Place Knowledge

KS2

GE-KS2-D002

Understanding and comparing the human and physical geography of a region of the United Kingdom, a region in a European country, and a region within North or South America.

National Curriculum context

Place knowledge at KS2 requires the in-depth study of three distinct regions at different scales and in different parts of the world: a UK region, a European region, and a region in North or South America. Each region study develops pupils' ability to describe, explain and compare the human and physical characteristics of a place, considering how physical geography shapes human activity and how human activity transforms physical landscapes. The comparison of regions from different continents ensures that pupils encounter genuinely diverse human geographies, challenging assumptions based on their own experience and developing the broader perspectives that characterise geographical understanding. These region studies also develop pupils' knowledge of specific places, giving them concrete geographical reference points that support broader spatial learning.

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Concepts

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Clusters

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Prerequisites

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With difficulty levels

AI Facilitated: 1

Lesson Clusters

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Compare a region of the UK with a region in Europe or the Americas

practice Curated

Single concept domain; regional place study expands KS1 locality comparison to a larger geographical scale — pupils use the full range of geographical enquiry tools to compare human and physical characteristics across continents.

1 concepts Scale, Proportion and Quantity

Teaching Suggestions (3)

Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.

Americas Regional Study

Geography Study Place Study
Pedagogical rationale

The Americas regional study is a statutory requirement that provides the most geographically distant and environmentally contrasting region study at KS2. Schools select a specific region, exposing pupils to dramatically different physical environments, economies, and cultures while developing the same comparative analytical framework used for UK and European studies.

Enquiry: What makes this region in the Americas so different from anywhere we have studied before? Place: Americas Region
Mayan Civilisation Evolution and Adaptation Traditional Tales: Myths from Around the World

European Regional Study

Geography Study Place Study
Pedagogical rationale

The European regional study is a statutory requirement that extends pupils' geographical horizons beyond the UK to a contrasting European environment. Schools select a specific region, enabling comparison of how physical geography, climate, and culture shape human activity differently in a European context compared to the UK region already studied. This builds the comparative skills essential to geographical thinking.

Enquiry: How is life in this European region different from and similar to our UK region? Place: European Region Contrast: UK Region vs European Region
Roman Britain Evolution and Adaptation Gaudi Architecture and Mosaic

UK Regional Study

Geography Study Place Study
Pedagogical rationale

The UK regional study is a statutory requirement that deepens pupils' knowledge of their own country beyond the local area studied at KS1. Schools select a specific region, enabling the study of how physical geography (relief, rivers, climate) shapes human activity (settlement, farming, tourism) at a regional scale. This develops the analytical framework that pupils will apply to European and American regions.

Enquiry: How has physical geography shaped the way people live in this UK region? Place: UK Region Contrast: UK Region vs European Region
British History Beyond 1066

Prerequisites

Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.

Concepts (1)

Regional Place Study and Cross-Continental Comparison

skill AI Facilitated

GE-KS2-C006

Place study at a regional scale involves developing in-depth understanding of a geographical region: its physical landscape, climate, vegetation, resources, settlement patterns, economic activity and cultural character. At KS2, pupils study three contrasting regions — a UK region, a European region, and a region within North or South America — comparing their human and physical characteristics across continental contexts. Understanding regions in depth, and comparing across continents, develops the geographical knowledge base and the comparative analytical skills that underpin sophisticated geographical thinking. The cross-continental frame ensures that pupils encounter genuinely diverse human geographies, building awareness of how physical geography (climate, relief, resources) shapes human activity in different parts of the world.

Teaching guidance

Choose regions that offer genuine contrast: a mountainous Alpine region in Europe compared with a UK lowland region; an Amazonian region compared with a Caribbean island. Structure each regional study using a consistent inquiry framework: location (where is it?), physical geography (what is the landscape and climate like?), human geography (how do people live and work?), change (how is the region changing?), comparison (how does it compare to the other regions studied?). Use maps, photographs, satellite images, statistical data and firsthand accounts. Avoid reducing regions to stereotypes; show their internal diversity and dynamism. Return to the regions studied across the primary years rather than treating each as a one-off topic.

Vocabulary: region, continent, country, European, Americas, compare, physical geography, human geography, characteristic, settlement, economic activity, climate, landscape, cultural, similarities, differences
Common misconceptions

Pupils may treat regional studies as discrete topics rather than as recurring reference points for geographical comparison. Returning to studied regions in different thematic contexts (rivers, climate, development) builds richer knowledge than treating each as a one-off study. Pupils may characterise regions by only one or two features, missing the complexity and internal diversity of real regions. Requiring pupils to update their knowledge of studied regions over time prevents oversimplification.

Difficulty levels

Entry

Identifying basic facts about a studied region: its location, one physical feature and one human feature.

Example task

Tell me three facts about the region of Europe we have been studying.

Model response: We studied the Alps in Europe. The Alps are very high mountains with snow on top. People ski there in the winter.

Developing

Describing the physical and human geography of a studied region using specific geographical vocabulary.

Example task

Describe the physical and human geography of the Amazon region in South America.

Model response: The Amazon region has the world's largest tropical rainforest with dense vegetation and the Amazon River, which is one of the longest rivers. The climate is hot and wet all year. Indigenous communities live in the forest. There is also logging, mining and cattle farming, which are changing the landscape.

Expected

Comparing two regions from different continents, identifying similarities and differences in their physical and human geography, and explaining reasons for the differences.

Example task

Compare the Lake District in the UK with a region in the Amazon. How and why are they different?

Model response: The Lake District has a temperate climate with cool, wet weather and is at a high latitude. The Amazon is tropical with constant heat and heavy rain, near the Equator. The Lake District's economy depends on tourism and sheep farming; the Amazon has logging, farming and indigenous communities. The differences are mainly because of their locations — latitude determines climate, which determines vegetation and how people make a living.

Greater Depth

Evaluating how global issues (climate change, trade, migration) affect studied regions differently, and considering multiple perspectives on regional change.

Example task

How might climate change affect the Lake District and the Amazon region differently? Who would be most affected in each place?

Model response: Climate change could bring more flooding to the Lake District, damaging tourism and farmland. In the Amazon, higher temperatures and drought could cause forest dieback, affecting indigenous communities who depend on the forest and releasing carbon that accelerates global warming. Farmers clearing forest might benefit short-term but cause long-term damage. The impacts are connected — deforestation in the Amazon affects global climate, which affects weather in the Lake District.

Delivery rationale

Geography skill — data interpretation and enquiry can be AI-structured with facilitator support.