Human and Physical Geography
KS2GE-KS2-D003
Describing and understanding key aspects of physical geography including climate zones, biomes, vegetation belts, rivers, mountains, volcanoes, earthquakes and the water cycle; and human geography including settlement types, land use, trade and the distribution of natural resources.
National Curriculum context
The scope of physical and human geography content expands substantially at KS2, moving from descriptive knowledge of features to explanatory understanding of processes. In physical geography, pupils learn about the major climate zones and biomes of the world, the geomorphological processes that shape rivers, mountains, coasts and volcanoes, and the hydrological cycle that connects land, sea and atmosphere. In human geography, pupils understand how settlements grow, how different types of economic activity are distributed, and how trade and natural resources shape human geography at global scales. This shift from description to explanation marks the most significant progression in geographical thinking at KS2, as pupils learn not just what the world looks like but why it is as it is.
3
Concepts
2
Clusters
2
Prerequisites
3
With difficulty levels
Lesson Clusters
Understand climate zones, biomes and the water cycle
introduction CuratedClimate zones/biomes (C002) and river systems/water cycle (C003) are linked by co-teach hints and share the physical geography thread — both explain how natural systems shape landscapes and are best taught as an interconnected physical world unit before introducing human responses.
Investigate settlement patterns and economic geography
practice CuratedSettlement and economic geography (C004) builds on the physical world established in cluster 1 — pupils explore how humans organise themselves in relation to physical features such as rivers, coasts and climate zones, applying understanding of place at multiple scales.
Teaching Suggestions (6)
Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.
Americas Regional Study
Geography Study Place StudyPedagogical 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.
Climate Zones, Biomes and Vegetation Belts
Geography Study Topic StudyPedagogical rationale
Climate zones and biomes are a statutory KS2 requirement that builds directly on KS1 work on hot and cold places, extending it into a systematic understanding of how latitude, altitude, and ocean currents determine the world's major climate patterns and the ecosystems they support. This topic connects physical geography (climate) to biological geography (biomes) and prepares pupils for KS3 work on climate change.
European Regional Study
Geography Study Place StudyPedagogical 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.
Rivers and the Water Cycle
Geography Study Topic StudyPedagogical rationale
Rivers and the water cycle are a statutory KS2 physical geography requirement that connects observable local features (streams, rainfall, puddles evaporating) to global-scale processes (the hydrological cycle). Teaching through a specific river case study grounds abstract process understanding in real geographical contexts and enables pupils to trace how water shapes landscapes through erosion, transportation, and deposition.
Trade, Economic Geography and Fairtrade
Geography Study Topic StudyPedagogical rationale
Fairtrade is the most common pedagogical vehicle schools use to deliver the KS2 statutory requirement on trade and economic activity, because it makes abstract global supply chains concrete and age-accessible. Tracing products (chocolate, bananas, cotton) from producer to consumer introduces pupils to primary, secondary, and tertiary economic sectors, global trade patterns, and the distribution of natural resources.
UK Regional Study
Geography Study Place StudyPedagogical 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.
Prerequisites
Concepts from other domains that pupils should know before this domain.
Concepts (3)
Climate Zones and Biomes
knowledge AI DirectGE-KS2-C002
Climate zones are large areas of the Earth characterised by similar patterns of temperature and rainfall, determined primarily by latitude. The main climate zones are tropical, subtropical, temperate, continental, polar and mountainous. Biomes are large ecological communities defined by their climate and vegetation: rainforest, savannah, desert, grassland, deciduous forest, coniferous forest, tundra and polar ice. At KS2, pupils develop understanding of how climate shapes the vegetation and wildlife of different regions, connecting physical and biological geography.
Teaching guidance
Use world climate and biome maps to show the distribution of different zones. Connect climate zones to latitude using the global grid: equatorial regions are typically tropical, polar regions are cold. Study specific biomes in depth: what are the characteristics, adaptations of plants and animals, human uses? Explore how climate change is altering biome boundaries. Compare a UK biome (temperate deciduous forest) with a contrasting global biome (tropical rainforest or desert). Connect to human geography by exploring how people adapt to different climate zones.
