desert landforms. [20]

Question typically phrased as extent to which landforms of deserts are the result of one of the three things: you are expected to evaluate that with reference to the others, and make a conclusion.

  1. Aeolian – small/constant, limited by height. Show examples & landforms
  2. Fluvial – small/intermittent, ephemeral water limits. Depends on aridity levels.
  3. OR – fluvial at a large scale likely to have needed lots more water, i.e. past conditions to be wetter à pluvial periods à last example was in the Pleistocene. Depends on time and location
  4. Evaluation could be on effectiveness (how many landforms), scale (how wide spread are those landforms) or rate (how powerful is the force for shaping an individual landscape). Always need to consider RELATIVE power/magnitude/frequency – water has big impact on relatively weak land, but not very often. Wind has weak power, but quite a lot of it!

Here, the first three lines of the essay planning prompt show the box. There’s a set of aeolian processes (wind) that students can describe, explain and say how they help. There’s a set of modern fluvial processes (water that flows every now and then), and there’s a set of past processes that occurred a long time ago (in the Pleistocene period) when it was much wetter (pluvials). Describing and explaining all of that is a significant skill. But to really master this, we need to be able to judge which we think is most important.

There are a few ways of stimulating that conversation. If it’s a binary “this or that”, a “washing line” debate can be helpful. You define the two ends of the line as the extremes, and ask students to identify where they think they want to put the peg. In the middle? 50/50? 60/40? 70/30? They can then use the sides of the line to annotate and identify the key points they want to make in support of one side (or the counter arguments to the other).

This doesn’t tend to work so easily for questions like our deserts example, though. There are three parts – how are students to identify where on the washing line model that might go? In this example – and ones with multiple factors – a pie chart might work better. We provide (or quickly sketch) a circle, and ask students to fill up the pie chart with different factors – most important first. As before, the students can fill up (or annotate around) the pie chart with the key factors that they want to use in their paragraphs to explain and justify those factors as important.

The critical follow up conversation is “explain why you put the lines where you did”. This requires students to evaluate why they ranked one thing first, or allocated this proportion of “extent” to one factor rather than another. Their judgements and evidence for this conversation are exactly the kind of critical discussion that pushes them towards those highest marks; and this approach can replace essay planning as a concept of bullet point lists or paragraphs – students can quickly assign the lines, and use in exam conditions!

CogSciSci Conference, May 2024

Feeling very much like an imposter, I was delighted to join scientists in the fabulous settings of St. Alban’s School to attend 2024’s Cog Sci Sci conference. I was very grateful to the organisers – for putting on an amazing event, with a real teacher-led discussion sense and a great buzz about the room – but also for encouraging and supporting people to come along and share, even if their last science was some decades ago now.

Speaking: Improving the Science of Climate Education

I was honoured to be able to share some ideas with great colleagues on how to update and improve some of the science of climate education. With so much movement in the specifications and content over time, I outlined some ways and resources that we could hope for:

  • Better narratives of impacts and relevant
  • Better data, through a better understanding of climate history and sources to trust
  • Better teaching and exploration of options and solutions

As well as talking about some of the big ideas and images, I was also delighted to be able to live-model some of the tools we can use and get people talking about climate solutions in an evidence informed way.  

I’ve uploaded my slides here (https://drpreece.home.blog/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/cogscisci-david-preece-improving-the-science-of-climate-science.pptx ) with all of the links and references. Colleagues new to it might want to look back at this blog piece on how I teach using earth.nullschool, or this guide to the IPCC’s AR6 release that gives some further context. I strongly recommend playing with the resources, but also looking at the Royal Meterological Society’s fabulous https://www.metlink.org/ including their brilliant practicals, demos and experiments.

Hugely grateful for all who came along and contributed, and always happy to talk and follow up conversations if I can help!

Learning & Thinking: Some amazing talks

As well as presenting, I was excited to see some fabulous talks around the conference’s theme of “attention”.

Sarah Cottinghatt’s (@scottinghatt) keynote on the neuroscience and pathways of memory was a great starter, and connected brilliantly with Amarbeer Singh Gill (@SinghAmarbeerG) on some of the learning theories of retrieval and practice. In both, I was grateful for amazing discussions and really positive ideas of

I think my favourite talk of the day was Dr Bill Wilkinson’s (@DrWilkinsonSci) fierce advocacy for removing microbarriers – a call to action in learning science and SEN alike, with some really powerful project and analysis work that showed the differences that could really help. Some of the data and facts are a strong reminder that we need to be able to do more – and this is an area of my own teaching that was not as good as it should have been! I left feeling uplifted and hopeful that there were great and effective solutions.

The whole day was a wonderful experience – brilliantly hosted by St. Alban’s, Adam Robbins and the superb CogSciSci team. The atmosphere was incredible for a half-term event, and such a pleasure to meet so many great people and hear such enthusiasm for teaching and learning. Long may it continue – and we’d love to see some of the team come along to the Geographical Association conference in Oxford 2025. Perhaps this collaborative conference thing might catch on!

Geographical Association Conference 2024 – Some Reflections

It’s been a while since the Conference, and I’ve been on some annual leave and playing catch up with work afterwards. But I thought I’d share some reflections and learning – and now that the session downloads are starting to come through, I’ve got time to explore some of the sessions I didn’t get to.

