Locational Knowledge
KS1GE-KS1-D001
Naming and locating the world's seven continents and five oceans; naming, locating and identifying characteristics of the four countries and capital cities of the United Kingdom and its surrounding seas.
National Curriculum context
Locational knowledge provides the spatial framework within which all other geographical learning is situated. At KS1, pupils build a mental map of the world at the broadest scale, learning the names and positions of the seven continents and five oceans that structure global geography. Within this global framework, pupils also develop detailed locational knowledge of the United Kingdom itself - its four constituent countries, their capitals and the surrounding seas. This dual focus on global and local scales is characteristic of geographical thinking: understanding where places are relative to each other is the foundation for understanding how the physical and human world is organised. Accurate locational knowledge enables pupils to make sense of news, travel and global connections they encounter in everyday life.
2
Concepts
1
Clusters
1
Prerequisites
2
With difficulty levels
Lesson Clusters
Understand the world's continents, oceans and UK countries
introduction CuratedBoth concepts establish foundational spatial literacy — the global scale (continents and oceans) and the home-country scale (UK nations and capitals). Taught together they build a nested sense of place: pupils locate the UK within the wider world.
Teaching Suggestions (4)
Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.
Contrasting Non-European Locality Study
Geography Study Comparison StudyPedagogical rationale
The contrasting locality study is a statutory requirement ensuring that pupils' earliest geographical experience extends beyond Europe, developing openness to diverse human geographies. Comparing a non-European locality with the local area teaches pupils that geography is about understanding similarities and differences between places, not just learning about 'exotic' locations. The school selects the specific locality, enabling choice of a place with meaningful connections to the school community.
Hot and Cold Places: Seasonal and Daily Weather Patterns
Geography Study Topic StudyPedagogical rationale
This statutory topic introduces the foundational relationship between location and climate: places near the Equator are generally hot, places near the Poles are generally cold, and the UK's temperate position produces distinct seasonal patterns. Observing daily and seasonal weather gives pupils direct, experiential evidence for geographical patterns, while the global dimension (hot and cold places) extends their mental map and connects to the Equator and Poles as key geographical concepts.
The United Kingdom: Countries, Capitals and Seas
Geography Study Topic StudyPedagogical rationale
Locational knowledge of the UK is a statutory requirement that gives pupils their first detailed political geography, understanding that the United Kingdom is made up of four countries each with its own capital, surrounded by named seas. This concrete, mappable knowledge provides the spatial framework for all subsequent UK geography and connects to pupils' sense of national and regional identity.
World Continents and Oceans
Geography Study Topic StudyPedagogical rationale
Naming and locating the seven continents and five oceans is a statutory KS1 requirement that builds the global spatial framework underpinning all subsequent geography. At this age, the emphasis is on building a mental map of the world at the broadest scale — recognising that the Earth is made up of large landmasses surrounded by named oceans — which gives children the vocabulary and spatial scaffolding to make sense of places they encounter in stories, news, and travel.
Prerequisites
Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.
Concepts (2)
World Geography: Continents and Oceans
Keystone knowledge AI DirectGE-KS1-C001
The Earth's surface is divided into seven large landmasses called continents (Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia/Oceania, Europe, North America, South America) and five major oceans (Arctic, Atlantic, Indian, Pacific, Southern). These are the fundamental units of world geography, providing the spatial framework within which countries, cities and physical features are located. At KS1, pupils learn to name, locate and recall these major global features, building the mental map that underpins all subsequent geographical learning.
Teaching guidance
Use large world maps and globes regularly. Teach continent and ocean names through songs, chants and repeated mapping activities. Use a globe to reinforce the spherical nature of the Earth and why the Equator, Poles and Tropics matter. Play games where pupils place labels on unlabelled world maps. Connect continents to relevant contexts: which continent is our school in? Which ocean would you cross to get to Australia? Use aerial and satellite images to show what continents look like from space.
Common misconceptions
Pupils may confuse countries with continents, for example thinking 'Africa' is a country. Regular comparison of political and physical maps helps clarify the distinction. The status of Australia as both a continent and a country causes confusion; explicit teaching of this as a special case is needed. Pupils may not understand that the Equator divides the globe into hemispheres; connecting this to temperature zones makes it meaningful.
Difficulty levels
Naming at least three continents and two oceans when shown them on a globe or world map.
Example task
Point to and name three continents on this world map.
Model response: This is Africa, this is Europe, and this is Asia.
Naming and locating all seven continents and five oceans on a world map, and identifying which continent the UK is on.
Example task
Label all seven continents on this blank world map. Which continent is the United Kingdom on?
Model response: Africa, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, South America. The United Kingdom is in Europe.
Locating continents and oceans on a world map and describing their relative positions using directional language (north, south, east, west).
Example task
Where is Africa in relation to Europe? Where is the Pacific Ocean?
Model response: Africa is south of Europe, separated by the Mediterranean Sea. The Pacific Ocean is the largest ocean and is between Asia and the Americas, on the east side of Asia.
Using knowledge of continents and oceans to locate unfamiliar countries or features, and explaining why the equator, poles and tropics are significant.
Example task
Brazil is in South America. Using the map, describe where South America is in relation to the Equator and the two closest oceans.
Model response: South America crosses the Equator, so it is in both the northern and southern hemispheres. The Atlantic Ocean is to its east and the Pacific Ocean is to its west. Because it crosses the Equator, the northern part is tropical and warm.
Delivery rationale
Geography map/spatial skill — digital mapping tools and interactive exercises are highly effective.
United Kingdom: Countries and Capitals
knowledge AI DirectGE-KS1-C002
The United Kingdom is a political union comprising four countries: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, each with its own capital city (London, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast respectively). The UK is surrounded by the North Sea, English Channel, Irish Sea and Atlantic Ocean. At KS1, pupils learn to identify the four countries, their capitals and their positions within the UK, alongside awareness of the surrounding seas.
Teaching guidance
Use maps of the UK regularly, pointing out and naming the four countries and their capitals. Make connections to pupils' own location: which country do we live in? What is our capital? Use physical outline maps for pupils to label. Connect to current events and news that reference specific UK countries. Explore the flags of the four countries and the Union Flag. Link to the surrounding seas by tracing routes on maps.
Common misconceptions
Pupils frequently confuse England with the United Kingdom and with Britain. Deliberate and consistent use of precise terms - UK, Britain, Great Britain, England - with clear definitions addresses this. Some pupils may not know that Northern Ireland is part of the UK; using maps that clearly show all four countries together prevents this misunderstanding.
Difficulty levels
Naming the four countries of the United Kingdom and identifying at least one capital city.
Example task
What are the four countries in the United Kingdom? What is the capital of England?
Model response: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The capital of England is London.
Naming all four countries and their capital cities, and locating them on a map of the United Kingdom.
Example task
Point to each country on this UK map and name its capital city.
Model response: England — London, Scotland — Edinburgh, Wales — Cardiff, Northern Ireland — Belfast.
Describing the position of countries and their capital cities using compass directions and identifying surrounding seas.
Example task
Describe where Scotland is in relation to England. What seas surround the UK?
Model response: Scotland is north of England. They share a border. The UK is surrounded by the North Sea to the east, the English Channel to the south, the Irish Sea between Britain and Ireland, and the Atlantic Ocean to the west.
Delivery rationale
Geography knowledge concept — locational, place, and process knowledge deliverable with visual resources.