Common misconceptions
Pupils may confuse climate zone with biome; clarifying that climate determines what biome can exist in an area resolves this. Pupils may think deserts are always hot; cold deserts (Gobi, Antarctica) challenge this assumption. The idea that tropical regions are always wet is also inaccurate; tropical wet and dry seasons should be distinguished. Pupils may underestimate how dramatically human activity has altered natural biomes; discussing deforestation and agriculture develops critical awareness.
Difficulty levels
Naming at least three different climate zones or biomes and identifying one feature of each.
Example task
Name three different environments (biomes) and describe one thing about each.
Model response: Rainforest — very hot and wet with lots of trees. Desert — very dry with sandy or rocky ground. Arctic — very cold with ice and snow.
Describing the climate, vegetation and animal life of specific biomes and locating them on a world map.
Example task
Describe the tropical rainforest biome. Where in the world are rainforests found?
Model response: Tropical rainforests have hot temperatures all year round and very high rainfall. They have dense vegetation with tall trees forming a canopy. Animals include monkeys, parrots and insects. Rainforests are found near the Equator in South America, Africa and Southeast Asia.
Explaining why different biomes exist in different locations, connecting climate zones to latitude, and explaining how plants and animals are adapted.
Example task
Why are tropical rainforests found near the Equator and not near the poles? How are rainforest plants adapted?
Model response: Tropical rainforests need constant warmth and heavy rainfall, which occurs near the Equator because direct sunlight heats the air, causing evaporation and daily rain. Near the poles, sunlight is weaker so temperatures are too low. Rainforest trees grow tall to reach sunlight above the canopy, and some have drip-tip leaves to shed water quickly. Plants on the forest floor have huge leaves to capture what little light reaches them.
Evaluating human impact on biomes, explaining how deforestation, climate change or land use alters ecosystems, and considering sustainability.
Example task
How is deforestation affecting the Amazon rainforest, and why should this matter to people in other countries?
Model response: Deforestation removes trees for cattle ranching and farming, destroying habitats and reducing biodiversity. Rainforests absorb carbon dioxide, so cutting them down increases greenhouse gases that affect the whole planet's climate. The Amazon also produces moisture that affects weather patterns far away. It matters to everyone because the rainforest provides global services — climate regulation, oxygen production and biodiversity — not just local ones.
Delivery rationale
Geography knowledge concept — locational, place, and process knowledge deliverable with visual resources.
River Systems and the Water Cycle
knowledge Specialist TeacherGE-KS2-C003
A river system comprises a river and all its tributaries, flowing through a drainage basin from source to mouth. Rivers shape the landscape through the processes of erosion, transportation and deposition, creating characteristic landforms including valleys, meanders, ox-bow lakes, deltas and floodplains. The water cycle describes the continuous movement of water between ocean, atmosphere, land and rivers through processes of evaporation, condensation, precipitation, run-off and infiltration. At KS2, pupils develop understanding of both river processes and the wider hydrological cycle that sustains freshwater systems.
Teaching guidance
Use diagrams and models to explain the water cycle, connecting the processes to observable phenomena (clouds, rain, rivers, evaporation). Study a specific river system in detail: trace it from source to mouth on a map, identify key tributaries and settlements, study the features at different stages. Use photographs to study river landforms at different locations. Connect rivers to human activity: water supply, settlements, trade, flooding. Investigate local rivers or streams through fieldwork.
Common misconceptions
Pupils often think rivers flow uphill at some point; careful explanation of how gravity determines flow direction addresses this. The water cycle is often presented too simplistically; exploring the variety of pathways water can take (groundwater, evapotranspiration, run-off) develops more accurate understanding. Pupils may not connect rivers to the water cycle; linking the discussion of river flow to rainfall and precipitation makes the connection explicit.
Difficulty levels
Identifying the main stages of the water cycle (evaporation, condensation, precipitation) and labelling a simple diagram.
Example task
Label this water cycle diagram with the words: evaporation, condensation, precipitation.
Model response: Evaporation is where water goes up from the sea. Condensation is where it forms clouds. Precipitation is where it falls as rain.
Describing the water cycle as a continuous process and identifying the main features of a river from source to mouth.
Example task
Describe what happens to water from the moment it falls as rain on a mountain until it reaches the sea.
Model response: Rain falls on the mountain and flows downhill as small streams. Streams join together to form a river. The river flows through valleys, getting wider and slower as it reaches flatter land. Eventually it reaches the sea at the river's mouth. Then the water evaporates and the cycle starts again.