First, congratulations to the whole team – from President to Chief Exec and all at HQ. I think it was a pretty packed conference, and it was delivered smoothly. There were a lot of amazing sessions and speakers, and I felt that most of the timetable blocks had four or five people that I could have easily gone to see or hear. Making decisions was hard – the pathways were nice, but there’s so much going on that it’s easy to feel like you’re missing out, even when you’re there!

It felt like there were some emerging themes across a number of sessions: the concepts of power, representation and ‘whose Geography’ have now firmly established themselves at the heart of the conference conversation. It also felt like there were a lot of conversations about sustainability – embedding the curriculum, the actions and the attitudes in to schools beyond just the geography classrooms; and there were also powerful themes of inclusion in terms of literacy (oracy, perhaps, next year?) and supporting EAL learners, as well as inclusion for the financial context of many schools and learners. I’m fascinated by the dynamic of what appears at Conference – and whether it drives the conversations in schools, or is driven by it and the wider circumstances. Clearly, there’s elements of both – a dialogue between Conference and the rest of the community and wider school geography.

There was a lot to love about the venue and the conference delivery, although there’s always considerate reflections (e.g. from Salaam Geographia) on how we can include more people, and make our spaces and community more diverse and inclusive. There are definitely better and more expert voices to listen to on how we improve our attendance and inclusivity of the whole community (perhaps even above and beyond the GA’s membership!), but one of the key elements that I’d reflect on is the discussion of cost. Clearly, the rail strike didn’t help anyone’s travel to and from Conference – though I guess Alanis would be proud at how many conversations happened about transport at a Geography event. But ticket prices are high, and travel and hotels put the conference out of reach for a significant proportion of teachers – particularly in a world where neither schools nor universities are likely to be subsidising professional development in the way they perhaps used to! I’m lucky to be able to come to conference – but how do we work together to make sure that everyone can, who wants to?

Learning Highlights:

For me, conference is always a space where I get to learn lots about things from expert practitioners. This year, I was really keen to learn more about literacy and supporting students in the classroom – and was delighted to be able to hear from real experts!

Emily Chandler’s (@ChandlerGeog) work is something we’ve already incorporated in to our training programme, but her talk this year on using a range of texts in the classroom will be incorporated in to our training as soon as I can make the edits. The need to look at reading as a fundamental driver of success in assessment (GL Reports, 2020), as well as the beating heart of the lesson was a really powerful message. As well as learning from other practice (e.g. Scaffolded Reading Experiences (Graves & Graves, 2003) drawn from English pedagogies), Emily’s session was also an awesome reminder of the *use* of texts to create, inspire or reimagine geographical worlds, rather than simply to read and download information.

As a bit of an old cynic about some of the hype around generative AI and tools in education (are they cool? Yes. Are they as smart as they claim? No. Are they going to revolutionise everything? Probably not… see interactive whiteboards), the modelled use of ChatGPT and specific tools to support literacy accessibility was actually really impressive. I’ll be taking away Diffit (https://web.diffit.me/) and Wordsift (https://wordsift.org/) as tools to scale up and down text for different reading ages, and to simply and powerfully create resources that serve the learners’ needs and development of the vocabulary and structures of learning! So thank you, Emily – not just for the demo of tools, but also the reminder to challenge my own cynicism at times!

Briley Habib (@Map_Addict) & Bethany Aldridge (@msaldrgeog) followed that up with another  masterclass on supporting EAL learners in the classroom, that’s also going to be incorporated in to our training programme as quickly as I can edit it! I loved the practical examples and work, balanced against the academic and researched rigour – delighted to learn more to support some of the techniques and ideas that Emily’s session had raised earlier. The worked examples showed the full effect of breaking the link between reading comprehension and success Ricketts et al. (2014) and the balances of cognitive science thinking needed in a Cummins’ Quadrants & Matrix.

Presenting Highlights:

Although a number of expert colleagues from phase committees and special interest groups were leading sessions, my presenter involvement was relatively limited this year. I was delighted that a number of my Teach First colleagues were able to lead sessions at conference, and I’m delighted to see Jessica and Helen’s expert thinking on supporting non-specialists and Stefan’s discussion of how we support and encourage Geography candidates for university on Friday. Well earned dinner on the Friday night for the presentation team, and it’s always great to talk to colleagues about what we’re doing in Teach First’s training programme and how we can learn from others.

Rather unusually, my highlight of Conference was being hugely proud (and a tiny bit of tech support) for my wife, Marianne, who spoke as an expert in the offshore wind sector. Although I’m sort of used to hearing some explanations at home, after a day of hybrid working, to see her expertise and knowledge in a lecture theatre in a geography conference was a really unexpected Saturday experience. I think it encapsulated the Presidential theme for the year beautifully: there’s so much geography in other spaces, if only we can connect with the people doing it to see inside their worlds. Thankfully, she was willing to come and volunteer at this event – we couldn’t have afforded to pay her normal speakers’ fees and charge-out rates!

Conference is a brilliant event to bring friends together, and renew one’s love for geography and the community – but I’d love to support and see that bring more people in every year. We’re a big tent of ideas, perspectives and approaches – and the more people and experience we hear from and share, the better our community is.

I take that mission as part of how we approach our training programme too – and so if we connected at conference, or if you think you’d like to work with us, or find out more about what we’re doing in Teach First Geography, then please do get in touch with me! Look forward to seeing you next year!