Human and Physical Geography
KS1GE-KS1-D003
Identifying seasonal and daily weather patterns in the United Kingdom and the location of hot and cold areas in relation to the Equator and North and South Poles; using basic vocabulary to refer to key physical and human features.
National Curriculum context
Human and physical geography at KS1 introduces pupils to the two great divisions of the subject: the study of the natural world (physical geography) and the study of human activity in places (human geography). Pupils learn to observe and describe seasonal and daily weather patterns - a familiar and observable physical phenomenon - and understand the relationship between latitude and temperature by considering the Equator and the Poles. The explicit vocabulary requirements for both physical features (beach, cliff, coast, forest, hill, mountain, sea, ocean, river, soil, valley, vegetation, season, weather) and human features (city, town, village, factory, farm, house, office, port, harbour, shop) establish the disciplinary language that pupils need to describe and discuss the world around them with precision.
2
Concepts
1
Clusters
1
Prerequisites
2
With difficulty levels
Lesson Clusters
Describe weather, seasons and the difference between physical and human features
introduction CuratedWeather/climate and the physical/human feature distinction are foundational geographical concepts that KS1 pupils encounter together when observing their local environment. Both deal with how to 'read' the landscape around them.
Teaching Suggestions (3)
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.
Our Local Area
Geography Study Place StudyPedagogical rationale
The local area study is the starting point for geographical enquiry at KS1, grounding abstract concepts in direct experience. Pupils observe, describe, and map the human and physical features of their immediate environment, building the observational and descriptive vocabulary that underpins all subsequent geography. The school determines which local area to study, making this universally relevant.
Prerequisites
Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.
Concepts (2)
Weather and Climate
knowledge AI DirectGE-KS1-C003
Weather describes the atmospheric conditions at a specific place and time - whether it is sunny, rainy, windy or cloudy - while climate describes the typical or average weather pattern of a place over a longer period. At KS1, pupils observe and record daily and seasonal weather patterns in the UK, developing understanding of why weather varies through the day and through the year. The relationship between latitude and temperature - how places nearer the Equator are generally warmer than places nearer the Poles - provides the foundational explanation for global climate variation.
Teaching guidance
Carry out regular weather observation and recording: daily weather symbols, temperature readings, rainfall records. Create weather diaries and simple graphs over time. Discuss seasonal patterns: what is different in winter and summer? Use photographs from around the world to explore how climate varies with latitude. Connect to the Equator and Poles on a globe to explain why some places are hot (near Equator) and some cold (near Poles). Relate weather to people's activities: how do seasonal changes affect farming, clothing, outdoor activities?
Common misconceptions
Pupils often confuse weather and climate. Using the phrase 'weather is what you get, climate is what you expect' helps establish the distinction. Pupils may think the UK has no summer or no winter based on extreme contrasts with other countries; a nuanced discussion of the UK's temperate climate is needed. The relationship between latitude and temperature can seem counterintuitive when placed on a flat map; a globe makes this relationship much clearer.
Difficulty levels
Describing the current weather using simple vocabulary (sunny, rainy, cloudy, windy, cold, hot) and identifying the current season.
Example task
Look outside. What is the weather like today? What season is it?
Model response: It is cloudy and cold today. It is winter.
Describing seasonal weather patterns in the UK, explaining what kind of weather is typical in each season.
Example task
What is the weather usually like in summer in the UK? How is it different from winter?
Model response: In summer it is usually warmer and the days are longer. We get more sunshine. In winter it is colder, the days are shorter, and we get more rain and sometimes snow.
Comparing weather patterns in the UK with weather in another location, and beginning to explain why places have different weather.
Example task
Compare the weather in our town with the weather in a hot country like Kenya. Why might they be different?
Model response: Our town has four seasons with cold winters and mild summers. Kenya is near the Equator so it is hot all year round. Kenya has a wet season and a dry season instead of our four seasons. The weather is different because Kenya is closer to the Equator where the sun is more directly overhead.
Delivery rationale
Geography knowledge concept — locational, place, and process knowledge deliverable with visual resources.
Physical and Human Features
knowledge AI DirectGE-KS1-C004
Geography categorises features of the world into physical features - those created by natural processes including landforms, water bodies and vegetation - and human features - those created by people including settlements, buildings and land uses. At KS1, pupils learn the key vocabulary for both types of feature, developing the language to describe and categorise the world around them and in studied places. Understanding the distinction between physical and human geography is foundational to the discipline.
Teaching guidance
Use photographs of local and distant places to identify and classify physical and human features. Sort feature cards into physical and human categories. Take pupils outdoors to observe and name physical and human features in the school environment and local area. Use the vocabulary list actively: say and write the words alongside images. Connect vocabulary to pupils' direct experience: 'We live in a city/town/village' - which is our human feature? What physical features can we see from the window?
Common misconceptions
Pupils may find the distinction between physical and human features unclear for some cases - a canal is human but a river is physical; a park could be either. Discussing borderline cases develops more sophisticated understanding. Pupils may not recognise common local features as 'geographical' until they are pointed out and named. Building observation skills through regular local fieldwork develops geographical awareness.
Difficulty levels
Identifying whether a feature is physical (natural) or human (made by people) when given examples.
Example task
Sort these into physical features and human features: river, bridge, hill, shop, forest, road.
Model response: Physical: river, hill, forest. Human: bridge, shop, road.
Using geographical vocabulary to describe physical and human features observed in the local area or in photographs of places.
Example task
Look at this photograph of a seaside town. Describe the physical features and human features you can see.
Model response: Physical features: cliffs, the sea, a sandy beach, rocks. Human features: houses along the seafront, a pier, a car park, a lighthouse.
Explaining the relationship between physical and human features — how the physical landscape influences what humans build and do there.
Example task
Why do you think this town was built next to the river? How do the physical features affect the human features?
Model response: The town was built by the river because people needed water for drinking, farming and transport. The flat land near the river was good for building on. The bridge was built because people needed to cross the river. The physical features — the river and flat land — helped decide where the human features would go.
Delivery rationale
Geography knowledge concept — locational, place, and process knowledge deliverable with visual resources.