Explaining how rivers shape the landscape through erosion, transportation and deposition, and identifying specific landforms created by these processes.
Example task
How does a river create a meander? What happens to the material that the river erodes?
Model response: Water flows faster on the outside of a river bend, eroding the bank and making the curve larger. On the inside of the bend, the water flows more slowly so it drops the material it is carrying — this is deposition. Over time, the bends become larger and more curved, creating meanders. The eroded material is transported downstream and deposited where the river slows, forming features like floodplains and deltas at the river's mouth.
Evaluating human interaction with rivers — how people use rivers, how flooding affects communities, and how humans modify river systems.
Example task
Rivers provide benefits but also pose risks. Explain how people manage this balance, using examples.
Model response: Rivers provide water, transport, power and fertile floodplains for farming. But flooding destroys homes and infrastructure. People manage this by building flood defences, creating flood plains to absorb excess water, and using early warning systems. However, building on floodplains increases risk, and upstream deforestation makes flooding worse by increasing run-off. Managing rivers involves trade-offs between economic use and flood risk.
Delivery rationale
Geography fieldwork concept — requires real-world data collection, outdoor safety supervision, and specialist planning.
Settlement and Economic Geography
knowledge AI DirectGE-KS2-C004
Settlements are places where people live and work, ranging from small hamlets to megacities. Their location, growth and character are shaped by physical factors (water supply, defensibility, flat land, resources) and human factors (trade routes, industry, government decisions). Economic activity is classified into sectors: primary (extracting raw materials), secondary (manufacturing), tertiary (services) and quaternary (knowledge-based). The distribution of natural resources including food, minerals, energy and water shapes economic activity and trade between places at global scales. At KS2, pupils develop conceptual frameworks for understanding why places are where they are and how economies work.
Teaching guidance
Study local settlement history: why was the town/city located here? What factors drove its growth? Compare settlement patterns in different environments: how do desert settlements differ from coastal or riverside ones? Use examples of global trade to illustrate economic interdependence. Investigate the origin of food and goods in the classroom or school. Map the distribution of specific natural resources (oil, minerals, food production) and connect to trade patterns. Explore how economic activity changes over time in a specific area.
Common misconceptions
Pupils may think cities grow randomly rather than for geographical reasons. Studying the historical reasons for settlement location challenges this. The concept of comparative advantage in trade can be difficult; concrete examples of why one place might specialise in particular goods make it accessible. Pupils may not appreciate the scale of global economic interdependence; tracking the journey of a familiar product from raw material to consumer makes global connections tangible.
Difficulty levels
Identifying different types of settlement (village, town, city) and naming one reason why people live in settlements.
Example task
What is the difference between a village and a city? Why do people live together in settlements?
Model response: A village is small with few buildings and a city is very large with lots of buildings and people. People live in settlements because they need to be near other people, shops and schools.
Describing why settlements are located where they are, identifying physical and human factors that influence settlement location.
Example task
Why were many old towns built near rivers? Give at least two reasons.
Model response: Towns were built near rivers because rivers provided drinking water and water for animals. Rivers were used for transport — boats could carry heavy goods. The flat land near rivers was good for building on and farming. Some rivers were also good for defence — a river on one side made the town harder to attack.
Explaining how economic activities are connected across places through trade, describing primary, secondary and tertiary sectors.
Example task
Explain the journey of a chocolate bar from the cocoa farm to the shop, identifying the different types of economic activity involved.
Model response: Cocoa beans are grown on a farm in Ghana — that is a primary activity (extracting raw materials). The beans are shipped to a factory in the UK where they are processed into chocolate — that is a secondary activity (manufacturing). The chocolate bar is then transported to shops and sold to customers — that is a tertiary activity (providing a service). Each stage happens in a different place and involves different workers.
Evaluating how globalisation and economic change affect settlements, including the impact of deindustrialisation, migration and trade on communities.
Example task
Many factory towns in the UK have changed since their factories closed. What happened and how have these places adapted?
Model response: When factories closed, people lost jobs and the towns became poorer. Young people often moved away to find work elsewhere. Some towns have adapted by developing tourism, technology industries or universities. Others have struggled with unemployment and depopulation. This shows that the economy of a place can change dramatically, and that places need to adapt when their main industry disappears.
Delivery rationale
Geography knowledge concept — locational, place, and process knowledge deliverable with visual resources.